Aaron Harber Bio, Age, Wife, Show, Net Worth, Height, Channel 3

Aaron Harber Biography

Aaron Harber is a long-form political TV discussion show host in the United States who can be seen on KCDO-TV Channel 3 Colorado, COMCAST Entertainment Television, and KPXC-TV.

How old is Aaron Harber? – Age

He is 70 years old as of 2023. He was born in 1953 in Boulder, Colorado, United States.

Aaron Harber Education

Aaron graduated first in his class and valedictorian from Boulder’s Fairview High School. Later, he received an AB from Princeton University and a specific degree in Economics from The Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.

Harber was the first individual in Princeton’s 220-year history to receive the W. Sanderson Detwiler 1903 Prize and the Class of 1901 Medal. Later, he got a master’s degree in public administration at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, where he focused on business, government, and political ethics. Harber was a member of Princeton University’s Board of Trustees as well as the Department of Civil and Geological Engineering’s Advisory Committee.

Aaron Harber Net Worth

He has an estimated net worth of $5 Million.

Aaron Harber Height

He has an estimated net worth of 6 feet 2 inches(1.88).

Aaron Harber  Show

The Aaron Harber Show, a nonpartisan political TV discussion show, is hosted and executive produced by Harber. Harber launched a new local election series, Colorado Election 2010, in January 2010. It featured non-partisan candidates during Colorado’s 2010 election season.

Harber was the executive producer of a new series, The Senate in Balance, in January 2008, which was primarily intended as a public platform for incumbent Congressman Mark Udall (D) and former Colorado Congressman Bob Schaffer (R). Harber created and hosted a seven-part documentary series on the 2008 Democratic National Convention.

Harber worked as an on-air political analyst for CW2 of the CW Network (formerly Tribune Broadcasting station KWGN and WB2, part of the Warner Brothers Network) in Denver and throughout Colorado from 1998 until 2008. Harber, representing KBDI-TV Channel 12, collaborated with CBS4 (KCNC Channel 4) to deliver two and a half hours of live, nightly coverage and commentary of the 2008 Democratic National Convention.

Harber contributes to The Huffington Post on public policy and economic concerns. He also writes a column for Colorado’s largest political journal, The Colorado Statesman, and for The Denver Daily News.

Aaron Harber Career

Harber’s most memorable stretch in communicating was in 1992 as the host of The Guard Dog, a policy-centered issues, shopper undertakings, and residents’ privileges program on the Discussion of the Rockies Organization. In 1994, he became host of After the Hurry. This program was at first outlined as a hilarious however relevant reaction to Rush Limbaugh which immediately quit focusing on Limbaugh, and on second thought handled the issues of the day.

Harber earned public respect when he was sued pointlessly for $20 million by Rush Limbaugh et al., for utilizing “Rush” in the title of his public radio program. With wide-based help across the political range, Harber won in the government legal dispute.

Aaron Harber Photo
Aaron Harber Photo

In 1997, the discussion business’ driving distribution Talkers Magazine chose Harber out of 5,000 hosts in the nation over as one of America’s “100 Most Significant Anchor people” (alongside others like Wear Imus, G. Gordon Liddy, Rush Limbaugh, Dr. Laura Schlesinger, Howard Harsh, and Bruce Williams).

In 1998, Harber moved from the ‘alk America Radio Organization (where he was heard on 51 radio broadcasts the nation over) solely into the TV field. In 2000, he facilitated the noteworthy impartial mission series Political race 2000, which was communicated on over-the-air TV (Colorado Public TV KBDI-television 12) as well as on the web, on account of financing from the John S. Furthermore, James L. Knight Establishment and an organization with the Denver Post.

After two years, Harber facilitated the fair Political race 2002 series on Colorado Public TV as an exhibit of how to advance impartial political decision data as well as to furnish residents with broad up-and-comer access and political decision inclusion.

Harber was a host on Colorado Chooses 2004 when it turned into a joint endeavor of KCNC-television (CBS4), KBDI-Station 12, and the Rough Mountain News. For Colorado Concludes 2006 he was the host, arbitrator, as well as essential examiner for each of the 21 projects remembering live call-for shows. He repeated this job in 2008.

Harber’s projects are presently conveyed by various stations, stations, and organizations, from business stations like Comcast Amusement TV and KPXC-television (part of Particle Media Organizations) to public TV slots and Free TV satellite Television stations as well as link stations like television Aspen.