Andrew Finlayson is the Vice President
and News Director for Fox Chicago. Over
two decades he has worked in radio, television,
and the Internet for ABC, CBS, one of
the nation's top NBC affiliates, and now
for Fox.
"It's good to be back home," said Finlayson. "I
grew up in Des Plaines and Arlington Heights,
and no matter where I moved, Chicago has
always been the place I considered my
hometown." Finlayson started at Fox Chicago
on January 1st of 2006. "The station is
undergoing a tremendous number of changes,
as are all newsrooms. We are fortunate
in that we have a strong team with some
extraordinary journalists in front of
and behind the camera," said Finlayson.
Prior to Chicago, Finlayson has been
a news director in Nashville and in San
Francisco. In Nashville, the team he
worked with at WSMV had notable ratings
success and added to the reputation of
one of the nation's most honored TV newsrooms.
In the two and a half years that Finlayson
was there, the 10 PM newscast finished
in first place for the first time since
1998, had a midday news win for the first
time in twenty years, and won two Edward
R. Murrow Regional awards for Overall
Excellence - Major Market. "The people
in that newsroom made it a great place
to work. We didn't have a lot of resources
but the team never gave up," said Finlayson. "They
wanted to win and they knew how to do
it with quality." While there, Finlayson
also won two local Emmy Awards for special
news programming, one for coverage of
the Iroquois Steeplechase and another
for live coverage of Nashville's 4th
of July celebrations.
Prior to Nashville, he was the news
director of KTVU in Oakland, California.
Channel 2 was known for consistently high
ratings, winning almost every newscast time
period for years at a time and earning the
reputation as the number one prime time
newscast in the country. Some of the notable
achievements of the KTVU team included the
station being recognized in 2000 by the
Project for Excellence in Journalism as
having the highest quality local newscast
in the country and the reputation around
the country for in-depth political reporting.
In 2002, the Los Angeles Times described
KTVU as doing "more and
better political coverage than any other
commercial news station in California" and
the AP referenced KTVU as an example of
how "intelligent election coverage does
result in better ratings."
"The great thing about working at KTVU
at that time was that you had the chance
to work with the news director Fred Zehnder
and the general manager Kevin O'Brien.
They were about as opposite as you get
in personality and style, but both were
passionate broadcasters who really cared
about the community and the station," said
Finlayson.
KTVU is the largest Fox affiliate in
the country and Finlayson served on the
Fox News Advisory Committee for a number
of years. He said, "Many of the people
I had a chance to meet on that committee
years ago are still with Fox. I think
it shows the loyalty that people have
to this company. They still are having
fun. That is something that the great
newsrooms have...fun." Over this time as
news director, Finlayson received three
local Emmy awards, including one for best
newscast. KTVU was also recognized as
the station of the year by the Associated
Press Television and Radio Association
(Western Region).
Before becoming news director at KTVU,
he served as the associate news director
and special projects producer. He also
served for a time as the business reporter,
providing updates on the market from the
floor of the Pacific Stock Exchange. "Kevin
and Fred were committed to covering news
wherever it happened when it happened," said
Finlayson. He traveled around the US and
overseas, including assignments in Hong
Kong, China, Russia, Germany, England, the Philippines, and South Korea. "Standing
along the border in Panmunjom and looking
into North Korea was a sobering experience.
You could see the fanaticism of the North
Koreans. You instantly appreciate the
freedom we have and the people who serve
all year round to protect that freedom," said
Finlayson.
Prior to his reporting and special project
work, Finlayson was the producer of the
nationally syndicated program "On the
Money". Each week for over two years the
program investigated a wide range of issues,
including illegal gun sales, traveling
con artists, and some of the first television
reporting on some of America's biggest
business success stories. "We talked to
two young people at Stanford about a search
engine they were working on," said Finlayson,
referring to Google's founders. "And we
did a story about a small coffee chain
in Seattle that had the strange name of
Starbucks. No. I didn't buy stock in either
business."
During this time Finlayson was also writing
daily business and real estate reports
for the CBS Radio Station News Service,
producing over one thousand stories over
the course of over four years.
His work with CBS RSNS came following
four years at the all news radio station
KCBS in San Francisco, where he served
as a producer, writer, and news editor. "I
had a chance to work with many outstanding
professionals at that station. Chet Casselman,
who had been a news director at KSFO during
the golden years of Bay Area radio, Don
Mozley, who reported on World War Two
for CBS, and Al Hart, the man with one
of the best voices and biggest hearts
on radio," said Finlayson. "These were
people who had seen history up close.
I still have the 1960s news style guide
that Chet shared with me. I use it to
this day."
Finlayson began his professional career
as an assistant librarian for ABC News
during the 1984 presidential campaign.
Finlayson has been a speaker/mentor for
the USC Annenberg Health Endowment, a
guest speaker at the Poynter Institute,
a panelist at the national RTNDA/NAB convention
in Las Vegas, and a presenter at various
colleges and universities. He has received
short term fellowships from Western Knight
Center, the Knight Center for Specialized
Journalism, RIAS, the National Press Foundation
and grants from the Radio Television and
News Director Foundation and the Kaiser
Family Foundation.
"The support of these groups, with no
restrictions, allowed us to do some extraordinary
reporting that our newsroom budgets often
did not allow," said Finlayson. "We were
able to do reporting on the fall of the
Berlin Wall, an in-depth look at the candidates
in the 2002 election, and some important
stories about the continuing AIDS/HIV
crisis in our nation." The reporting on
the Berlin Wall led to a being a finalist
for the Livingston Award for young journalists.
"We are committed to doing that kind of in-depth reporting here at Fox Chicago," said
Finlayson. "Fox is investing in Chicago
and we are turning that support into great
journalism, focused on some of the critical
issues of our neighborhoods. We have people
who really know Chicago and the suburbs
out on the streets every day, camera people,
reporters, anchors, and producers who are
always investigating new stories you won't
see anywhere else."
Finlayson's interest in asking questions
goes beyond journalism, and led to writing
the book "Questions That Work: How to
Ask Questions That Will Help You Succeed
in Any Business Situation." This book
was the subject of a number of articles
and guest appearances on radio and television.
Finlayson was also the editor of a Web
site based on the book. Over the last
five years the book has been translated
into three languages for world wide sales.
"I've been blessed to work with some
amazing journalists over the last twenty
years. They often made many little known
sacrifices, not only in long hours, but
often in the personal risks they took
to bring us the news," said Finlayson. "Once
I worked with a reporter, producer, and
camera person who went out on the streets
at night to tell the story of the life
of homeless people in San Francisco.
While I know this wasn't a war zone, it
still required taking on challenges that
many people might back away from. This
was back in 1999 and I think it really
opened a lot of eyes to a growing crisis.
We all are fortunate that there are people
who are that committed to their work." This
series of reports was a national finalist
for the NATAS Emmy Community Service award.
"I know there is a lot of good work that
doesn't win awards. What Fred Zehender
taught me was that awards are not important.
The most important "award" is winning
the respect of the viewer day after day," said
Finlayson. "I know the people in the Fox
Chicago newsroom are doing that, working
hard to serve our friends and neighbors.
I hope you'll watch."
Finlayson is a member of RTNDA, NABJ,
and NLGJA, and
is a graduate of San Francisco State University,
where he was the recipient of the Bob
Brown Memorial Scholarship.
He and his wife, Arleen Bolton, have two
children and one dog.
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