Oscar J. Corral height - How tall is Oscar J. Corral?

Oscar J. Corral was born on 16 August, 1974 in American, is a Cuban-American journalist and filmmaker. At 46 years old, Oscar J. Corral height not available right now. We will update Oscar J. Corral's height soon as possible.

Now We discover Oscar J. Corral's Biography, Age, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of net worth at the age of 48 years old?

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Oscar J. Corral Age 48 years old
Zodiac Sign Leo
Born 16 August 1974
Birthday 16 August
Birthplace N/A
Nationality American

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 16 August. He is a member of famous Filmmaker with the age 48 years old group.

Oscar J. Corral Weight & Measurements

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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Oscar J. Corral Net Worth

He net worth has been growing significantly in 2021-22. So, how much is Oscar J. Corral worth at the age of 48 years old? Oscar J. Corral’s income source is mostly from being a successful Filmmaker. He is from American. We have estimated Oscar J. Corral's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2022 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2022 Under Review
Net Worth in 2021 Pending
Salary in 2021 Under Review
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Source of Income Filmmaker

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Timeline

2019

"The McClatchy Company had bought the Knight-Ridder newspaper chain, with its crown jewel, the Miami Herald, just three months earlier. Headquartered in Sacramento, California, McClatchy rarely interfered in the running of its properties. But when news of the Hiaasen stand-off reached Vice President for News Howard Weaver, he intervened. Hiaasen’s column, he ruled, would run—and it appeared in its regularly scheduled slot on September 17."

During his years as a journalist at the Miami Herald, Corral twice made the Miami New Times’ annual “Best Of Miami” edition. In 2004, he reported the “Best Quote,” which was attributed to Miami Police Chief John Timoney. It reads: “It's always threat-level orange when John Timoney opens his mouth. But this inspired utterance, issued while he was on a bike tour of the anti-free-trade protest zone in downtown Miami this past November, rocketed the churlish chief well into the red zone. Perhaps he was drunk from the $8.5 million the Department of Homeland Security allotted the Magic City police force to fend off opponents of the Free Trade Association of the Americas. "You're bad. Fuck you!" he yelled at a young male demonstrator as undercover cops shoved the lad against a car to arrest him. Scrappy Miami Herald reporter Oscar Corral, who was bicycle-embedded with Timoney when he snagged the quote, slammed it into the lead sentence of his story, right where it belonged. Timoney later denied saying "You're bad," insisting that he doesn't talk like that. But he may have blurted the "Fuck you" part, he allowed with a chuckle. The prudish daily softened the f-word to "f---" on the printed page, but that didn't keep this quote from ricocheting into a revealing metaphor of the man Miami pays to keep the peace.”

2014

Through his own media production company, Explica Media Solutions, Corral has partnered with, and worked for, many news organizations, including the Miami Herald, which premiered an 18-part video series about invasive Burmese pythons in 2014. That series, later rebranded Exotic Invaders: Pythons in the Everglades, premiered on PBS nationally in 2015 and is available on Netflix. The film won an Emmy award for environmental films. Corral also completed a documentary film about undocumented child immigrants, The Crossfire Kids, in 2014. That film aired on South Florida PBS affiliate WPBT2 and received an Emmy nomination.

"Miami Herald publisher Jesús Díaz, Jr., held ultimate responsibility for both newspapers. He had made the decision to fire the three Nuevo Herald reporters. As criticism mounted, he came in for scathing critique within both the Nuevo Herald and—to the surprise of some—the Miami Herald newsrooms. On September 15, nationally recognized Miami Herald columnist Carl Hiaasen submitted for publication a column about the Radio Martí incident in which, Díaz felt, Hiaasen made light of the situation. Fearing more backlash, Díaz spiked the column. Hiaasen protested, and threatened to resign.

2008

Corral left the Miami Herald in 2008 to launch a multimedia production company. His first major project was the Wolfe documentary, Tom Wolfe Gets Back to Blood. He is now working on a documentary about the role immigrants have played in Miami.

2007

Corral was eventually asked to cover the contentious Cuban exile politics beat and launched a blog called Miami's Cuban Connection, which grew steadily in popularity until 2007, when Corral moved on to another beat. He covered the story of Luis Posada Carriles, a Cuban exile militant and accused terrorist who slipped past Homeland Security to sneak into Miami in 2005. Corral and colleague Alfonso Chardy were the first journalists in the United States to find and interview Posada on American Soil. Posada was arrested by federal authorities soon after and has been in federal detention since then. Posada has been accused of masterminding the bombing of a Cuban passenger jet in 1976, which killed 74 people, including several children. Corral and Chardy were awarded first place in the Sunshine State awards for their reporting on the Posada story. The Miami Herald nominated the duo for a Pulitzer Prize that year.

