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Tom Llamas
Tom Llamas
from Wikipedia

Thomas Edward Llamas (/ˈjɑːmɑːs/ YAH-mahs;[1] born July 2, 1979) is an American journalist working for NBC News as the anchor of NBC Nightly News and Top Story with Tom Llamas.

Key Information

He worked for ABC News as the weekend anchor of ABC World News Tonight from 2014 until 2021, before joining NBC News as the senior national correspondent and anchor for NBC News Now, hosting Top Story with Tom Llamas, and serving as a substitute anchor for Today and NBC Nightly News.

On March 5, 2025, he was named the anchor (succeeding Lester Holt) and the managing editor of NBC Nightly News beginning June 2, 2025, becoming the first Latino anchor of an American nightly news broadcast.[2]

Llamas has won multiple Emmy Awards for his reporting in addition to two Edward R. Murrow awards.[3]

Early life

[edit]

Llamas was born in Miami on July 2, 1979, to Cuban immigrant parents who had fled the island as political refugees.[4] He attended Belen Jesuit Preparatory School in Tamiami, Florida and became a fan of the Miami Hurricanes football team[5]. He graduated from Loyola University New Orleans in Louisiana with a bachelor's degree in broadcast journalism and one in drama and speech.[6] He was also a member of the Louisiana Gamma chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon, a fraternity.[7][8]

Career

[edit]

Llamas began his broadcasting career at the age of 15 as an intern for the news department at WSCV in Hialeah, Florida. Llamas returned to Miami after graduating from college and working in various behind-the-scenes roles at NBC News for an on-air position at NBC affiliate WTVJ.[9]

He joined WNBC and NBC News in New York in 2009 as general-assignment reporter and anchor. In September 2014, he moved to ABC News as a New York-based correspondent[10] and substituted for David Muir on ABC World News Tonight during the Christmas 2014 break. Llamas became the Sunday anchor of ABC World News Tonight in 2015[11] and the sole weekend anchor of the program in January 2017.[12]

During the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, Llamas reported on the Republican candidates. He criticized the use by Jeb Bush and Donald Trump of the term "anchor baby" and was called a "sleaze" by Trump after questioning him about the amount of money he had donated to charity.[13][14]

In January 2021, it was reported that Llamas would leave ABC News and return to NBC News. His last broadcast on ABC News was on January 31, 2021.[15] In April 2021, it was announced that Llamas was named the senior national correspondent for NBC News and would anchor a primetime newscast for NBC News Now beginning May 3, 2021.[16][17] A rebroadcast of the newscast, Top Story with Tom Llamas, was added to the overnight schedule of most NBC stations on weeknights on March 28, 2022, replacing a replay of Today's fourth hour show.

On March 5, 2025, NBC News announced Llamas would be the successor to Lester Holt as anchor and the managing editor of NBC Nightly News. Llamas continues to anchor Top Story.[18] He debuted as the anchor for Nightly News on June 2, 2025.[19]

Awards

[edit]

Llamas has won several awards including an Emmy Award for "Best Anchor" and "Best Hard News Story" and a regional Edward R. Murrow Award for WNBC's coverage of Hurricane Sandy.[10][20] He was awarded his first Emmy in 2008 for his reporting as the first TV journalist to work on a human smuggling interdiction at sea with the U.S. Coast Guard.[21] He won an Emmy Award in 2013 for his coverage of Hurricane Irene.

Throughout his career, Llamas has been recognized with several honors, such as the Presidential Award of Impact from the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and the El Award from El Diario La Prensa. In 2022, he and his team earned NAHJ’s Al Neuharth Award for excellence in investigative reporting. He was also a member of the WNBC team that received a Murrow Award in 2014 for their live coverage of Hurricane Sandy.[3]

Personal life

[edit]

