Dave Ross | |
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Born | 1952 Yorktown, New York |
Alma mater | Cornell University |
Occupation | Radio broadcaster |
Known for | The Dave Ross Show |
Board member of | Seattle Transportation Choices Coalition Economic Opportunity Institute |
Spouse(s) | Patti Ross |
Children | Caitlin Ross Emilie Ross |
Awards | 2001 RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Award for Best Commentary 2005 RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Award for Best Commentary |
Dave Ross (born April 10, 1952) is a talk show host on Seattle's KIRO-FM radio station, with whom he had been a news anchor from 1978 until his talk show started nine years later in 1987. He has sometimes broadcast his show while on assignment in other locations, including overseas, such as Baghdad, Iraq in April 2004. Ross is also heard on the CBS Radio Network, where he provides daily political commentary.
Ross was the 2004 Democratic Party candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives for Washington's 8th congressional district. For more than three decades in his spare time he has been performing with the Seattle Gilbert and Sullivan Society.
Born into a Catholic family in Yorktown Heights, New York, Ross is the son of a commercial artist and has a brother and two sisters. He started his broadcast career at the age of 15 at WVIP in Mt. Kisco, New York. After graduating from Cornell University in 1973, where he was a member of the Cornell University Glee Club and the Quill and Dagger society, Ross worked as a reporter at WSB in Atlanta, Georgia from 1973 to 1978.
In addition to hosting his talk show on radio station KIRO (AM) in Seattle, Ross broadcasts a national daily commentary on the CBS Radio Network. From 1983-2004 he hosted and produced the first syndicated daily radio report on computers, for the Associated Press, called Chip Talk. He was also part of the 1995 Launch Team for CNET, where he contributed segments called The Last Word to c|net central. Since 1992, Ross has also filled in for CBS Radio colleague Charles Osgood on his "Osgood File" commentaries. Ross has broadcast from overseas or outside Seattle to cover various historic events. For example, on the eve of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Ross traveled to the Persian Gulf to broadcast his radio show from Qatar. Other field trips included forays to cover the Pope's visit to Britain in 1982, trips to China in 1984 and the Soviet Union in 1987, the toppling of the Berlin Wall and the revolution in Czechoslovakia in 1989, the 1992 Rodney King riots Los Angeles, a 2002 trip to Jerusalem after a series of suicide bombings, a trip to Baghdad in April 2004 and many others.