Bill Larson's career as a communicator,
broadcast journalist and news staff manager and writer spans more than four
decades. In positions with radio and TV stations throughout the US, Bill has
been responsible for the direction of news staff personnel and the complete
supervision of news coverage.
Bill distinguished himself with his expert broadcast
reporting of America's space program during the 1960s and 70s. He covered
every launch at Cape Kennedy and Kennedy Space Center from the first
Gemini
launch through the moon landing of Apollo 11. He was one of the first
reporters to break the story of the Apollo One fire. During his following
ten years at ABC News in New York he anchored the broadcasts of all manned
launches from KSC except for his live network "pool" coverage of
"splashdown" recoveries in the South Pacific. He reported from aboard the
carriers New Orleans and Ticonderoga for 2 Skylab missions and Apollo14.
Serving as ABC co-anchor with Merrill Mueller, Bill provided continuous
coverage of the second inaugural of President Nixon. Bill also anchored
approximately 25 network radio news broadcasts per week on the ABC Radio
Network.
In 1980 Bill moved to Chicago and opened his own consulting
firm providing executives with the skills needed to capture the attention of
an audience and to work effectively with the news media. His clients
included numerous Fortune 500 companies. He also appeared in several TV
shows, movies and local, regional and national commercials.
Currently Bill is semi-retired in Florida where he continues
to write, co-produce and narrate videos for various production companies and
government agencies including NASA, the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation and
Hall of fame as well the Air Force 45th Space Wing. He was the
writer/narrator on the award winning documentary "John Glenn Recalls the
Flight of Friendship 7."