James Rosen Bio, Age, Family, Wife, Net Worth, Books, Fox News

James Rosen Biography

James Rosen is a journalist, television correspondent, and author working with Sinclair Broadcast Group. He previously worked for the Fox News Channel as a Washington, D.C. correspondent.

Advertisements

How old is James Rosen? – Age

He is 52 years old as of September 2, 2020. He was born James Samuel Rosen in 1968 in Brooklyn, New York.

James Rosen Family – Education

Rosen is the son of Myron Rosen and Regina Rosen. His parents transferred him to the adjacent borough of Staten Island when he was a child, and he attended public schools there. He earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from Johns Hopkins University. He went on to Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, where he earned a master’s degree in journalism.

Is James Rosen still Married? – Wife

He married Sara Ann Durkin in 2004. Rosen, his wife, and their two sons live in Washington, D.C.

James Rosen Net Worth

He has an estimated net worth is $2 million.

What happened to John Rosen?

Rosen departed NPR in January 2018 amid sexual misconduct charges, according to NPR. Rosen allegedly made “overt physical and sexual overtures” to coworkers three times, according to the study, which was based on interviews with eight of Rosen’s former coworkers.

John Rosen The Strong Man

The Strong Man: John Mitchell and the Secrets of Watergate, a history of Richard Nixon’s attorney general, John N. Mitchell, and his involvement in the Watergate affair, was released by Doubleday in 2008. Rosen had spent 17 years researching and writing The Strong Man, which was based on a grant from William F. Buckley Jr. that he had received shortly after graduating from journalism school.

James Rosen Photo
James Rosen Photo

John Rosen Career

James previously worked for Fox News for nineteen years, where he covered the White House and State Department beats, served as chief Washington correspondent, and reported from Capitol Hill, the Pentagon, the Supreme Court, the campaign trail, and nearly all fifty states as well as forty foreign countries on five continents.

The Obama administration designated James as a criminal co-conspirator in a violation of the Espionage Act as a result of his exclusive reporting on North Korea’s nuclear weapons program; the ensuing furor sparked a national debate about press freedoms in the Obama era and led to procedural reforms at the Department of Justice for the treatment of journalists. When it was uncovered that employees at the State Department inappropriately erased James’s insightful line of questioning about the Iran nuclear deal from the department’s archives of daily press briefings, his effort triggered procedural adjustments. Presidents, secretaries of state, CIA directors, and celebrities from the worlds of literature and popular cultures, such as Paul McCartney, Tom Wolfe, Laura Hillenbrand, and others, have all been interviewed by James.