Llamas and his wife, Jennifer have three children. The family lived for three years in a Midtown East three-bedroom apartment in Manhattan before moving to Purchase in Harrison, New York in 2022.[22] Llamas and his wife are Catholic.[23]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Tom Llamas (born July 2, 1979) is an American journalist and television news anchor who has served as the anchor and managing editor of since June 2025. Born in Miami, , to Cuban immigrants who fled as political refugees, he graduated from in 1997 and earned a B.A. in from . Llamas began his career as an intern at a local station before joining in 2000 as a during the , advancing to roles as a correspondent for and anchor in New York. In 2014, he transitioned to ABC News as a national correspondent and weekend anchor for World News Tonight, where he received in 2013 for best anchor and best hard news story, as well as regional Awards in 2012 for feature and hard news reporting. He returned to in 2021 as a senior national correspondent, later anchoring Top Story with Tom Llamas on Now and Sunday editions of prior to assuming the flagship program's primary role, succeeding after over 25 years in .

Early Life and Education

Upbringing and Family Background

Tom Llamas was born on July 2, 1979, in Miami, Florida, to parents who had immigrated from as children, fleeing the emerging Castro regime with their families. His father was raised in the eastern province of Oriente, while his mother grew up in ; both departed amid the political upheaval following Fidel Castro's seizure of power, arriving in the United States with minimal possessions and seeking refuge from communist rule. This heritage as children of refugees shaped Llamas' early worldview, with his parents emphasizing the fragility of freedom and the opportunities afforded by America. Raised in Miami's vibrant Cuban-American community, spanning areas like and Coral Gables, Llamas experienced a household steeped in pride for their adopted country and a strong derived from his parents' immigrant struggles. He has a sister and a brother, both born in the U.S., and his parents instilled in the siblings a of civic awareness, urging them to stay informed about global events and understand systemic workings from a young age. Llamas has credited his family's narrative of escaping oppression for fostering his belief in the , noting that his parents arrived in 1956—prior to Castro's full consolidation—and taught their children to cherish national loyalty and personal responsibility.

Academic Background

Llamas attended , where he pursued studies in communication and . He graduated in May 2001 with degrees in , , and speech. These programs were housed within the university's School of Communication and Design, which emphasizes practical training in media production and . His coursework provided foundational skills in reporting, on-camera delivery, and narrative , aligning with his subsequent career trajectory in broadcast news. No advanced degrees or have been documented in from the university or professional biographies.

Journalism Career

Early Roles in Broadcasting

Llamas began his broadcasting career in his teenage years with an unpaid internship in the news department at Telemundo station WSCV (channel 51) in Hialeah, Florida, starting at age 15. This early exposure to local Spanish-language television operations in Miami provided foundational experience in news production and reporting. Following his college graduation, Llamas entered professional roles at in 2000, initially serving as a with the NBC News Specials Unit during coverage of the . He advanced to contributor positions at MSNBC, where he focused on political coverage and developed skills in live reporting and analysis. By 2003, he had taken on embedded reporting duties for campaigns, including producing on-the-ground segments. These initial positions at network-affiliated outlets laid the groundwork for his transition to local station work, including general assignment reporting at NBC-owned in around 2005, where he handled investigative stories and field reporting. In 2004, amid the presidential primaries, Llamas embedded as a reporter and for Rev. Al Sharpton's campaign, delivering reports to MSNBC and platforms.

NBC News Tenure (2003–2021)

Llamas began his tenure at in 2003, initially serving as an overnight production assistant before transitioning to a campaign embed role covering political events. He contributed reports to MSNBC and platforms during this period, including embedding with Rev. Al Sharpton's 2004 presidential campaign as a reporter and . Throughout the mid-2000s, Llamas worked as a general assignment reporter for NBC affiliate in , focusing on local and regional stories. He later moved to in New York, where he anchored newscasts and conducted investigative reporting on topics such as public safety and urban issues. His coverage at WNBC included events, notably in 2012, for which the station's team received a 2014 Edward R. Murrow Award for overall excellence in . Llamas earned recognition for his work during this time, including two 2012 regional for feature reporting and hard news, as well as 2013 for best anchor and best hard news story. His reporting emphasized on-the-ground accountability , often involving direct engagement with officials and affected communities. He departed in mid-September 2014 to join ABC News. Llamas rejoined in April 2021 as a senior national correspondent, marking the end of this extended period of association with the network prior to further advancements.

