MIGUEL PEREZ-- Professor and former Chair, Department of Journalism, Communication and Theatre, Lehman College of the City University of New York.
-- Columnist, Creators Syndicate, The Record, The New York Daily News. -- Radio and TV Political Analyst. Journalist Miguel Pérez, an award-winning reporter, columnist and popular radio and television talk-show host, has spent his 40-year career covering the issues and concerns of America's burgeoning Latino population, and chronicling the evolution of our Hispanic heritage. |
En Español, Clic: SOBRE MIGUEL
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On September 19, 2015, Perez was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists. The Hall of Fame honors journalists “whose efforts resulted in a greater number of Latinos entering the journalism profession or have helped to improve news coverage of the nation’s Latino community.”
The following year, Pérez received the Illustrious Award for Journalism from the Institute for Latino Studies. As a columnist for the Creators Syndicate since January of 2004, he has brought a Latino perspective – with insight, sensitivity, and passion – to a national audience. |
As a political analyst, Pérez has spent years examining the key issues affecting the Hispanic community on CNN, Telemundo, Univision, FOX, PBS, WABC-NY, The New Jersey Network, Bronxnet TV and a few other TV and radio stations.
As professor and chair of the Department of Journalism, Communication and Theatre, at Lehman College, CUNY, in the Bronx, Pérez has found the vehicle for passing his passion, knowledge and experience to a very diverse generation of future American journalists. |
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For the past two decades, Pérez has been passionately driven by his history project. What started as a series of columns on the history of Latinos in the United States, has reached more than 150 parts and it's still growing!
The series led to the creation of HiddenHispanicHeritage.com, a website that includes columns, photographs, and videos from four cross-country road trips, chronicling the fascinating but underreported Hispanic history of the United States. Pérez calls it "The Great Hispanic History Tour." The website then led to the creation of a unique college course, "U.S. Hispanic History," which Pérez has taught at Lehman College since the fall of 2017, using HiddenHispanicHeritage.com as the course's "online textbook." The site now includes a constantly growing "Hispanic American History Timeline," featuring dozens of essays written by students and edited by Pérez. |
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While the site frequently updated with new and compelling stories, Pérez plans to publish his "Great Hispanic American History Tour" as a book soon.
In his nationally syndicated columns (http://www.creators.com/features/miguel-perez), Pérez covered Latino contributions to American society, the fight to protect democratic rights in Latin America, immigration trends across the United States, and many other issues of concern to America’s Hispanic population. Pérez writes about those who are misunderstood, ignored and often discriminated against, serving as a bridge to non-Latino Americans who receive his columns as educational and conciliatory. "He teaches the Anglos important lessons about our community," stated Latin New York Magazine in a profile of Pérez, "and tries to instill a sense of pride in Latinos." Born in Havana 73 years ago, Pérez came to the United States as a refugee at the age of 11 in 1962. He didn't speak a word of English. But he went on to become sports editor of his high school newspaper, editor of two college papers, a reporter for The Tampa Times and The Miami Herald, and a staff columnist for the New York Daily News and The Record of Hackensack, N.J. He has been the host of three radio shows and four television programs in both English and Spanish. Pérez has been covering the New York metropolitan area’s Latino community since 1978, when he received his Master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Before that, he was a reporter for The Miami Herald, covering Miami’s Hispanic community. Upon graduation from Columbia, he went to work for The New York Daily News, becoming, at that time, one of the few English-language Latino columnists in the nation. For his Daily News columns on the city's Latinos, in 1982 Pérez won the Mike Berger Award, considered the top print journalism prize in New York City. After 13 years at the Daily News, Pérez published his own newspaper, "The Latino News," New York’s first and only English-language Hispanic newspaper. But the venture lasted only two years, 1991-92, due to financial constraints. However, the experience he gained was priceless. |
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In 1993, Pérez became a columnist and reporter at The Record, where he won two consecutive Deadline Club Awards – Minority Focus category – from the New York City Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists in 2005 and 2006.
