About Rick

Rick Sanchez has been a journalist, reporter and television news anchor for over 25 years, with over 8 years in cable news, first on MSNBC and then for 6 years on CNN.  His professional honors include an Emmy Award and an American Medical Association “Distinguished Journalist Award.”  He was also part of CNN’s Peabody Award-winning coverage of Hurricane Katrina.

Rick was most recently the host of his own show called Rick’s List and was frequently a substitute anchor for CNN’s 8 pm prime time broadcast where he went head-to-head against Keith Olbermann and Bill O’Reilly.

Based out of CNN’s world headquarters in Atlanta, Rick was one of the highest rated anchors on CNN and CNN en Español.

Prior to joining CNN, Rick was the anchor for WTVJ, the NBC affiliate in Miami. Prior to that, he worked for two years as a correspondent and anchor for MSNBC, where he also delivered breaking news for CNBC and updates for NBC National radio.

Rick started his career as a television journalist at WSVN in Miami in 1982. He became the first person to both anchor a television news program and host a talk show on Spanish-language radio, El Show de Rick Sanchez.

Throughout his career, Rick has reported on major events across the United States and around the world.  He was on-the-scene covering the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. Rick has also reported in war zones in Nicaragua, the invasion of Grenada and the fall of the Jean-Claude Duvalier regime in Haiti.  Rick has also reported live from Havana, Cuba many times.  He won an Emmy for his series titled, When I left Cuba.

In 2006, Rick anchored CNN’s coverage of Hurricane Katrina, which won a Peabody Award.  It was during the Katrina coverage that Rick went nearly 48 hours without sleep, first anchoring from Atlanta and then flying to Louisiana where he reported live from the scene.

Rick has interviewed prominent newsmakers and world leaders including Jimmy Carter, Fidel Castro, Bill Clinton, Mikhail Gorbachev and Manuel Noriega.

Rick has been an impassioned advocate and pioneer in marrying social media and the news.  Rick was the first national news anchor to use Twitter.  In 2009, NPR famously wrote, “CNN news anchor Rick Sanchez was tweeting before Twitter was cool.”

Rick used social networking to launch viewer-driven newscasts, something no one else had ever done before.  Rick used all these tools—Twitter, facebook, myspace—to engage viewers in what he calls a “national conversation.”  He is one of the few anchors who follows many of his own Twitter followers and engages in discussions with them off the air about news, sports and their lives.  For Rick, the national conversation didn’t stop just because the camera went off.

More than all these professional successes, Rick is most proud of his personal achievements and who he is: a father, a son, a husband and a friend.  He’s been married to the same woman–Suzanne–for over 20 years.  They have four children and live in suburban Atlanta. 

Rick has always made his family a priority.  Even when he worked 14 hour days while doing his own show and filling in at 8 pm, Rick always made the time to go to all of his kids’ sporting events.

These are the values that Rick grew up with.

Rick’s parents escaped Castro’s Cuba and came to the United States with hopes of a better life for their children.  When they arrived, Rick was just two years old and didn’t know a word of English.

Rick grew up poor. His parents never made more than $10,000 a year.  His dad, who had shined shoes in Cuba, came to this country and began working several jobs simply to support his family and make ends meet.  He moved furniture by night and washed dishes by day.

Rick attended Minnesota State University on a football scholarship and later transferred to the University of Minnesota on a CBS Journalism Scholarship.

Rick’s story is not one of privilege, but it is the quintessential American success story that draws new immigrants to this country each day.  It’s a story of hope, fear, success,  failure and yes, discrimination and obstacles.  Despite all this, Rick beat the odds and overcame many challenges in his life.  And come what may, one thing is for certain: Rick is a fighter, and he’ll always be striving and working hard to better himself.