Alex Sanz is a veteran journalist and senior news leader.
He is the deputy managing editor and politics director at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and is overseeing a major expansion of its politics franchise, providing overall leadership and oversight to the politics teams, overseeing the editorial strategy for state and national political coverage, and working with senior editorial leaders to develop the AJC’s video, podcast, newsletter and live events strategies.
The AJC’s mission is to be the most essential and engaging source of news and information for the people of Atlanta, of Georgia and the South. Backed by a substantial investment by Cox Enterprises, which also owns Axios, the AJC is focusing on new content experiences, new formats and new product capabilities to ensure its world-class journalism meets audiences where they are.
Since joining the AJC, he has directed coverage of the 2024 presidential election, including the CNN presidential debate in Atlanta, the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, President Joe Biden's decision to end his reelection campaign, the Democratic National Convention in Chicago and the ABC News presidential debate in Philadelphia.
Sanz joined Cox and the AJC in 2024 after working for more than a decade at The Associated Press. He worked as a global news manager at the AP, overseeing the news report in all formats and platforms, working with news leaders and journalists to drive coverage of the world’s top stories, and with broadcast television networks and television stations in North America to build and expand editor-to-editor relationships with the AP.
From the Nerve Center, the hub of AP’s global newsroom, which serves as a center for global news coordination and planning, standards, research, editorial communication and audience engagement, he oversaw coverage of the Israel-Hamas war; the Russia-Ukraine war; the 2024 presidential election in the United States; the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny; the British Royal family, including King Charles III’s and Princess Kate’s cancer diagnoses; the attack at Crocus City Hall in Moscow; the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore; the mass shootings at the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory parade and in Lewiston, Maine; the Republican presidential debates in Miami and Simi Vally, California; and led coverage of the death of former U.S. first lady Rosalynn Carter and Hurricane Idalia in Florida. He also helped manage the AP’s national security and foreign policy series with the 2024 Republican presidential candidates in collaboration with Clemson University and contributed reporting to the AP’s coverage of the Israel-Hamas war and the total solar eclipse in North America.
Previously, as deputy director of newsgathering, he led a team of AP journalists in the southeastern United States and supervised the region’s state-based news editors and video staff in 27 states, including the central United States. He oversaw the region’s politics coverage, was involved in the development and production of The AP Interview, served as a moderator of the AP’s live political roundtable, directed and expanded the AP’s video coverage of space, and helped lead the effort to expand the AP’s video newsgathering footprint in the United States.
Sanz also worked with the team focused on the AP’s efforts to deepen engagement with audiences on APNews.com, the AP News app, social media and other emerging digital platforms, with the goal of bringing the AP’s journalism, including its election coverage, to more people, in more modern ways.
In 2021, he joined the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Board of Governors. Two years earlier, he was inducted into the Silver Circle, one of the organization’s most prestigious awards, honoring a lifetime of dedication to the television industry. He is a mentor at Military Veterans in Journalism and in 2022 was honored as MVJ Mentor of the Year.
At the AP, Sanz directed coverage of the 2022 midterm election; Hurricane Ian in southwest Florida; the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas; the trial of the three men who chased and killed Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Ga.; the partial collapse of Champlain Towers South in Surfside, Fla.; civil unrest after the death of George Floyd and the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin; the coronavirus pandemic; the 2020 presidential election, including the South Carolina Democratic presidential primary and the Democratic presidential primary debates in Charleston, Atlanta and Miami; the March 3, 2019, tornado outbreak in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina; the 2018 midterm election; Hurricane Michael in Florida and Hurricane Florence in North Carolina and South Carolina; the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida; the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia; and other major stories in the central and southeastern United States.
He also managed the AP’s extensive, all-formats coverage of the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. and helped oversee all-formats coverage of the 50th anniversary of the Apollo program, the first commercial crew program launches from the United States, Blue Origin’s first crewed flight to space, Super Bowl LIII in Atlanta, Super Bowl LIV in Miami and Super Bowl LV in Tampa.
