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Phelps
S. Hawkins Professor
Hawkins has more than 40 years of experience as a journalist,
executive and manager in all facets of broadcast news, production and marketing, with a particular emphasis on international
news. He has reported in 29 countries and has served as foreign editor for NBC News. A common theme
running through many of his international projects is the need for Americans to understand other countries and their citizens,
thus becoming true citizens of the world themselves.
Reflecting a recurring frustration with the lack of quality,
substance, and global commitment of U.S. broadcast news, Mr. Hawkins moved to Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, in August 2007 to
accept an appointment as Assistant Professor of Journalism at the American University in Bulgaria. There, along with
his wife and fellow faculty member Sandra Earley, he is teaching elite students from Bulgaria and surrounding states, soon
to include students from Afghanistan and North Korea. “The wonderful mix of opportunity and challenge at AUBG, with its focus on introducing new
ideas and appreciation of media and societal impacts on developing democracies, is remarkably rejuvenating,” Hawkins
explains. He teaches the main introductory JMC course, Communications, Media & Society, basic
journalism and TV reporting courses, Media Law & Ethics, and advanced courses in international reporting and
global media.
A long-time innovator dedicated to fashioning top-quality TV and radio programs with complex content, Professor
Hawkins is the founder and principal partner of Mission Media Inc. of Columbia, MD. It advises on national and
international projects that employ high quality, responsible journalism to address significant social and cultural issues. Before
moving to Bulgaria, he was advising Chestnut Hill College in Philadelphia on its TV studio operation and teaching
television and journalism production. He has also advised the President of American University - Central Asia
in Kyrgyzstan on global communications and marketing, as well as its journalism and broadcasting academic programs.
Previously, Professor Hawkins led seminars with local broadcasters in Hungary on contemporary news techniques and the
prospects/problems of mixing quality journalism with revenue expectations. That project, coordinated with the Government
of Hungary and the Cox International Center at the University of Georgia, revealed as much about U.S. news broadcasting as
the needs in Hungary.
Professor Hawkins played
a major role in creating the innovative Mideast News Service
in January 2003. He advised on the broad content of the web site, its mission statement and promotion of the service.
He also produced "MNS Journal," the web site's unique video vignettes and analysis reports from
the Middle East.
Building often-unique synergies in news operations
and programming has been a recurring theme throughout Mr. Hawkins’ varied career. Even in his early
work with the U.S. Navy in Vietnam, he was recognized by the Secretary of the Navy for his innovative work building technical
and content capacities between commands in the Gulf of Tonkin. By the mid-1970’s and at the CBS affiliate
in Eastern Idaho, he instituted the first noon-time combination news and home advice program which dominated the time slot
within four months. Later, at NBC News in Asia, he worked to develop a system of “firebases”
through the region, streamlining news coverage and reducing costs, while also pushing for collaboration among news agencies. NBC News has been a regular professional base for Mr. Hawkins during his wide and varied career. He began in
1972 as a desk assistant at the network's New York news headquarters, when he was just back from Vietnam and attending Columbia
University. Since then he has held several important positions. As Manager of News Operations in
Tokyo from 1986 to 1990, he ran the region's 10 bureaus outside Japan and trained the Asian news desk staff in Tokyo.
He also produced major news coverage for the network, including coverage of China's Tiananmen Square riots, Emperor Hirohito's
death, Gorbachev meeting Gandhi, the Philippine and South Korean democracy movements, and U.S.-Vietnam MIA talks.
Prior to his Asia tour, he was an NBC News foreign editor in New York and conceived, assigned and coordinated both foreign
and domestic news coverage. More recently, he was a business news editor for CNBC, also coordinating coverage with CNBC
Asia and Europe.
Public broadcasting's commitment to thoughtful, global programming has also attracted Mr. Hawkins
during his career. In the early 1990's, he was Senior Vice President of News and Information for Public
Radio International in Minneapolis, where he built the news production and marketing department. He also conceived PRI's
award-winning global news program, "The World."
In public television, Mr. Hawkins was the Director of
News and Public Affairs for Chicago's WTTW-TV. There he developed and produced local, national, and international
documentaries, town hall meetings, political debates and a children's series on education.
Mr. Hawkins went on
to combine his public television and radio interests at the New Jersey Network, the state's public broadcasting operation.
He served as Executive Producer for TV News, in charge of the network's unique, statewide, daily news program. At the
same time, he re-launched and managed the network's radio operation, quintupling its audience in just the first audience survey. He
was also a member of NJN’s Executive Staff.
Earlier, Mr. Hawkins worked as a reporter at several TV stations
including KARE-TV in Minneapolis, where he was Managing Editor, and KMSP-TV, also in Minneapolis, where he was Assistant News
Director and did daily TV reporting. He was Director of News and Production for Guam Cable TV. Based on his
revamping of all facets of the newsroom, it won the 1978 "Best Newscast" award from the National Cable Television
Association (NCTA).
Professor Hawkins has a Master of Science degree in journalism and a BA in history,
both from Columbia University. He was also a Reflective Leadership Fellow at the University of Minnesota's Hubert
Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. He served on the Board of the Centre for Asians and Pacific Islanders (CAPI) in
Minneapolis, as a Trustee of the Phelps Stokes Fund, and currently serves on the Board of the Camp Nejeda Foundation for Diabetic
children. During
three tours of duty in Vietnam from 1967 to 1971, Mr. Hawkins served as a Navy journalist on the aircraft carrier USS Oriskany.
The holder of seven awards and citations during his Navy career, he was awarded the Navy Achievement Medal from the Secretary
of the Navy for his radio and television work in support of the troops, both in the Gulf of Tonkin and in-country. As a global media
consultant for more than a decade, Mr. Hawkins offers media training, mission-oriented videos, freelance writing and copy
editing, and international strategies and planning services through his company, Mission Media Inc. His clients have
included The Diabetes Foundation, Novo Nordisk, HealthPartners, the Hubert Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, Southwestern
Bell, Public Radio International, the Government of Hungary, Winning Strategies Public Relations, and others.
Professor Hawkins
lives in Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, with his wife, writer, editor and fellow professor Sandra Earley, and son, Bradshaw, who recently
graduated from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.
Committed to World-class journalism for companies & non-profits.
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