Neal Karlinsky Biography
Neal Karlinsky born Neal A. Karlinsky is the former Seattle correspondent for ABC News, known for covering stories worldwide for Good Morning America, World News Tonight and Nightline. He is the Senior Manager and Content Creator at Amazon.
Neal Karlinsky Age
He was born on October 14, 1968 in Detroit, Michigan, U.S. He is 50 years old as of 2018.
Neal Karlinsky Wife
He is married to Malia Karlinsky, a Lifestyle Reporter and Producer at KOMO-TV, the ABC affiliate in Seattle who is an Emmy award winner. The couple has two children.
Neal Karlinsky Family
He was born to Arnold and Vivian Karlinsky (née, Monarch). He has two siblings, his brother, Paul Arnold, and a sister, Deborah Arnold. They were all raised together.
Neal Karlinsky photo
Neal Karlinsky Education
He studied at Michigan State University in journalism, and obtained his baccalaureate.
Neal Karlinsky ABC News
He debuted his journalism career at WLNS-TV in Lansing, Michigan, where and moved to Nashville, Tennessee to WKRN-TV, and finally landing at KIRO-TV in Seattle, Washington. He joined ABC News as a Seattle-based correspondent in August 2000, where he covered the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, which made him nominated for Outstanding Continuing Coverage of a News Story at the News & Documentary Emmy Award. This story appeared on ABC World News Tonight. Together with John Berman, he received a nomination for a cooking segment on Nightline, in the Television Segment category at the 2012 James Beard Awards.
Neal Karlinsky Goodbye
Neal Karlinsky Leaving ABS And Amazon
Life After TV News: How About Amazon?
Updated: Jun. 9, 2017.
Former ABC News correspondent and KIRO reporter Neal A. Karlinsky didn’t have to go far to find his next gig.
Karlinsky, based in Seattle, is now working for Amazon as a Storyteller.
Karlinsky, who had been with ABC News since 2000, left the network in March. Before ABC, he spent 6 years at Seattle CBS affiliate KIRO. He’s also worked at ABC affiliate WKRN-TV in Nashville and Lansing’s CBS affiliate WLNS.
For Amazon he’s telling stories of how the company’s products are helping people live better lives. The challenge is to ensure the stories don’t come off as commercials, but rather, have the tone of a feature you might watch on a local newscast. In his first story, Karlinsky visits a Morristown, NJ school for the blind to show how students are using Amazon’s Echo.
Source: adweek.com