Sanz reported on the tensions in Ukraine and the impact on U.S.-Russia space cooperation, the fall of Afghanistan and American efforts to rescue a high-profile national police officer being hunted by Taliban insurgents because of his years working with the United States military. After several failed attempts, Mohammad Khalid Wardak and his family were whisked away by helicopter in a dramatic rescue carried out under the cover of darkness. Several weeks later, they settled in the United States. He also reported on international efforts to evacuate members of Afghanistan’s girls national soccer team and their families over fears of reprisal by the Taliban. The girls were later reunited with Farkhunda Muhtaj, the captain of the women’s national team, who helped arrange their rescue.
He joined the AP’s U.S. News leadership team in 2017 after covering national politics, the 2016 presidential election, the 2014 midterm election, the southeastern United States and space for Associated Press Television News, the international television division of The Associated Press. He reported throughout the United States, including from the first-in-the-nation presidential primary in New Hampshire, the Democratic and Republican presidential primary debates and the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, where Hillary Clinton made history as the first woman in the United States to become the presidential nominee of a major political party.
Sanz also reported on the Word of Faith Fellowship in Spindale, North Carolina, an extensive, 18-month investigation in which more than three dozen former church members told the AP in exclusive interviews that congregants were regularly punched, smacked, choked, slammed to the floor or thrown through walls in a violent form of deliverance meant to "purify" sinners by beating out devils – allegations the church denied. In 2018, the Society of Professional Journalists and the Green Eyeshade Awards honored Sanz for his reporting on the congregation.
In addition to his reports for APTN, AP Radio Network and the wire service, his work has appeared in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Boston Globe, The New York Times, The Washington Post, TIME and USA TODAY. It has also appeared on ABC News, Al Jazeera, BBC World News, CBS News, Inside Edition, National Public Radio, NBC News, PBS NewsHour and television and radio stations across the United States and around the world.
He was part of a team of AP journalists honored in 2017 by the Society of Professional Journalists with a Sigma Delta Chi award for Divided America, the AP’s exploration of the economic, social and political divisions in American society. He was also part of a team of AP journalists honored by the Associated Press Media Editors, an association of news and broadcast leaders, journalism educators and student leaders in the United States and Canada, for its coverage of the mass shooting at Pulse in Orlando. In 2015, he and other AP journalists were honored by the Press Club of Atlantic City with National Headliner Awards for their coverage of the Ebola outbreak and the decision of a St. Louis County grand jury not to indict Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson after the death of Michael Brown. He was also part of a team of AP journalists honored by the Society of Professional Journalists with a Sigma Delta Chi award and APME award for their coverage of the St. Louis County grand jury decision. The Society of Professional Journalists also honored him with a Green Eyeshade Award for his coverage of three men from Little Rock, Arkansas, who traveled to Boston to finish the Boston Marathon one year after the April 15, 2013, bombing.
Before joining The Associated Press in 2013, Sanz covered government, politics and criminal justice for The E.W. Scripps Company. Earlier that year, he covered the second-degree murder trial of George Zimmerman in Sanford, Florida. In 2012, he traveled throughout Florida to cover the Republican presidential primary, the Republican National Convention in Tampa, the campaigns of President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and the presidential debate at Lynn University in Boca Raton. He was one of the first journalists in the country to sit down for an interview with U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan after he became the Republican vice presidential nominee.
Sanz was also part of a team of journalists who reported for FLDemocracy2012.com, a joint venture of The E.W. Scripps Company, its Florida television stations, the Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers and the Naples Daily News. At The E.W. Scripps Company, Sanz covered milestones in the U.S. space program, including the inaugural SpaceX mission to the International Space Station and the construction of the Orion spacecraft. His reports aired on WPTV-TV and WFLX-TV in South Florida, WFTS-TV in Tampa, KNXV-TV in Phoenix and other Scripps television stations in the United States.
He joined The E.W. Scripps Company from KHOU-TV in Houston, where he covered Harris County government, Houston City Hall and NASA. At KHOU, Sanz contributed a wide range of enterprise, general assignment and breaking news reports, and filled in on the anchor desk. He covered the 2010 midterm election and the 2008 presidential election, and was part of the KHOU news team honored by the Radio Television Digital News Association with two Edward R. Murrow Awards for its coverage of wildfires in Texas. He was the first journalist to broadcast live from Grimes County, Texas, as wildfires threatened three counties near Houston in 2011. His first reports, streamed via broadband, were part of the "Texas on Fire" coverage honored by RTDNA. He was nominated for a Lone Star EMMY Award in 2011 for his coverage of spot news. He was also honored by the Texas Associated Press Broadcasters for spot news coverage and for his coverage of breaking news, homeland security, NASA and and the January 12, 2010, earthquake in Haiti. In 2011, Sanz was part of the KHOU 11 News This Morning team honored as the best morning newscast in Texas. That year, he was also nominated for the Texas Farm Bureau Excellence in Journalism award for his coverage of Brazoria and Galveston counties.