ABC News Period (2021–2025)

Llamas joined ABC News in mid-September 2014 as a New York-based correspondent and anchor, focusing on national affairs reporting. In early March 2015, he was named anchor for the Sunday edition of ABC World News Tonight, partnering with Cecilia Vega for the Saturday broadcast, marking his elevation to weekend anchoring duties alongside his correspondent role. As chief national affairs correspondent, Llamas covered major political developments, including multiple interviews with then-President Donald Trump on topics such as immigration and foreign policy. Throughout his tenure, Llamas frequently substituted for weekday anchor on World News Tonight, gaining visibility for in-depth segments on domestic issues like and civil unrest. His reporting emphasized on-the-ground coverage, such as investigations into police practices following high-profile incidents, though specific outputs were shaped by network editorial priorities that some observers critiqued for selective framing in politically charged stories. Llamas' departure from ABC News occurred after his final broadcast on January 31, 2021, driven by the realization that he would not assume the permanent weekday anchor position, which solidified under Muir as Diane Sawyer's successor. This move back to reflected his ambition for a lead anchoring role amid frustrations over limited advancement opportunities at ABC, where internal dynamics favored continuity over competitive promotion. No verified records indicate Llamas' involvement with ABC News from 2021 onward, aligning with his transition to as senior national correspondent starting in April 2021.

Return to NBC and NBC Nightly News Anchor Role (2025–present)

In May 2025, NBC News announced that Tom Llamas would succeed Lester Holt as anchor and managing editor of NBC Nightly News, marking his return to the network after a four-year tenure at ABC News. Llamas, who had been a national correspondent and anchor at NBC from 2003 to 2021, assumed the role to lead the weekday broadcast at 6:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. CT, focusing on breaking news, in-depth reporting, and global events. Llamas debuted in the anchor chair on June 2, 2025, delivering the evening newscast following Holt's departure after 13 years in the position. The transition positioned Llamas as the first Latino anchor of a major English-language network evening newscast, a milestone attributed to his background as the son of immigrants. In addition to Nightly News, he maintained his role as principal anchor of , where he had hosted for nearly 15 years, and contributed to NBC's streaming and digital platforms, including Top Story with Tom Llamas on NOW. Since assuming the role, Llamas has emphasized a commitment to straightforward reporting and viewer engagement, drawing on his prior experience in field and live coverage. The program under his leadership has continued to cover major stories such as international conflicts, developments, and breaking U.S. events, with episodes airing daily as of October 2025.

Journalistic Approach and Notable Coverage

Reporting Style and Principles

Tom Llamas has articulated his core journalistic principles as being "tough but fair" and reporting "without fear or favor," which he views as essential to producing accurate and impactful journalism. These tenets guide his approach to holding subjects accountable through direct, probing questions while maintaining impartiality, prioritizing facts over opinions to counter prevalent misinformation from social media and other unverified sources. In execution, Llamas emphasizes serving the audience by framing interviews as proxies for viewer inquiries, stating, "I work for , but I really work for the viewers... I’m asking questions for the people at home." This viewer-centric focus informs his commitment to quality over ratings, as he has noted, "I want to be number one... But at the end of the day, the most important thing is quality journalism." His reporting style integrates field work—traveling to event sites to capture firsthand accounts from those affected—with studio anchoring, reflecting a reporter's to "hear from the people and let them tell their stories" rather than relying solely on remote aggregation. Llamas advocates modernizing traditional newscasts through subtle innovations, such as incorporating to enhance storytelling relevance without compromising trust-based delivery. He maintains a calm, composed demeanor in delivery, avoiding to focus on "real and important stories," and has been described as deeply invested in each rather than merely reciting scripts. This methodical style underscores his philosophy of fairness, informed by personal experiences like his Cuban immigrant heritage, which shapes nuanced coverage of issues such as by grounding reports in direct human testimony over abstracted .

