Ron
Handberg
Ron
Handberg grew up in Minnesota, was educated by its schools,
its University and its School of Journalism. He took his
first broadcast job in Minnesota. Resisting repeated efforts
from the networks, Handberg chose to stay in his home state.
Handberg
spent twenty-nine years of his professional life working for
WCCO-AM and WCCO-TV. During Handberg's tenure as News Director
and Vice President and General Manager at WCCO-TV, the station
expanded to five newscasts each weekday, created the largest
investigative unit in local broadcast journalism, launched
the award winning "The Moore Report" and instituted
regular editorials. Under his guidance, WCCO-TV created the
I-Team in 1980, which in its first ten years won twelve national
awards including two Emmys, two Peabodys and two duPont/Columbia
awards.
Handberg
maintained a strong relations between WCCO-TV and the University
of Minnesota's School of Journalism, supporting it financially,
encouraging his staff to teach and lecture at the school,
and building an extensive student intern program.
No station effort better symbolized Handberg's rigorous commitment
to journalistic ethics than his support for "In the Public
Interest", a series of innovative broadcasts in which
WCCO-TV invited its severest critics to challenge and question
the station's operation live in prime time.
In
1989, Handberg retired from WCCO-TV to return to his first
passion, writing. After four years, he was enticed back into
the newsroom to help launch a daily newscast for Twin City
Public Television, which became a model for other public television
stations across the country.
He returned to his writing and has published four mystery
novels. He continues to live (and write) in the Twin Cities
with his wife Carol, and their children and grandchildren
living close by.