In 2006, Pérez became a journalism professor at Lehman College of the City University of New York, where he was immediately granted full professor status and tenure with two years. From 2010 to 2013, he served as chairman of the Department of Journalism, Communication and Theatre, until he was granted a leave of absence to go on a Hispanic history research road trip. On television, Pérez has hosted programs in two languages. From 1993 to 2001, he was the host of Images/Imagenes, a weekly English-language, Hispanic public affairs talk show on the (PBS) New Jersey Network. For his work on that program, he received two regional Emmy nominations, in 1995 and 1997. During the fall political seasons of 2012 and 2013, he hosted "Cuentame Miguel," a weekly segment on Telemundo47/NYC, where he analyzed local, state and national politics and its effects on Hispanics. In 1989, he hosted Primera Plana (Front Page), a Spanish-language talk show on New York's WNJU-TV Channel 47, an affiliate of the Telemundo network. In 1983, he was co-host of Tiempo, a weekly English-language Hispanic program on WABC-TV Channel 7 in New York. |
GREAT HISPANIC AMERICAN HISTORY TOUR
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Many of the shows he hosted, as well as many of his TV appearances as a political analyst, are now part of a YouTube archive of almost 500 videos covering more than 30 years. Now he has his own Youtube channel, Miguel Pérez TV.
On Spanish-language radio, Pérez was the host of award-winning "Sin Censura" (Uncensored), a daily two-hour talk-radio program – one of New York’s most spirited and popular – on WADO Radio in 2001-2002, on WSKQ Radio in 1991-1992, and on WJIT Radio in 1989-1990. In 2002, Pérez won the two most coveted prizes for Spanish-language radio broadcasters in New York: The Achievement In Radio (A.I.R.) Award as the “Best Hispanic On-Air Personality” in the news/talk format, for his coverage of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in New York City. |
“Sin Censura” also won the ACE Award as the “best radio talk show in the city” from the Association of Entertainment Critics. Pérez has also served as a guest commentator, in English, on National Public Radio’s “Latino USA” program.
On the Internet, Pérez was the editor of NYNJLatinos.com, an online daily newspaper for New York and New Jersey Latinos, owned by The Record, from 1999 to 2001. Currently, he hosts two websites, his own www.miguelperez.com – featuring links to his articles and columns – and www.hiddenhispanicheritage.com, devoted to his history project. Pérez is a street reporter who gets involved. Clippings below show him covering everything from riots to World Cup celebrations. |
In 1979, he was instrumental in helping police persuade three Spanish-speaking gunmen to release two-dozen people who were being held hostage in a Brooklyn supermarket.
In 1980, at a time when dissatisfied Cuban exiles were hijacking airplanes back to Havana, by carrying bottles of inflamables, Pérez tested airport security by boarding airplanes with a bottle whisky in is back pocket. In that same year he was on the front lines covering the Miami riots, were many were killed, and he also spent three months disguised as an undocumented immigrant and wrote a four-part Daily News series on "Sweatshops: The New Slavery," for which he won the Public Service Award of the Public Relations Society of America, New York Chapter. See clippings below. For The Record, again pretending to be an undocumented immigrant, Pérez crossed the Rio Grande and a New Mexico desert for a 1995 series of articles on "Border Wars." In 1994, he flew with the "Brothers to the Rescue" pilots in a small aircraft searching for Cuban rafters lost and adrift in the Florida Straits and traveled to the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to expose the conditions at Cuban and Haitian refugee detention camps. In 2000, he went back to the roots of his youth in Miami, to explain to his readers why Cuban-Americans felt so emotional about Elian Gonzalez. In 1999, he accompanied a group of doctors to earthquake-devastated Armenia, Colombia, for a series of columns that served to reconnect broken umbilical cords between Colombian-Americans and their motherland. In 1997, he won a fellowship from the Newspaper Association of America to study Interactive Media at the prestigious Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Fl. Pérez has pursued a journalism career since high school. He served as sports editor of the Miami High Times. He was editor-in-chief of The Falcon Times of Miami-Dade Community College, which, for his tenure, received the Pacemaker Award, given to the top six college papers in the nation. He was also the founder and first editor of The Good Times of Florida International University, from where he graduated in 1974 with a bachelor’s degree in political science. Four years later, he received a Master’s in journalism from Columbia University in New York City. |
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