Salary | $73,234 |
Net Worth | $743,675 |
Salary
As of 2023, Blake’s yearly pay is an average of $73,234. He works as a reporter and the weekend evening news anchor for FOX 4, and as a result, he makes a respectable living.
Net Worth
He has many years of experience as a journalist. There can be no doubt that he has amassed a respectable amount of cash over the years. As of 2023, Blake’s projected net worth is $743,675.
Blake Hanson Bio
Blake Hanson is an American journalist and reporter. He is currently employed with FOX 4 in Dallas, Texas, where he reports and anchors the weekend evening news. In July 2017, Blake began working for the station as a reporter. He developed a passion for journalism while still in high school after reading the works of outstanding authors like Boyd Huppert, Bob Dotson, and Steve Hartman.
Blake Hanson Age
In the American Midwest state of Minnesota, Eric was born on June 18, 1990. He is 32 years old as of 2023.
Blake Hanson Parents
His parents were from the Midwest and he was born and raised in Minnesota. Blake is of Caucasian ethnicity and has American citizenship. But he hasn’t revealed any details about his parents or siblings.
Blake Hanson Wife
The NBC DFW reporter Wylie is the wife of Blake. The University of Missouri’s journalism program is where the pair first met. In addition to being proud parents of a Dutch Shepherd named “Roux” and a large cat named “Dakota,” Blake and Wylie were married at White Rock Lake in 2016. The family calls Dallas, Texas home.
Blake Hanson Education Background
Blake enrolled at the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2008 and earned a B.J. in Radio-TV Journalism from there in 2012.
Blake Hanson Career Background
At FOX 4 in Dallas, Texas, Blake is a reporter and the weekend evening news anchor. In July 2017, he began working with the station as a correspondent. When he was in high school, great writers like Boyd Huppert, Bob Dotson, and Steve Hartman inspired him to pursue journalism. Blake’s first position as a full-time reporter was at WDSU-Tv in New Orleans, where he caught the “hard news” bug.
He covered a Super Bowl power outage, Hurricane Isaac, and a former New Orleans mayor’s federal corruption trial. Blake later began working for Charlotte, North Carolina’s WSOC-TV. His in-depth reporting inspired the idea for news laws.