Marianne Favro is an Emmy award-winning general assignment reporter. The Associated Press nominated her Reporter of the Year for 2006. She also received the Surgeon General's Award for Best Medical Reporting.
Marianne has also won five Emmy Awards. One was for a story about Stanford medical students who work with horses to learn to improve patient skills. Marianne's most recent Emmy was for her coverage of the Ghost Ship warehouse fire in Oakland.
She was recently one of the only broadcast journalists awarded the "Knight Fellowship" to attend a special program for journalists at the Centers for Disease Control.
Marianne enjoys many aspects of her job including meeting new people, always learning and making a difference by providing important information.
Some of Marianne's other professional achievements include a Golden Microphone Award for Best Newscast, which she anchored and produced. She also won the Best Serious Feature Award from the Radio and Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) for a profile of a local Titanic survivor.
Prior to joining NBC Bay Area, she worked as an anchor and reporter in San Luis Obispo, California for seven years. She began her career at a news radio station in Santa Barbara where she was an anchor and reporter. During her first five years at NBC Bay Area, she anchored the morning show.
In her time away from NBC Bay Area, Marianne enjoys spending time with her husband, Kent, her daughter Sofia, and her twin sons Connor and Nolan. She also enjoys traveling, mountain bike riding, scuba diving and running.
By uniting her devotion to the community and her love of running, Marianne completed a marathon to raise money for the Leukemia Society. Marianne also volunteers for the American Heart Association, The Diabetes Society and the MS Society.
Marianne grew up in Santa Barbara. She attended UC Santa Barbara, the University of London, and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo where she graduated with a degree in Broadcast Journalism.
The Latest
-
San Francisco State lecturers let go amid financial woes
Some lecturers at San Francisco State University said they have been let go as the university grapples with financial woes.
-
Thanksgiving holiday travel surge hits Bay Area
The holiday travel surge is hitting its peak in the Bay Area and across the nation.
-
Advocates raise concerns over San Jose animal shelter's conditions
A recently released audit of the San Jose Animal Care and Services found disturbing conditions at the city’s shelter.
-
San Jose park light display offers bike-only night; hundreds attend
A San Jose light display has a unique take on how visitors can drive through.
-
Salmon make way to South Bay creek, draws in crowds
Storm Chinook Salmon have made their way in big numbers to a South Bay creek.
-
San Jose's Christmas in the Park experiences financial difficulties
Christmas in the Park is returning to Downtown San Jose, but organizers are concerned about its future.
-
San Jose council discuss options for filling seat vacated by Omar Torres
San Jose City Council District 3 is without representation after its elected councilmember resigned and is in jail, leaving the city to make sure the district’s constituents have a voice.
-
Bob Lee murder case: Defendant Nima Momeni answers questions from jurors
The high-profile murder trial of Nima Momeni, the man accused of murdering Cash App co-founder Bob Lee, continued Monday in San Francisco.
-
E. coli infections linked to organic carrots from Central California farm
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a crucial warning about a deadly E. coli outbreak linked to California carrots.
-
‘Demoralizing distraction': San Mateo County deputies union on Sheriff Corpus
The San Mateo County Deputy Sheriff’s Association continues its push for Sheriff Christina Corpus to resign after a scathing independent report detailing allegations against her office was released by supervisors this week.