Key Interviews, Fact-Checks, and Event Coverage

During his tenure at ABC News from 2021 to 2025, Llamas conducted high-profile interviews with world leaders, including Venezuelan President and Ukrainian President , focusing on geopolitical tensions and U.S. foreign policy. In one notable 2019 exchange, he pressed then-President on claims of raising $6 million for veterans' charities following an Iowa fundraiser, highlighting discrepancies after Trump presented a $1 million check from his foundation, prompting Trump to label Llamas a "sleaze." At NBC News since 2025, Llamas secured an exclusive interview with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on September 26, 2025, during the UN General Assembly, where Pezeshkian criticized U.S. policy under President Trump as risking escalation in the Middle East, including warnings of "setting fire" to the region amid nuclear site developments and Israeli strikes. He also interviewed House Speaker Mike Johnson on October 10, 2025, probing support for Trump's proposed federal spending cuts amid a government shutdown threat. Llamas has emphasized rigorous in his reporting, particularly in confrontational settings; for instance, his 2016 questioning of Trump's veterans' fundraising totals exemplified scrutiny of numerical claims against . Colleagues and industry observers note his post-2016 approach intensified verification of guest statements, adapting to heightened political . In event coverage, Llamas anchored ABC's weekend Tonight during major breaking stories, including immigration enforcement operations and 2020 election disputes. At , he led coverage of the 2024 presidential election, providing real-time updates from the network's election desk, and reported on such as Hurricane Erin in August 2025, detailing East Coast impacts from winds and tides. Recent broadcasts under his role have included the 2025 near-government shutdown over spending bills, federal worker paycheck delays, and clashes over Trump's policies, with on-scene reporting from affected sites.

Awards and Recognition

Major Awards and Honors

Llamas has earned multiple recognizing his on-air anchoring and investigative reporting. In 2013, he received the Emmy for Outstanding Anchor and another for Outstanding Hard News Story, honors tied to his work at NBC's affiliate. His first Emmy came in 2008 for pioneering television coverage from , where he was the first U.S. network journalist permitted to film inside the country. He has also secured Edward R. Murrow Awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, including two regional citations in 2012 for feature reporting and hard news coverage during his tenure at WTVJ in Miami. Among honors specific to his contributions as a Hispanic journalist, Llamas received the National Association of Hispanic Journalists' Presidential Award of Impact, acknowledging his influence in elevating Latino voices in mainstream media. In April 2025, Voto Latino presented him with the "Our Voices Groundbreakers Award" for his trailblazing role as the first Latino to anchor a prime-time weekday network newscast. Additional recognition includes El Diario's El Award for excellence in Spanish-language media engagement.

Controversies and Criticisms

Accusations of Bias and Political Interactions

In May 2016, then-presidential candidate Donald Trump publicly called ABC News correspondent Tom Llamas a "sleaze" during a press conference announcing $5.6 million in donations to veterans' groups from a January fundraiser. Trump accused Llamas of misrepresenting facts despite knowing them, stemming from Llamas's prior reporting on delays in disclosing the fundraiser's details and recipients. Llamas responded by asking for clarification on the label, to which Trump reiterated that Llamas's knowledge of the events made his questioning dishonest. This exchange was interpreted by Trump supporters as evidence of Llamas exhibiting anti-Trump bias through persistent scrutiny of fundraising claims. Conservative media watchdogs, including NewsBusters, have accused Llamas of leftist bias in his reporting at ABC's Tonight and subsequent NBC roles, citing examples of story selection that allegedly emphasized negative angles on Republicans while downplaying Democratic shortcomings, such as equivocating on partisan attack ads in the 2017 Virginia gubernatorial race by attributing negativity to "." Such critiques portray Llamas's confrontational style—evident in interviews pressing politicians on policy specifics—as selectively applied to conservatives. Llamas's political interactions have included multiple interviews with Trump, such as a October 2016 one-on-one where he questioned Trump's tensions with House Speaker over campaign support. Viewer feedback remains divided, with some conservative-leaning observers in 2025 noting Llamas's coverage as relatively favorable to Trump compared to prior anchors, while others decry it as continuing tendencies toward left-leaning framing.

