I-Comm Week - Speaker
Bio
Brian Lamb
Chairman and CEO, C-SPAN
Brian Lamb is the CEO of C-SPAN Networks. He’s been at the
helm of the public affairs channel since he helped the cable industry
launch it 29 years ago on March 19, 1979.
Today, C-SPAN employs 270 people and delivers public affairs programming
on three television channels to the nation’s cable and satellite
customers; globally to Internet users via C-SPAN.org and 15 other
internet sites; and to radio listeners through C-SPAN radio—an
FM station in Washington that can also be heard on XM satellite
service nationwide.
Brian has also been a regular on-air presence at C-SPAN since
the network’s earliest days. Over the years, he has interviewed
Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Clinton,
and George W. Bush and many world leaders such as Margaret Thatcher
and Mikhail Gorbachev. For 15 years, beginning in 1989, he interviewed
800 non-fiction authors for a weekly program known as Booknotes. Four
books of collected interviews have been published based on the Booknotes series.
Currently, Brian hosts Q and A, an hour long interview program
on Sunday evening with people who are making things happen in politics,
media, education or technology.
Brian Lamb is a Hoosier, born and raised in Lafayette, Indiana.
Interested in broadcasting as a child, he built crystal radio sets
to pick up local signals. During high school and college, he sought
out jobs at Lafayette radio and television stations, spinning records,
selling ads, and eventually hosting his own television program.
After graduating from Purdue with a degree in speech, Brian joined
the Navy. His tour included the USS Thuban, White House
duty during the Johnson Administration, and a stint in the Pentagon
public affairs office during the Vietnam War.
In 1967, his navy service complete, Brian returned home to Lafayette.
However, it wasn’t long before he returned to the nation’s
capital where he began as a freelance reporter for UPI radio. Later,
he served as a Senate press secretary and worked for the White
House Office of Telecommunications Policy at a time when a national
strategy was being developed for communications satellites.
In 1974, Brian returned to journalism, publishing a biweekly newsletter
called The Media Report. He also covered telecommunications
issues as Washington bureau chief for Cablevision Magazine.
It was from this vantage point that C-SPAN began to take shape.
Congress was about to televise its proceedings; the cable industry
was looking for programming to deliver to its customers by satellite.
Brian brought these two ideas together with C-SPAN, which launched
with the first televised House of Representatives debate on March
19, 1979.
Brian and his wife Victoria are longtime residents of Arlington,
Virginia. When he’s not reading newspapers or non-fiction
books, Brian is often in hot pursuit of the latest country music
release.
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