CBS2 catches up with former Menudo member Cesar Abreu
The Washington Heights resident and NYU grad said he is living his truth as he moves on with next stages of his career.
Dave Carlin has covered major national news stories and events in the past four decades including Superstorm Sandy and its tri-state impacts, Hurricane Hugo in South Carolina and Iniki on Kauai, Hawaii. He also covered the Space Shuttle Program, 1989 San Francisco Earthquake, numerous Southern California wildfires, the trial and execution of serial killer Ted Bundy in Florida, the 1994 police shooting death of Tyke the eacaped Cirus Elephant on the streets of Honolulu, 2009's Miracle on the Hudson, the NYC Mayoral administrations of Bloomberg through Adams and more.
Prior to joining CBS News New York in 2006, he served as anchor/reporter at KSWB-TV in San Diego for six years, preceded by stints at CBS affiliates including KGMB-TV in Honolulu, Hawaii, where he worked for 10 years as an anchor/reporter. Before that Carlin worked at WHP-TV in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where he took his first job as a weekday anchor. Carlin started his journalism career at KTBC-TV in Austin, Texas, as a general assignment reporter.
Carlin covers arts and entertainment. As he seeks out our region's best shows and exhibits and profiles artists and theater makers, he looks for arts stories with broader societal and community themes and historical significance. "We give you a strong sense of who these great artists really are. Not as stars, but as regular people. And we help you choose the right shows and attractions, some of them offered for free," Carlin said.
Carlin's work has earned him an Emmy Award from The Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, a Golden Mic Award and awards from the Society of Professional Journalists and The Associated Press.
Born in England and raised in Ithaca, New York, Carlin and his family also spent part of his childhood in Ghana, West Africa, where his father founded new programs at a school for deaf and blind children in Mampong. His family also lived in Mexico City in the early 1980s.
Carlin is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin.
The Washington Heights resident and NYU grad said he is living his truth as he moves on with next stages of his career.
Gatherings served as countdowns to Monday's federal holiday, established last year.
The holiday is coming up Sunday, and will be officially observed on Monday.
Amalia Oliva Rojas and Tony Valdovinos are among the thousands of immigrant children brought to the United States when they were very young who were enrolled in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA.
The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater returns to Lincoln Center on Wednesday for six performances.
National Immigrant Heritage Month shines a light on their struggles. An off-Broadway musical is doing the same.
This year's Tonys were a celebration of resilience through COVID and gratitude to be back.
These musicals with a wide array of topics and themes are being celebrated at the Tonys.
Hundreds of protests demanding action against gun violence are taking place Saturday across the country, including in New York City.
The exhibit filled with love and Pride runs through June 19.
The $6 billion project is up for bid. A winning firm will be selected sometime in early fall at the latest.
As many city hotels bounce back from the pandemic, some remain boarded up and left behind.
Currently, the budget calls for about $79 per student with no guarantee the money gets used by the principals for arts-related studies.
You can watch the Tony Awards on CBS2 at 8 p.m. on Sunday, June 12.
Events were held across New York City this weekend as the nation continues to observe Gun Violence Awareness Month.