Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| Lara Logan | |
|---|---|
| Birth place | Durban, Natal Province, South Africa |
| Education | University of Natal |
| Occupation | War correspondent, Television presenter |
| Yearsactive | 1990–present |
| Spouse | Jason Siebel (m. 2008) |
| Employer | CBS News (2002–2018), Fox News (2021–present) |
| Known for | Foreign reporting, 60 Minutes |
Lara Logan is a South African-born war correspondent and television presenter known for her extensive frontline reporting from global conflict zones. Her career, primarily with CBS News and later Fox News, has been marked by high-profile assignments and significant controversy. Logan has received numerous awards for her journalism but has also faced intense scrutiny for her reporting methods and public statements.
Born in Durban, she grew up during the final years of apartheid in South Africa. Logan attended the University of Natal, where she initially pursued a degree in commerce. Her interest in current events led her to switch her focus, and she began working as a reporter for the Sunday Tribune in Durban. This early experience covering local stories during a turbulent political era laid the foundation for her future career in international journalism.
Logan began her broadcast career with Reuters Television and later worked for Associated Press Television News in Europe and Africa. Her breakthrough came when she joined CBS News in 2002 as a correspondent, quickly becoming a regular contributor to the CBS Evening News and a full-time correspondent for 60 Minutes. She reported extensively from Afghanistan and Iraq following the September 11 attacks and the subsequent war, earning a reputation for immersive, dangerous fieldwork. In 2018, after a series of controversies, her contract with CBS was not renewed. She later joined the Fox News channel in 2021, where she hosts the documentary series Lara Logan Has No Agenda and contributes to Fox Nation.
In 2008, she married Jason Siebel, a venture capitalist and former U.S. Navy SEAL officer. The couple has two children and resides in the United States. Logan is a naturalized American citizen. Her experiences as a mother and her husband's military background have been topics she has occasionally referenced in discussions about covering conflict and terrorism.
Logan's career has been punctuated by several major controversies. In 2011, while covering the Egyptian revolution in Cairo's Tahrir Square, she was the victim of a brutal sexual assault and beating by a mob, an event that sparked widespread debate about the dangers faced by journalists. In 2013, her report for 60 Minutes on the 2012 Benghazi attack, featuring an interview with security contractor Dylan Davies, was retracted by CBS News after an internal review found critical flaws in the sourcing and verification. More recently, her tenure at Fox News has been marked by controversial statements, including comparisons of Anthony Fauci to Josef Mengele and spreading disinformation about COVID-19 vaccines, leading to formal rebukes from the network.
Despite controversies, Logan has received significant recognition for her work. She is a recipient of the Emmy Award, a Gerald Loeb Award, and multiple Edward R. Murrow Awards. Her reporting from Afghanistan earned her the Michele Clark Fellowship from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She has also been honored by the Radio Television Digital News Association and the Overseas Press Club for her international coverage.
Category:South African journalists Category:American television journalists Category:War correspondents Category:CBS News people Category:Fox News people