In 2010, Sanz was nominated for a Lone Star EMMY Award for his coverage of NASA. He was also honored by the Texas Associated Press Broadcasters for his coverage of Harris County government. In 2008, he was part of the station’s continuous, Lone Star EMMY and Edward R. Murrow award-winning coverage of Hurricane Ike, reporting on coastal evacuations, the storm’s landfall, its impact on the Houston area and the recovery efforts. A year earlier, his breaking news reports for KHOU 11 News This Morning contributed to the program’s Lone Star EMMY nomination for best large market morning newscast. While in Houston, Sanz filed reports for CBS Newspath, CBS News on Logo, CBS Radio News, The Early Show and other Belo Corporation television stations, including KENS-TV in San Antonio, Texas, KVUE-TV in Austin, Texas, and WFAA-TV in Dallas. He also contributed reports to The Daily Wrap on the Wall Street Journal Radio Network and KROI-FM in Houston.
He moved to Houston in 2006 after working for several years as a general assignment reporter at WTHR-TV in Indianapolis. At WTHR, Sanz was part of a team of journalists sent to cover the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina along the United States Gulf Coast. Through his reports as an embedded reporter, he chronicled the journey of the Indiana National Guard in Mississippi. He also traveled to Mexico with the Indianapolis police and fire departments to report on their international training mission. His series, "Badges without Borders," received the Indiana Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists first place award for Best Coverage of Minority Issues. The judges called it a story "well traveled, well told and well shot." In addition, Sanz covered the 2006 midterm election and 2004 presidential election. He contributed reports to CNN, MSNBC, NBC News Channel, NBC Weather Plus, WBNS-TV in Columbus, Ohio, and WFMS-FM in Indianapolis while at WTHR.
Sanz was a morning anchor and reporter at News 12 in New York before joining WTHR in 2003. He anchored the weekday morning newscasts and covered local, state and national politics, including the Mayor Michael Bloomberg administration and Hillary Clinton’s first term as U.S. senator, for the first, largest and most-watched regional news network in the United States. During his time in the New York tri-state area, he co-anchored News 12 Network coverage of the Northeast blackout of 2003, Operation Iraqi Freedom and the loss of space shuttle Columbia. He also co-anchored News 12’s weekly public affairs program, "2&1: Two Reporters and the Person of the Week." He joined News 12 in 2001 after working as a freelance reporter at WFTS.
His broadcast journalism career began at the Channel One Network in Los Angeles where he covered news across the country and around the world. As an anchor and correspondent for Channel One News, nearly nine million people in 12,000 secondary schools nationwide watched Sanz’s reports. His travels took him to more than 30 states and nearly a dozen countries. At Channel One, he covered the devastation of Hurricane Mitch in Central America, the drug war in Mexico and one of the worst tornado outbreaks in Oklahoma history. He also reported from the White House and Capitol Hill.
In 2000, The Imagen Foundation honored his feature "Hero Street," about the small town of Silvis, Illinois, with its Best Children’s Programming Award. In 1999, Channel One News followed him on a journey to Cuba where he traced his family’s ancestry. Prior to joining the Channel One Network in 1998, Sanz worked in morning-drive radio. He anchored news headlines at WMMS-FM in Cleveland and worked as an anchor and producer at WPLL-FM in Miami.
His career in journalism began at the Sun-Sentinel in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where he reported and wrote news and feature stories for the metro, sports, lifestyle and community news sections of the newspaper. While there, he received awards for his reporting and writing and was honored as a most valuable staffer.
Sanz is a South Florida native who studied broadcast journalism at Florida International University in Miami. He worked at WFOR-TV, WSVN-TV and WTVJ-TV in Miami while attending college. He has a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Journalism from the University System of Maryland and is a graduate of the FBI Citizens Academy.
