Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Marcia Kramer

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Name
  
Marcia Kramer

Role
  
Correspondent

Spouse
  
Marc Kalech (m. 1996)


Marcia Kramer Marcia Kramer CSPANorg


Nominations
  
News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Regional News Story – Spot News

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Profiles

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Marcia Kramer (born December 30, 1948) is the chief political correspondent for WCBS-TV (CBS 2) in New York City. Kramer has collected many awards for her electronic journalism at the station and at the New York Daily News newspaper. The awards include two George Foster Peabody awards, two Edward R. Murrow awards, eight Emmy awards, two New York Press Club Golden Typewriter awards and a first-place award from the Associated Press for her investigative reporting. [WCBS-TV web bio]. At the Daily News, she was a staff reporter before she was appointed the paper's first woman bureau chief in City Hall and Albany.

Contents

Marcia Kramer Do You Walk in NYC Then You Don39t Matter to CBS239s Marcia

Kramer joined WCBS-TV in 1990 during a labor disruption at the tabloid. Her broadcast career includes many years serving as host of the station's Sunday morning political show - "Sunday Edition with Marcia Kramer." The show featured interviews with local and national politicians as well as round-table discussions with fellow reporters and editors. In 1996, she married Marc Kalech, who was Managing Editor of the New York Post.

Marcia Kramer MARCIA KRAMER 5 YouTube

During the 1992 New York presidential primary, she asked then-candidate Bill Clinton the question about his past marijuana use which prompted his response that he had smoked the drug while in college "but did not inhale."

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In October 2000, during a New York State Senate debate, Kramer asked candidates Hillary Clinton and Rick Lazio what they thought of "Federal Bill 602-P." Kramer described the bill as a proposal to implement a tax on internet email messages. As part of a promotion by the station, the question had been sent in by a listener but the screeners reviewing the questions, Kramer and the candidates were all unaware that the "tax" was actually an internet hoax. The station quickly issued a statement correcting the error.

References

Marcia Kramer Wikipedia