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Joe Halderman
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Joe Halderman : ウィキペディア英語版
Joe Halderman

Robert Joel "Joe" Halderman (born October 1957, Dayton, Ohio) is an American television news writer, director, Emmy Award-nominated producer, and convicted felon.〔(Joe Halderman at the Internet Movie Database )〕
==Career==

Halderman's journalistic career began in 1980 when he worked for CNN in New York. He was hired as a sound man and then became a cameraman, a writer and an assignment editor. In 1982, he went to work for CBS News, first on the national assignment desk and then, as a producer on the ''CBS Morning Show'' with Diane Sawyer and Bill Kurtis. In 1986, he produced the CBS specials ''AIDS Hits Home'' and ''48 Hours on Crack Street.'' He became a foreign reporter who travelled to more than 70 countries, and was responsible for war reportage from nations such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, and Bosnia.
He was stationed in London for 12 years, throughout the 1990s, from where he reported on events in the Soviet Union and later Russia. In 1992, he wrote and produced the CBS special ''Somalia: A Country Is Dying.'' Halderman worked for CBS Sports during the Winter Olympic Games in Albertville, France '92, Lillehammer, Norway '94 and Nagano, Japan '98.
During the 2000s, Halderman worked on domestic shows for CBS, He produced the show ''Flashpoint'' in 2007, and from 2005–2009, he was also a producer of the CBS true crime journalism series ''48 Hours,'' including episodes such as ''Out of the Shadows'' (2005), about the serial killer Dennis Rader, also known as the BTK Killer, and ''Virginia Tech: Anatomy of a Rampage'' (2007), about the school shooting and mass murder known as the Virginia Tech massacre which took place at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.〔 Halderman wrote and produced more than 50 episodes of ''48 Hours'' during his tenure there. In September 2006 he produced ''Five Years Later: How Safe Are We?,'' a look at US security since the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and The Pentagon.〔
Halderman's work at CBS News won an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for broadcast journalism and eight Emmy Awards. He also received an Academy Award nomination for the 2006 film ''Beslan: Three Days in September'' which was narrated by Julia Roberts. The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York and aired on Showtime. The film, which Halderman wrote, directed and produced, combined guerilla footage and interviews with family members, soldiers, local politicians, school officials, and survivors to describe the hostage-taking and massacre of hundreds of people at a children's school by Chechen rebels in North Ossetia, Russia.〔〔
In July 2010, when he was serving his sentence at Riker's Island, Halderman was nominated for an Emmy as a producer of a ''48 Hours Mystery'' segment regarding Amanda Knox. The Emmy was won instead by a ''60 Minutes'' segment on the War in Pakistan.〔http://www.emmyonline.org/mediacenter/news_31st_winners.html〕
Halderman was the Senior Producer for ''On the Case with Paula Zahn'' from 2011 to 2013.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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