He is the deputy managing editor and politics director at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and is overseeing a major expansion of its politics franchise, providing overall leadership and oversight to the politics teams, overseeing the editorial strategy for state and national political coverage, and working with senior editorial leaders to develop the AJC’s video, podcast, newsletter and live events strategies.
The AJC’s mission is to be the most essential and engaging source of news and information for the people of Atlanta, of Georgia and the South. Backed by a substantial investment by Cox Enterprises, which also owns Axios, the AJC is focusing on new content experiences, new formats and new product capabilities to ensure its world-class journalism meets audiences where they are.
Since joining the AJC, he has directed coverage of the 2024 presidential election, including the CNN presidential debate in Atlanta, the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, President Joe Biden's decision to end his reelection campaign, the Democratic National Convention in Chicago and the ABC News presidential debate in Philadelphia.
Sanz joined Cox and the AJC in 2024 after working for more than a decade at The Associated Press. He worked as a global news manager at the AP, overseeing the news report in all formats and platforms, working with news leaders and journalists to drive coverage of the world’s top stories, and with broadcast television networks and television stations in North America to build and expand editor-to-editor relationships with the AP.
From the Nerve Center, the hub of AP’s global newsroom, which serves as a center for global news coordination and planning, standards, research, editorial communication and audience engagement, he oversaw coverage of the Israel-Hamas war; the Russia-Ukraine war; the 2024 presidential election in the United States; the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny; the British Royal family, including King Charles III’s and Princess Kate’s cancer diagnoses; the attack at Crocus City Hall in Moscow; the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore; the mass shootings at the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory parade and in Lewiston, Maine; the Republican presidential debates in Miami and Simi Vally, California; and led coverage of the death of former U.S. first lady Rosalynn Carter and Hurricane Idalia in Florida. He also helped manage the AP’s national security and foreign policy series with the 2024 Republican presidential candidates in collaboration with Clemson University and contributed reporting to the AP’s coverage of the Israel-Hamas war and the total solar eclipse in North America.
Previously, as deputy director of newsgathering, he led a team of AP journalists in the southeastern United States and supervised the region’s state-based news editors and video staff in 27 states, including the central United States. He oversaw the region’s politics coverage, was involved in the development and production of The AP Interview, served as a moderator of the AP’s live political roundtable, directed and expanded the AP’s video coverage of space, and helped lead the effort to expand the AP’s video newsgathering footprint in the United States.
Sanz also worked with the team focused on the AP’s efforts to deepen engagement with audiences on APNews.com, the AP News app, social media and other emerging digital platforms, with the goal of bringing the AP’s journalism, including its election coverage, to more people, in more modern ways.
In 2021, he joined the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Board of Governors. Two years earlier, he was inducted into the Silver Circle, one of the organization’s most prestigious awards, honoring a lifetime of dedication to the television industry. He is a mentor at Military Veterans in Journalism and in 2022 was honored as MVJ Mentor of the Year.
At the AP, Sanz directed coverage of the 2022 midterm election; Hurricane Ian in southwest Florida; the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas; the trial of the three men who chased and killed Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Ga.; the partial collapse of Champlain Towers South in Surfside, Fla.; civil unrest after the death of George Floyd and the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin; the coronavirus pandemic; the 2020 presidential election, including the South Carolina Democratic presidential primary and the Democratic presidential primary debates in Charleston, Atlanta and Miami; the March 3, 2019, tornado outbreak in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina; the 2018 midterm election; Hurricane Michael in Florida and Hurricane Florence in North Carolina and South Carolina; the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida; the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia; and other major stories in the central and southeastern United States.
He also managed the AP’s extensive, all-formats coverage of the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. and helped oversee all-formats coverage of the 50th anniversary of the Apollo program, the first commercial crew program launches from the United States, Blue Origin’s first crewed flight to space, Super Bowl LIII in Atlanta, Super Bowl LIV in Miami and Super Bowl LV in Tampa.
