Miles O'Brien (journalist)

Journalist

Birthday June 9, 1959

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Detroit, Michigan, U.S.

Age 64 years old

Nationality United States

#32634 Most Popular

1959

Miles O'Brien (born June 9, 1959) is an independent American broadcast news journalist specializing in science, technology, and aerospace who has been serving as national science correspondent for PBS NewsHour since 2010.

Born in Detroit and raised in Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan, O’Brien attended Georgetown University.

1982

In 1982, he was offered and accepted his first broadcasting position with WRC-TV in Washington, DC.

He was later a reporter and anchor at TV stations in Boston, Massachusetts; Tampa, Florida; Albany, New York; and St. Joseph, Missouri.

1988

A private pilot since 1988, O’Brien also reported extensively on civil aviation issues and crash investigations.

O'Brien reported the airliner crashes of US Airways Flight 427, ValuJet 592, TWA 800, EgyptAir 990, American Airlines 587, Comair 5191, John F. Kennedy Jr., Payne Stewart, Paul Wellstone, the C-150 incursion into the Washington DC Air Defense Identification Zone, and the Cory Lidle crash in Manhattan.

In the wake of the September 11 attacks, O'Brien provided viewers with radar tracks of the hijacked flights while the twin towers were still standing.

During the Afghanistan and Iraq invasions, he, along with various retired generals, reported on military aviation techniques and strategy.

His coverage of non-aerospace topics included anchoring The Situation Room, covering the terrorist attack in Mumbai on the Oberoi Trident and Taj Mahal hotels, as well as several other locations.

He also covered Hurricane Katrina for several weeks, anchoring CNN's Peabody and Dupont Award-winning coverage.

1992

O’Brien joined CNN in 1992.

He is a third-generation general aviation pilot.

His father, a private pilot, shared his love of flying with him at an early age.

His first flights were in small Cessnas and Pipers rented by his father.

O'Brien's paternal and maternal grandfathers were also both pilots.

While with CNN in Atlanta and New York, O’Brien served as CNN's science, space, aviation technology, and environment correspondent.

He anchored programs including Science and Technology Week, Headline News, Primetime, Live From…(CNN), and CNN American Morning.

O’Brien covered all aspects of the United States space program for CNN including reports on the Hubble Space Telescope, the shuttle dockings at Mir, the first space station launch from Kazakhstan, landings on Mars, the winning of the Ansari X-Prize, and the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster and its crew, a story he told to the world in a 16-hour marathon of live coverage.

After years of negotiations, NASA had signed an agreement with CNN that, if not for the disaster, would have made O’Brien the first journalist to fly on a space shuttle.

O’Brien followed the investigation and successful return to flight.

2000

In 2000, O’Brien produced, shot, and wrote a one-hour documentary on the process of readying a space shuttle for flight: "Terminal Count: What it Takes to Make the Space Shuttle Fly," which aired in May 2001.

2008

O’Brien left CNN in December 2008.

2009

O’Brien joined "True/Slant" as a blogger in 2009.

He co-founded the Spaceflight Now podcast, "This Week in Space" in 2009, and hosted shows until the retirement of the shuttle in 2011.

Starting in 2009, O’Brien joined the National Science Foundation as a correspondent for the “Science Nation” series, and joined the PBS Frontline produced by WGBH-TV Boston, as a writer and correspondent.

He worked on the Frontline documentary, "Flying Cheap" which aired on the one-year anniversary of the Colgan Air plane crash in Buffalo, NY.

The highly acclaimed documentary featured former Colgan Air pilots revealing shocking details about some attempts to keep underpaid pilots flying beyond legal limits.

2010

In 2010, O'Brien became a PBS NewsHour science correspondent.

2013

In 2013, O’Brien produced and directed “Mind of a Rampage Killer” and “Manhunt: Boston Bombers” and “Megastorm Aftermath” for PBS' Nova. In 2014, he produced and narrated "Why Planes Vanish" for Nova, adapted from "Where is Flight MH370?"

from the BBC science program Horizon.

He also narrated a recent view after the Fukushima disaster on a new episode of Nova.

O'Brien resides in Chevy Chase, Maryland.

He has a son, Miles, and a daughter, Connery.

An instrument-rated pilot with about 2,000 hours pilot-in-command time, O'Brien owns a Cirrus SR22, which he often flies on assignments.

His other interests include running, mountain and road biking, swimming, waterskiing, scuba diving, sailing, and carpentry.

2014

He was rehired by CNN as an aviation analyst in March, 2014.

After leaving CNN, O’Brien formed Miles O’Brien Productions, LLC in Washington, DC.

Through this independent company, O’Brien creates stories for numerous outlets including PBS, Discovery Science (TV channel), National Science Foundation, Spaceflightnow.com, and corporate clients.

One of his most notable series productions for PBS was "Blueprint America" that dealt with rebuilding American mass transit infrastructure.

In February, 2014, O'Brien was injured when a Pelican case filled with television equipment fell on his left forearm, causing acute compartment syndrome and resulting in the amputation of his left arm above the elbow.