Correspondent, producer, substitute anchor at PBS NewsHour
washington, district of columbia, united states
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Claim your profileWilliam Brangham is an award-winning correspondent, producer, and substitute anchor for the PBS NewsHour.Brangham was part of the NewsHour team that won a 2022 Peabody Award for its coverage of guns and gun violence in America. His reporting that year culminated in the NewsHour documentary, “Ricochet: An American Trauma.”Over the years, Brangham has also reported extensively on the climate crisis, covering the complexity and severity of the issue at everything from U.N. climate conferences to the glaciers of Antarctica. Brangham’s climate reporting has helped establish the NewsHour as the clear leader in broadcast news. Among his many stories, his four-part series from Antarctica was nominated for a 2020 News & Documentary Emmy, and became the basis for the NewsHour’s first ever podcast series, “The Last Continent.”Brangham has also done considerable reporting on health, healthcare, and pandemics. In addition to playing a central role in the NewsHour’s Covid-19 coverage, his multi-part series about the fight against influenza won the 2020 News & Documentary Emmy Award for “Outstanding Science, Medical and Environmental Report.” His five-part series looking at why America has failed to achieve universal health care (when so many other nations have) was turned into another NewsHour documentary: “Critical Care: America vs The World.”In 2018, Brangham and the NewsHour team produced an investigative series about sexual assault, rape, and retaliation within the U.S. Forest Service. The day after that series aired, the head of the Forest Service suddenly stepped down. This reporting won a 2019 News & Documentary Emmy Award for "Outstanding Investigative Report in a Newscast,” won a Webby Award, was nominated for a Peabody, and won the 2018 Al Neuharth Innovation in Investigative Journalism Award.In 2017, Brangham and his colleagues won another News & Documentary Emmy Award for their series "The End of AIDS?," which looked at the state of the global campaign against HIV. That series also received several other awards, including the National Academies of Sciences Communication Award.Brangham’s reporting on the Syrian refugee crisis in 2015, where he followed Syrian families trying to cross from Hungary into Austria, was among the work cited when the NewsHour won a Peabody that year for its ongoing series “Desperate Journey.”When he is not out reporting in the field, Brangham is a regular interviewer on the NewsHour, and is the substitute anchor for the program.






English Language, English Language And Literature at Colorado CollegeGraduated: 1990