Sanz reported on the tensions in Ukraine and the impact on U.S.-Russia space cooperation, the fall of Afghanistan and American efforts to rescue a high-profile national police officer being hunted by Taliban insurgents because of his years working with the United States military. After several failed attempts, Mohammad Khalid Wardak and his family were whisked away by helicopter in a dramatic rescue carried out under the cover of darkness. Several weeks later, they settled in the United States. He also reported on international efforts to evacuate members of Afghanistan’s girls national soccer team and their families over fears of reprisal by the Taliban. The girls were later reunited with Farkhunda Muhtaj, the captain of the women’s national team, who helped arrange their rescue.
He joined the AP’s U.S. News leadership team in 2017 after covering national politics, the 2016 presidential election, the 2014 midterm election, the southeastern United States and space for Associated Press Television News, the international television division of The Associated Press. He reported throughout the United States, including from the first-in-the-nation presidential primary in New Hampshire, the Democratic and Republican presidential primary debates and the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, where Hillary Clinton made history as the first woman in the United States to become the presidential nominee of a major political party.
Sanz also reported on the Word of Faith Fellowship in Spindale, North Carolina, an extensive, 18-month investigation in which more than three dozen former church members told the AP in exclusive interviews that congregants were regularly punched, smacked, choked, slammed to the floor or thrown through walls in a violent form of deliverance meant to "purify" sinners by beating out devils – allegations the church denied. In 2018, the Society of Professional Journalists and the Green Eyeshade Awards honored Sanz for his reporting on the congregation.
In addition to his reports for APTN, AP Radio Network and the wire service, his work has appeared in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Boston Globe, The New York Times, The Washington Post, TIME and USA TODAY. It has also appeared on ABC News, Al Jazeera, BBC World News, CBS News, Inside Edition, National Public Radio, NBC News, PBS NewsHour and television and radio stations across the United States and around the world.
He was part of a team of AP journalists honored in 2017 by the Society of Professional Journalists with a Sigma Delta Chi award for Divided America, the AP’s exploration of the economic, social and political divisions in American society. He was also part of a team of AP journalists honored by the Associated Press Media Editors, an association of news and broadcast leaders, journalism educators and student leaders in the United States and Canada, for its coverage of the mass shooting at Pulse in Orlando. In 2015, he and other AP journalists were honored by the Press Club of Atlantic City with National Headliner Awards for their coverage of the Ebola outbreak and the decision of a St. Louis County grand jury not to indict Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson after the death of Michael Brown. He was also part of a team of AP journalists honored by the Society of Professional Journalists with a Sigma Delta Chi award and APME award for their coverage of the St. Louis County grand jury decision. The Society of Professional Journalists also honored him with a Green Eyeshade Award for his coverage of three men from Little Rock, Arkansas, who traveled to Boston to finish the Boston Marathon one year after the April 15, 2013, bombing.
Before joining The Associated Press in 2013, Sanz covered government, politics and criminal justice for The E.W. Scripps Company. Earlier that year, he covered the second-degree murder trial of George Zimmerman in Sanford, Florida. In 2012, he traveled throughout Florida to cover the Republican presidential primary, the Republican National Convention in Tampa, the campaigns of President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and the presidential debate at Lynn University in Boca Raton. He was one of the first journalists in the country to sit down for an interview with U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan after he became the Republican vice presidential nominee.
Sanz was also part of a team of journalists who reported for FLDemocracy2012.com, a joint venture of The E.W. Scripps Company, its Florida television stations, the Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers and the Naples Daily News. At The E.W. Scripps Company, Sanz covered milestones in the U.S. space program, including the inaugural SpaceX mission to the International Space Station and the construction of the Orion spacecraft. His reports aired on WPTV-TV and WFLX-TV in South Florida, WFTS-TV in Tampa, KNXV-TV in Phoenix and other Scripps television stations in the United States.
He joined The E.W. Scripps Company from KHOU-TV in Houston, where he covered Harris County government, Houston City Hall and NASA. At KHOU, Sanz contributed a wide range of enterprise, general assignment and breaking news reports, and filled in on the anchor desk. He covered the 2010 midterm election and the 2008 presidential election, and was part of the KHOU news team honored by the Radio Television Digital News Association with two Edward R. Murrow Awards for its coverage of wildfires in Texas. He was the first journalist to broadcast live from Grimes County, Texas, as wildfires threatened three counties near Houston in 2011. His first reports, streamed via broadband, were part of the "Texas on Fire" coverage honored by RTDNA. He was nominated for a Lone Star EMMY Award in 2011 for his coverage of spot news. He was also honored by the Texas Associated Press Broadcasters for spot news coverage and for his coverage of breaking news, homeland security, NASA and and the January 12, 2010, earthquake in Haiti. In 2011, Sanz was part of the KHOU 11 News This Morning team honored as the best morning newscast in Texas. That year, he was also nominated for the Texas Farm Bureau Excellence in Journalism award for his coverage of Brazoria and Galveston counties.