Internal Professional Disputes and Public Backlash

Llamas's management style as anchor and managing editor of , implemented following his June 2025 ascension to the role, has generated internal friction among staff accustomed to predecessor Holt's more relaxed approach. Insiders described Llamas's style as aggressive and demanding, with reports of him pushing producers and editors for rapid revisions and heightened scrutiny on story selection, leading to complaints of a high-pressure environment that contrasted sharply with Holt's collaborative demeanor. This shift reportedly stemmed from Llamas's ambition to elevate the program's competitiveness against ABC's World News Tonight, though it has unsettled team members, some of whom viewed it as overly intense for the nightly broadcast's established rhythm. In August 2025, public scrutiny intensified when details emerged of Llamas's 2001 arrest during his time as president of at , involving a violent and beating at a rival house that injured a and involved nearly a dozen arrests. Llamas was detained alongside other members but faced no charges after cooperating with police, yet the incident's resurfacing—prompted by a similar recent frat-related event—drew questions about his direct involvement and failure to publicly address it, prompting to enter damage control mode. Critics, including online commentators, highlighted the episode as emblematic of unaddressed youthful indiscretions clashing with his public persona as a principled , though supporters dismissed it as a decades-old, non-criminal matter irrelevant to his professional record. Earlier in his career, Llamas faced accusations of from former President , who in a labeled him a "sleaze" after Llamas pressed on discrepancies in Trump's claims related to veterans' causes, a charge Trump attributed to Llamas knowingly distorting facts despite evidence of the reporter's fact-based questioning. This exchange fueled conservative backlash portraying Llamas as unfairly adversarial toward Trump, though Llamas maintained his inquiries adhered to verifiable and disclosures. Such incidents, while not resulting in formal repercussions, underscored periodic public debates over his confrontational interviewing style, with detractors on the right viewing it as selective scrutiny absent similar rigor toward Democratic figures.

Personal Life

Family and Private Life

Tom Llamas has been married to Jennifer Llamas, a former broadcast news producer from New Orleans, since June 2006. The couple met while studying at . Jennifer, who began her career behind the camera in media production, has largely stepped back from professional work to manage family responsibilities, often described by Llamas as the "" of their household. The couple has three children: daughters Malena, born in 2013, and , born in 2015, followed by son Tomás in 2017. Llamas has occasionally shared glimpses of family life in interviews, noting the challenges of balancing a demanding career with parenting three young children, including coordinating school and extracurricular activities. Prior to 2022, the family resided in a three-bedroom apartment in Manhattan's Midtown East for several years, reflecting Llamas's professional base in New York City broadcasting. In 2022, they relocated to a seven-bedroom home in Purchase, New York, providing more space amid Llamas's rising responsibilities at NBC. Llamas maintains a relatively private personal life, avoiding extensive public disclosure beyond occasional family mentions in professional contexts.

Cultural Heritage and Public Persona

Tom Llamas was born to Cuban immigrant parents who the as political refugees in the wake of Fidel Castro's . His originated from the eastern province of Oriente, while his mother grew up in and departed soon after Castro's takeover, eventually reuniting with family in the United States. Raised in , , amid a vibrant Cuban-American community, Llamas maintains deep ties to his heritage through daily use of Spanish, regular listening to Cuban music, and family traditions that emphasize resilience and cultural identity. His upbringing involved consuming news in both English and Spanish, reflecting his parents' bilingual household and commitment to staying informed about events in and the U.S. Llamas's public persona as a highlights his identity as a Cuban-American success story, often framing his career ascent—including becoming the first Latino anchor of in 2025—as a realization of the rooted in his parents' sacrifices. He projects a professional demeanor focused on viewer trust, human-centered reporting, and bilingual accessibility to broaden appeal, particularly among audiences, without compromising factual rigor.

References

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