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  • Life of an Armenian Icon,through his own Words

    The Life of an Armenian Icon, Through His Own Words
    By Antranig Dereyan - on August 15, 2009


    An Interview with Armen Keteyian

    It may have been hard to convince this second-generation Armenian
    American growing up that he would one day be in charge of a major
    network's investigating unit and have eight Emmy Awards that praise
    his integrity, interviewing skills, and versatility. Add to that his
    position as a shortstop in a professional baseball franchise, and he
    would think it wasn't possible. But that is exactly what happened to
    him, Armen Keteyian, the chief investigating correspondent of CBS
    News.

    Born in Detroit, Mich., on March 6, 1953, Keteyian spent most of his
    young life playing basketball, football, and baseball. While at Lahser
    High School in Bloomfield, he lettered in all three sports and ended
    up going to Central Michigan University on a partial sports
    scholarship, and later transferred to San Diego State University to
    continue his collegiate career.

    `Playing shortstop, starting shortstop, first at Central Michigan and
    then at San Diego State - I had opportunities to pursuit it, I had a
    chance to sign with the Detroit Tigers and try playing pro, but I felt
    I couldn't hit [the ball] well enough. I thought I couldn't make it. I
    was good, but wasn't good enough - At some point and time you don't
    quit sports-sports quits you. I learned the most from failure and
    baseball, which is my biggest failure. I learned from that point on
    that you can't throw away opportunities,' Keteyian told the
    Armenian Weekly.

    Though he loved sports, he was an avid reader, and his interest in
    writing soon sparked. He wrote for his high school and college
    newspapers, and majored in journalism at both Central Michigan and San
    Diego State.

    Yet, after his transfer to San Diego State, he found himself three
    units shy of graduation, so he took an internship helping Frank
    Church, the Senator from Idaho, attempt to win the 1976 presidential
    campaign.

    `I went from an internship volunteer to one of the Senator's top
    advance people-advancing the political events. He won in his first
    primary in Nebraska, which I was heavily involved in, then won his
    second in Oregon - Then we ran into Jimmy Carter in Ohio and that was
    the end of Church's campaign, but it was a tremendous experience being
    around him and the people,' said Keteyian, who as a result of the
    internship graduated that year, cum laude with a BA in journalism and
    a minor in political science.

    Once in the real world, he found himself, 23, out of school and in
    need of a job. `I started at the bottom at a weekly newspaper in La
    Mesa, Calif., a suburb of San Diego. Then I worked my way up through a
    suburban daily, to writing for the San Diego Union-Tribune, which was
    followed by my big break-being hired by Sports Illustrated in New
    York. That really catapulted me from being a `beachy' guy in San
    Diego, who had established a pretty good reputation as a writer, to a
    completely different culture' on the national stage, said Keteyian.

    But the progression was not so cut, dry, and easy.

    `I was writing sports for a daily paper in Escondido, Calif., but left
    the business in 1980 because I wasn't really sure what I wanted to
    do. I took a job at a sports-marketing, public relations firm in San
    Diego, while writing freelance for the San Diego Union-Tribune, where
    I was writing about virtually everything but sports. I was writing
    about finance, art auctions, and business-related stories for the
    culture section, which I loved. It was great to get away from sports,
    which at that point I was beginning to get tired of. But, I did a
    sports-related story on a tri-athlete, Julie Moss, which won a
    national sports writing award. That convinced Sports Illustrated to
    finally hire me in May 1982, after a year of trying to get the job,
    sending the head of research in New York clip after clip. I arrived in
    June. The family, which at that time was my wife Dede and our first
    born Kristen, they came later,' he said, adding, `I didn't just drop
    into this job or profession, I worked for every ounce.'

    >From Sports Illustrated, Keteyian was presented with another chance
    to advance and learn. `In 1988, NBC wanted me for the Seoul Korea
    Olympics,' he said. `I took a leave of absence from the magazine,
    where at that point I had done many investigative pieces and had a
    big-time reputation as an investigative reporter, having worked on
    college point shaving [betting against the favored team, after a
    bookie bribes the team to lose], steroids, and pay-to-play [bribing a
    college player to go to a certain school with money, jewelry, or
    cars].'

    `I had also recently been promoted. I left that to become the on-air
    reporter for NBC's coverage of the swimming venue. I had an interest
    in TV work, I did a good job in Seoul, and some more opportunities
    presented themselves, so I left the magazine and went to work for
    NBC,' Keteyian said.

    He spent little time at NBC, however. The next year, he left to write
    his first of eight books, Big Red Confidential: Inside Nebraska
    Football, about Nebraska's football program under Tom Osborne.

    `It was the first book to raise any kind of questions about wrongdoing
    within the program. To this day, I don't think I am the most welcomed
    man in Nebraska,' said a grinning Keteyian.

    From the book, ABC was his next stop. `ABC was looking for a
    high-level sports reporter who they could turn into a TV
    correspondent. I auditioned for the position by sending in my audition
    tape, an original story on Major League Baseball umpire Dave Pallone,
    who at the time was leaving his job in order to write a book Behind
    the Mask, about being in professional baseball and being gay. Thanks
    to my friend, who worked at the bar in New York where he often
    visited, I was able to sit down with him. It caught people's attention
    and I was given the job where, until I left in 1997, I got basically a
    PhD in TV,' he said.

    His transition to CBS came when he was hired to be on HBO's
    `Real Sports' with Bryant Gumbel. Then CBS hired him as a
    special features reporter and, after buying the rights to the National
    Football League, gave Keteyian the position of sideline reporter.

    `It gave me a whole-other level of exposure,' reflected Keteyian, who
    stayed at CBS Sports as their sideline and special features reporter,
    winning three Emmy's for CBS's coverage of the Tour de France.

    In 2005, on his way back from an Indianapolis Colts' practice, a call
    from CBS Sports/News president Sean McManus opened a brand new door to
    him.

    `When his assistant told me `Hold for Sean,' those words, you never
    know what will happen after that. But he offered me the position of
    chief investigating correspondent of CBS News. I also had the task of
    starting an investigating unit from the ground-up,' said Keteyian.

    Despite his high level of success, Keteyian never forgot his
    roots. `I was an altar boy at St. Sarkis Church where I also
    went to Saturday Armenian School until the 8th grade, until I moved to
    Bloomfield Hills. Though my Armenian has stayed in Detroit, I still
    know a few words. I host events, like when the Catholicos came, and
    other events that help raise money or awareness for the Armenian
    community. I feel, purposely, I have kept my fingers, toes, and heart
    in the Armenian communities in Detroit, Watertown, and California. I
    cook pilaf, my wife, Dede, who is not Armenian, cooks like one. My
    kids, Kristen and Kelly, also cook some Armenian dishes.

    Whenever they see their cousins in Detroit and are able to see the
    culture, they are surprised how good it makes them feel and how
    connected they feel - It affects them in a positive way. So, my
    Armenian roots are still not only in my blood, but my family's blood
    as well,' explained Keteyian.

    He started his career in 1976, and in 30 years reached the summit of
    his profession. How does it feel to have worked so hard for so long?
    `It hardly ever felt like work to me,' he said, smiling.

    `My wife and my kids deserve a lot of credit for sticking by me after
    all this time. I am a very fortunate guy

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/08/15/the -life-of-an-armenian-icon-through-his-own-words/
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