
Robert Siegel
Senior Host of All Things Considered
Robert Siegel, a senior host of NPR's award-winning evening newsmagazine All Things Considered, got started in radio news when he was a college freshman in 1964. He's still at it.
As
a host, Siegel has reported from Western Europe, Eastern Europe, and
Israel. He now concentrates on domestic stories. During the fall of
1992, Siegel took a short leave from the show to anchor Talk of the Nation, NPR's nationwide live call-in program.
Before
joining All Things Considered in 1987, Siegel served for four years as
director of NPR's News and Information Department, overseeing
production of NPR's newsmagazines All Things Considered and Morning Edition,
as well as special events and other news programming. During his
tenure, NPR launched its popular Saturday and Sunday newsmagazine Weekend Edition.
Siegel joined NPR in December 1976 as an associate producer, and was
appointed public affairs editor in 1977 and senior editor in 1978. In
1979, Siegel was chosen to open NPR's London bureau, where he worked as
senior editor until 1983.
From 1971 to 1976, Siegel worked for
WRVR Radio in New York City as a reporter, host, and director of news
and public affairs. While at WRVR, he was one of a team that received
an Armstrong Award for the series "Rockefeller's Drug Law." Before
going to WRVR, he was morning news reporter and telephone talk show
host for WGLI Radio in Babylon, New York.
Siegel shared in NPR's
1994/95 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Silver Baton Award for
"The Changing of the Guard: The Republican Revolution," NPR's coverage
of the first 100 days of the 104th Congress. His coverage of the peace
movements in East and West Germany earned him a 1984 Alfred I.
duPont-Columbia University Silver Baton Award for excellence in
broadcast journalism. Siegel's two-part documentary "Murder,
Punishment, and Parole in Alabama" earned the 1997 American Bar
Association's Silver Gavel Award. The series revealed a criminal
justice system beset by the financial difficulties of keeping violent
offenders in long-term incarceration. His other awards include the
National Mental Health Association's 1991 Mental Health Award for his
interviews conducted on the streets of New York in an All Things
Considered story, "The Mentally Ill Homeless."
A graduate of New
York's Stuyvesant High School and Columbia University, Siegel began his
career in radio at the college radio station WKCR-FM where he anchored
coverage of the 1968 Columbia demonstrations. The station's work
received an award from the Writers Guild of America East.
Siegel
is the editor of The NPR Interviews 1994, The NPR Interviews 1995, and
The NPR Interviews 1996—compilations of NPR's most popular radio
conversations from each year
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