In 2007, Corral was named by Miami New Times as “Best Commie Agent”, an ironic allusion to the extensive slander and libel that befell Corral following his investigations of how the U.S. government was misspending hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to promote democracy in Cuba. It reads: “That damn Oscar Corral. First he writes a story informing Miami residents that ten South Florida journalists are on the payrolls of U.S. propaganda vehicles Radio and TV Martí. Then he has the nerve to tell us that none of the $55.5 million in taxpayer money intended to fund Cuban dissidents has reached the island in cash. Instead the bulk was spent in Miami and Washington, or on exorbitant bills to ship goods to the island. And then he reports that most of that local spending was done without oversight or competitive bidding, and that the goods purchased for anti-Castro activists to foster democracy included Nintendo Game Boys, a chainsaw, Sony PlayStations, cashmere sweaters, a mountain bike, Godiva chocolates, and crabmeat. He may have been leaking fecal matter and stuffed with tubes, but there was only one man behind this, and he wears an Adidas track jacket and has a beard. Thank God for the freelance columnist at El Nuevo Herald, Nicolas Perez Diaz-Arguelles, who finally put two and two together and took the leap of faith to insinuate what was on all of our minds: Oscar Corral is a Cuban spy. The writer's editor may have cried "blood libel," but when it comes down to it, newspapers are irrelevant to a democracy. Eating truffles while playing Grand Theft Auto, That's a slap in Castro's face.”

2006

Corral also played major roles in the coverage of other big stories in Miami, including the fall of Miami Commissioner Arthur Teele, the case of Cuban exile militant Luis Posada Carriles [2], and multiple state and national political campaigns. His short-lived blog, Miami's Cuban Connection[3], enjoyed a burst of popularity in 2006 before fading into internet limbo, where it lives on in the Miami Herald's archives. It has not been updated for several years.

In September 2006, Corral published what would become the most controversial investigative article of his career. It unleashed a firestorm in the Cuban exile community and turned Corral into a target for death threats, slander and undaunted libel. According to Columbia University Professor Kirsten Lundberg, who turned the case into a 30-page journalism ethics case study, the event can be used to discuss strategic management at both an editorial and ownership level. "Students can gain understanding of the relationship between newspaper owners, their publishers and their editors. The case also raises for discussion ethnic issues in the newsroom. How should managers approach ethnic diversity in a newsroom if that becomes a tripwire for anger and hostility."

"On September 8, 2006, the Miami Herald ran a Page One story titled “10 Miami journalists take U.S. pay.” The story by Oscar Corral reported that Miami-area journalists had accepted money from Radio/TV Martí, a US government-run broadcast targeted at the communist nation of Cuba. Three of the 11 journalists named in the story worked for El Nuevo Herald, a Spanish-language newspaper also owned by the Miami Herald Publishing Company. Corral wrote that the three had been fired for violating conflict of interest rules.

2005

In 2005, Corral and several colleagues drove an RV packed with supplies to Biloxi, and then on to New Orleans in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Corral spent a week living in the destroyed Radisson downtown with other journalists, covering the unrest and chaos that followed the historic storm.

2003

Corral covered the 2003-2004 presidential primary of Connecticut Senator Joseph Lieberman[5], following Al Gore's former running mate for months as he combed New Hampshire and other early-voting states pining for votes. He also covered the failed gubernatorial campaign of former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno, and the failed campaign of presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani in Florida in 2008.

2001

Corral returned to his native Miami in 2001, just weeks before the September 11 attacks, and was quickly assigned to the story's Florida angle by his new employer, The Miami Herald. He and a team of other journalists won a Green Eyeshade Award from the Society of Professional Journalists for their coverage of the terrorists' movements in Florida in the weeks leading up to the attacks.

1998

Corral later graduated from the University of Florida's journalism program, and won first place in the Hearst National Writing Awards in 1998 [4] with an article about the budding medical marijuana scene in San Francisco that year.

1992

Corral is the 2nd child of Oscar Jose Corral-Corral and Maria Caridad Parlade y Fernandez de Castro, Cuban exiles. He graduated in 1992 from Belen Jesuit Preparatory School in Miami.

1974

Oscar Jose Corral (born 16 August 1974) is a Cuban-American journalist and filmmaker. In 2012, Corral directed and produced a documentary film, Tom Wolfe Gets Back to Blood, which enjoyed a national run on PBS and was screened in more than 40 independent theaters around the country. It is the only film ever made about Wolfe, an iconic author and satirist whose stature in American letters has loomed large for the last half century. The film is about how Wolfe researched his Miami-set novel, Back to Blood, in South Florida.

1969

While at Newsday, Corral worked on several high-profile stories, including the case of Reyna Angelica Marroquin, a Salvadoran immigrant to New York who disappeared in 1969. Her mummified body was discovered inside a metal drum below a Long Island mansion 30 years later. Corral reported on the importance of science and technology in breaking the case, turning the heads of television producers looking to recreate true-crime stories on television. Corral was the first to find the woman's family in El Salvador and break the news to them about her death. The story made national headlines and Forensic Files made a documentary on the case, where Corral appears in an interview. The case was also featured on 48 Hours and became the backdrop for an episode of Law & Order.