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'''Greg Dobbs''' worked for 23 years for ABC News, reporting from nearly 80 countries around the world. His major stories overseas for ABC include:

• The Iranian revolution
<br />• The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
<br />• The Gulf War
<br />• The troubles in Northern Ireland
<br />• The Solidarity revolution in Poland
<br />• The leadership transition in the Soviet Union
<br />• The Iran-Iraq war
<br />• The conflicts with Libya
<br />• The civil war in Zimbabwe (née Rhodesia)
<br />• The assassination of Anwar Sadat in Egypt

>His major domestic stories include:

• The Watergate scandal
<br />• The Indian occupation of Wounded Knee
<br />• The execution of Gary Gilmore
<br />• The Exxon Valdez oil spill

Appearing on World News, Nightline, 20/20, and Good Morning America, Dobbs won two national Emmys and was nominated for more. He also won the Distinguished Service Award from the Society of Professional Journalists.

Beginning in 2004, Dobbs was a correspondent for HDNet television’s documentary-style World Report. Besides domestic programs for World Report about everything from PTSD to sexual offender laws to advances with stem cell treatments to abuse of the Indian Trust, the countries around the world from which he has reported include:

• Russia (Putin’s politics)
<br />• Egypt (terrorism)
<br />• South Africa (post-Apartheid report card)
<br />• Vietnam (legacy of Agent Orange)
<br />• Lebanon (Hezbollah)
<br />• Venezuela (Hugo Chavez)
<br />• The Palestinian Territories and Israel (the inert peace process)
<br />• Indonesia (filthy water)
<br />• Switzerland (assisted suicide)
<br />• Dubai (income versus ideology)
<br />• Nicaragua (free trade with US)
<br />• Liberia (recovering from civil war)
<br />• Great Britain (politics)
<br />• Bolivia (coca crops)
<br />• Colombia (the drug war)
<br />• Mexico (deepwater oil drilling)

He also provided live reports along with Dan Rather on primary and general election nights in 2008, and has covered the U.S. space program for HDNet, anchoring live from Florida for every space shuttle launch since the Columbia disaster.

Between ABC News and HDNet, Dobbs was a talk show host on the 50,000-watt KOA Radio in Denver, and a columnist for The Denver Post and the late Rocky Mountain News, and a syndicated columnist for Scripps Howard News Service. Also, for six years Dobbs hosted the Emmy-award winning television program Colorado State of Mind on Rocky Mountain PBS. He also is co-founder of the leading baby boomer site on the internet, BoomerCafé.com

Besides his new book Life in the Wrong Lane, Dobbs is the author of a university-level journalism textbook called Better Broadcast Writing, Better Broadcast News.

Dobbs and his wife Carol live in Colorado and have two sons. He is active on community non-profit boards. He is a native of San Francisco with degrees from the University of California at Berkeley and Northwestern University.

==External links==

Greg Alan Dobbs Webpage.<ref name="webpage">[http://www.lifeinthewronglane.com Life in the Wrong Lane], The webpage of Greg Alan Dobbs book.</ref>

== References ==
{{reflist}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Dobbs, Greg Alan}}
[[Category:American television journalists]]
[[Category:Living people]]

Revision as of 21:01, 26 March 2012