Ti-Hua Chang Biography
Ti-Hua Chang, a Chinese American television journalist, has been based in New York City since 1989. He worked as the climate change investigative reporter for TYT Investigates. He has worked as an investigative reporter for a number of New York City-area and national news outlets.
Ti-Hua Chang Age
Ti was born on 6 September 1950, in New York, New York, United States of America. He is 73 years old as of September 2023.
Ti-Hua Chang Education
He has a bachelor’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania and a Master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism (1977).
Ti-Hua Chang Wife
In 2002, he married Elaine Huie, a fashion designer. Chang practices Brazilian jiu-jitsu at Renzo Gracies in New York City.
Ti-Hua Chang Career
He was a freelance correspondent for CBS Evening News. He began working as a general assignment reporter for WWOR/MY9 in 2008. A year later, he worked as a general assignment and investigative reporter for WNYW, a FOX station in New York. Before joining WCBS in 2005, Chang was a general assignment/investigative TV reporter at WNBC-TV. Prior to that, he hosted his own chat program, New York Hotline, on WNYC-TV. Chang previously worked as an investigative producer for ABC News and a reporter for WLOX in Biloxi, Mississippi, KYW-TV in Philadelphia, KUSA in Denver, and WJBK in Detroit.
Chang received the George Foster Peabody Award in 1996 for his news documentary “Passport to Kill”. The series of publications followed alleged child killers and cops who fled to the Dominican Republic, where they were shielded by archaic extradition laws. The laws have changed. In 2006. He received an Edward R. Murrow Award for a story on police employing high-tech equipment to spy on a romantic pair. As an ABC Primetime Live producer, he helped to put Byron De la Beckwith, the assassin of civil rights icon Medgar Evers, behind bars 29 years later. On March 9, 2020, he joined The Young Turks network as an investigative climate reporter. In 2022, Chang began working as a freelance MMJ for Newsday TV.
Ti-Hua Chang Awards
Chang has also received five Emmys, Press Association prizes in Philadelphia, Denver, Detroit, and New York, AP and UPI awards, and Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) and National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) awards, including AAJA’s Lifetime Achievement Award. He is an active member of the Asian American community and has previously served on the AAJA’s national and local boards of directors in New York. Chang’s writing has appeared in The New York Times, the Detroit Free Press, and the Detroit News. In 2004, he received an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree from New York City College of Technology.
Hua Chang Net Worth
He has an estimated net worth of 3 million dollars.