Soledad O'Brien is the anchor for CNN morning show Starting Point with
Soledad O'Brien and special correspondent for CNN/U.S. Since joining
the network in 2003, O'Brien has reported breaking news from around the
globe and has produced award-winning, record-breaking and critically
acclaimed documentaries on the most important stories facing the world
today. She also covers political news as part of CNN's "Best Political
Team on Television." In 2010, she wrote a critically-acclaimed memoir
The Next Big Story: My Journey through the Land of Possibilities, which
chronicles her biggest reporting moments and how her upbringing and
background have influenced these experiences.
O'Brien's most recent documentaries include Black in America: The New
Promised Land - Silicon Valley, a profile of an accelerator program
developed to diversify the technology industry by helping
African-American digital entrepreneurs secure funding for their
ventures; Latino in America 2: In Her Corner, the story of female
flyweight fighter and U.S. Olympic hopeful Marlen Esparza; Beyond
Bravery: The Women of 9/11, an investigation into the lives of female
rescue workers who were the first to respond to the World Trade Center
terrorist attacks; Don't Fail Me: Education in America, a look at the
crisis in public education where American kids are not learning the
skills necessary to compete; The Women Who Would be Queen, a portrayal
of the future King and Queen's friendship-turned-romance and very
modern royal marriage; Unwelcome: The Muslims Next Door, a report on
religious freedom protections; Pictures Don't Lie, the story of the
secret life of Civil Rights photographer Ernest Withers as a paid FBI
informant; Almighty Debt, a Black in America special that explores the
role of the black church in helping African Americans survive the worst
financial crisis since the Great Depression; Rescued, a look at Haiti's
remarkable children before, during and after the devastating
earthquake; and Gary and Tony Have a Baby, the story of two gay men and
their struggle to have a baby that has a biological and legal
connection to both of them.
In 2009, Soledad reported for Latino in America, a wide-ranging look at
Latinos living in this country; how they're reshaping America and how
America is reshaping them. Prior, O'Brien reported for Black in America
2, a four-hour documentary focusing on successful community leaders who
are improving the lives of African-Americans. O'Brien's reporting for
Black in America in 2008 revealed the state of Black America 40 years
after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. She has also
reported for the CNN documentary Words That Changed a Nation, featuring
a never-before-seen look at Dr. King's private writings and notes, and
investigated his assassination in Eyewitness to Murder: The King
Assassination. Her Children of the Storm project and One Crime at a
Time documentary demonstrate O'Brien's continued commitment to covering
stories out of New Orleans.
O'Brien joined CNN as the co-anchor of the network's flagship morning
program, American Morning, and distinguished herself by reporting from
the scene on the transformational stories that broke on her watch. For
CNN's Katrina coverage, O'Brien's reports on the storm's impact
included an in-depth interview with former FEMA chief Michael Brown.
She also covered the Japan earthquake and tsunami in 2011, London
terrorism attacks in July 2005, and in December 2004, she was among a
handful of CNN anchors sent to Thailand to cover the disaster and
aftermath of the tsunami.
In 2011, Soledad won her first Emmy for Crisis in Haiti (Anderson
Cooper 360) in the category of Outstanding Live Coverage of a Current
News Story - Long Form. O'Brien was part of the coverage teams that
earned CNN a George Foster Peabody award for its BP oil spill and
Katrina coverage and an Alfred I. duPont Award for its coverage of the
Southeast Asia tsunami. The National Association of Black Journalists
named O'Brien the Journalist of the Year and Edward R Murrow Awards
lauded her with the RTDNA/UNITY award for Latino in America in 2010.
She received the 2009 Medallion of Excellence for Leadership and
Community Service Award from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus
Institute. In 2008, she was the first recipient of the Soledad O'Brien
Freedom's Voice Award from the Morehouse School of Medicine for being a
catalyst for social change and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health's Goodermote Humanitarian Award for her efforts while
reporting on the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina and the
tsunami. Her numerous other awards include a Gracie Allen Award in 2007
for her reporting from Cyprus on the Israeli-Hezbollah conflict as well
as her reports from the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina. The NAACP
honored her with its President's Award in 2007 for her humanitarian
efforts and journalistic excellence.
O'Brien came to CNN from NBC News where she anchored the network's
Weekend Today since July 1999. Prior, O'Brien anchored MSNBC's
award-winning technology program The Site. O'Brien joined NBC News in
1991 and was based in New York as a field producer for Nightly News and
TODAY. Before her time at NBC, she served three years as a local
reporter and bureau chief for the NBC affiliate KRON in San Francisco.
She began her career as an associate producer and news writer at the
then-NBC affiliate WBZ-TV in Boston. Soledad O'Brien is a graduate of
Harvard University and currently lives with her husband and four
children in Manhattan.