In 2010, Sanz was nominated for a Lone Star EMMY Award for his coverage of NASA. He was also honored by the Texas Associated Press Broadcasters for his coverage of Harris County government. In 2008, he was part of the station’s continuous, Lone Star EMMY and Edward R. Murrow award-winning coverage of Hurricane Ike, reporting on coastal evacuations, the storm’s landfall, its impact on the Houston area and the recovery efforts. A year earlier, his breaking news reports for KHOU 11 News This Morning contributed to the program’s Lone Star EMMY nomination for best large market morning newscast. While in Houston, Sanz filed reports for CBS Newspath, CBS News on Logo, CBS Radio News, The Early Show and other Belo Corporation television stations, including KENS-TV in San Antonio, Texas, KVUE-TV in Austin, Texas, and WFAA-TV in Dallas. He also contributed reports to The Daily Wrap on the Wall Street Journal Radio Network and KROI-FM in Houston.
He moved to Houston in 2006 after working for several years as a general assignment reporter at WTHR-TV in Indianapolis. At WTHR, Sanz was part of a team of journalists sent to cover the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina along the United States Gulf Coast. Through his reports as an embedded reporter, he chronicled the journey of the Indiana National Guard in Mississippi. He also traveled to Mexico with the Indianapolis police and fire departments to report on their international training mission. His series, "Badges without Borders," received the Indiana Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists first place award for Best Coverage of Minority Issues. The judges called it a story "well traveled, well told and well shot." In addition, Sanz covered the 2006 midterm election and 2004 presidential election. He contributed reports to CNN, MSNBC, NBC News Channel, NBC Weather Plus, WBNS-TV in Columbus, Ohio, and WFMS-FM in Indianapolis while at WTHR.
Sanz was a morning anchor and reporter at News 12 in New York before joining WTHR in 2003. He anchored the weekday morning newscasts and covered local, state and national politics, including the Mayor Michael Bloomberg administration and Hillary Clinton’s first term as U.S. senator, for the first, largest and most-watched regional news network in the United States. During his time in the New York tri-state area, he co-anchored News 12 Network coverage of the Northeast blackout of 2003, Operation Iraqi Freedom and the loss of space shuttle Columbia. He also co-anchored News 12’s weekly public affairs program, "2&1: Two Reporters and the Person of the Week." He joined News 12 in 2001 after working as a freelance reporter at WFTS.
His broadcast journalism career began at the Channel One Network in Los Angeles where he covered news across the country and around the world. As an anchor and correspondent for Channel One News, nearly nine million people in 12,000 secondary schools nationwide watched Sanz’s reports. His travels took him to more than 30 states and nearly a dozen countries. At Channel One, he covered the devastation of Hurricane Mitch in Central America, the drug war in Mexico and one of the worst tornado outbreaks in Oklahoma history. He also reported from the White House and Capitol Hill.
In 2000, The Imagen Foundation honored his feature "Hero Street," about the small town of Silvis, Illinois, with its Best Children’s Programming Award. In 1999, Channel One News followed him on a journey to Cuba where he traced his family’s ancestry. Prior to joining the Channel One Network in 1998, Sanz worked in morning-drive radio. He anchored news headlines at WMMS-FM in Cleveland and worked as an anchor and producer at WPLL-FM in Miami.
His career in journalism began at the Sun-Sentinel in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where he reported and wrote news and feature stories for the metro, sports, lifestyle and community news sections of the newspaper. While there, he received awards for his reporting and writing and was honored as a most valuable staffer.
Sanz is a South Florida native who studied broadcast journalism at Florida International University in Miami. He worked at WFOR-TV, WSVN-TV and WTVJ-TV in Miami while attending college. He has a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Journalism from the University System of Maryland and is a graduate of the FBI Citizens Academy.