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Norman Robinson (television news reporter)

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Name
  
Norman Robinson

Role
  
Television news reporter

Norman Robinson (television news reporter) wwwwdsucomimageview20341924highRes2max

Norman Hollis Robinson (born 1951 in Toomsuba, Lauderdale County, Mississippi) is news anchor for WDSU-TV New Orleans Channel 6 (NBC), where he has worked in the news department since 1992.

After service as a musician in the United States Navy, he began his career in broadcast journalism on radio in Southern California and then worked successively in television in Alabama, New York, and District of Columbia (where he served on the White House Press Corps for CBS) before moving to New Orleans. Robinson is known for his ability to interview public officials in the New Orleans area. It was on the news program which Robinson anchors that New Orleans City Councilwoman Stacy Head was interviewed as she started posting her e-mails online during the height of the 2009 New Orleans e-mail controversy.

He received significant attention in 1991 when he questioned Louisiana gubernatorial candidate David Duke, a Republican State Representative and former Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, during the state's runoff debate. Robinson, who is African-American, told Duke that he was "scared" at the prospect of Duke winning the election because of his history of "diabolical, evil, vile" racist and anti-Semitic comments, some of which he read to Duke. He then pressed Duke for an apology and when Duke protested that Robinson was not being fair to him, Robinson replied that he didn't think Duke was being honest. Jason Berry of the Los Angeles Times called it "startling TV" and the "catalyst" for the "overwhelming" turnout of black voters that helped former Governor Edwin Edwards defeat Duke.

In June 2008 Robinson was furloughed by WDSU after being arrested for driving while intoxicated but returned to work a month later. Robinson promised that he would never again drive while under the influence of alcohol. In an April 2009 testimony concerning the role of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet, Robinson said that post-Katrina trauma, including loss of his home:

Robinson is married to Monica Hall Robinson of Mobile, Alabama. The couple has three children. His civic activities include Goodwill Industries, March of Dimes, New Orleans Concert Band, and Our Lady of Holy Cross College (from which he received an honorary doctor of humane letters). He is a member of Golden Key International Honour Society and a deacon in Saint Mark's Fourth Baptist Church of New Orleans.

References

Norman Robinson (television news reporter) Wikipedia