Chris Livesay,
Chris Livesay is a CBS News foreign correspondent based in Rome, contributing to all CBS News broadcasts and platforms. Livesay, a journalist with experience covering hotspots across Europe and the Middle East, joined CBS News in 2020 and began reporting for the Network at the height of the COVID-19 outbreak in Italy. He provided extensive coverage across that country throughout the pandemic. In March, Livesay was the first reporter for an American television network to go inside an ICU in Italy when the country was at the epicenter of the crisis and doctors inside the hospital turned scuba masks into ventilators as supplies ran low. He has reported from northern Italy where cemeteries couldn't keep up with the number of bodies. Livesay also found bright spots amid the suffering; in Venice, he spoke with volunteers who delivered supplies to those in need in gondolas via the city's famous canals. This week, he reported from Venice that nature is flourishing, with streets and canals nearly empty of people and transportation. Before joining CBS News, Livesay reported around the globe for NBC News, PBS NewsHour, PBS Frontline, and NPR News. He brings to CBS News a wealth of international experience having covered a number of major stories with global impact, such as the targeted killing of Iranian General Qassim Soleimani, the protests in Hong Kong, and the priest sex abuse scandals at the Vatican. In 2018, he was the first American TV correspondent to report from Libya in almost a year and had to flee the country amid government threats for shedding light on migrant trafficking, torture and abuse. In 2016, he was among the first TV journalists to report from Mosul on the front lines of the Iraqi military's push to remove ISIS. Livesay got his start in journalism by volunteering at his local NPR-affiliated radio station KJZZ in Phoenix, Arizona, and later filed reports for 'All Things Considered' and 'Morning Edition'. He holds bachelor's degrees in Italian and art history from Arizona State University and a master's degree with the highest honors from Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism in New York City. Livesay lives in Rome with his wife.
80%
The Daily's Verdict
This author has a mixed reputation for journalistic standards. It is advisable to fact-check, scrutinize for bias, and check for conflicts of interest before relying on the author's reporting.
Bias
75%
Examples:
- Abedelraof Meqdad gestures as he speaks with CBS News inside his home in the central Gaza Strip, June 13, 2024, five days after he says Israeli special forces burst in and interrogated him and his family amid a raid to rescue hostages.
- He was shot right next to me, in the stomach and the leg.
- It's the smell of burning flesh - it's very hard to get out of one's head.
- What's been less visible, however, is the aftermath of that operation, and the Palestinian civilians who survived it.
Conflicts of Interest
100%
Examples:
No current examples available.
Contradictions
100%
Examples:
- The Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry says 274 people were killed in the rescue operation,
Deceptions
65%
Examples:
- He told them, 'shut up or I will shoot you and them.'
- The Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry says 274 people were killed in the rescue operation,
- What's been less visible, however, is the aftermath of that operation, and the Palestinian civilians who survived it.
Recent Articles
Israeli Hostages Rescued in Gaza, but at What Cost? One Palestinian Civilian Killed and Another Injured
Broke On: Thursday, 13 June 2024Israeli forces rescued four hostages from Hamas in Gaza on June 8, 2024, but the operation resulted in civilian casualties and accusations of war crimes. One Palestinian civilian was killed and another injured during the raid, which involved interrogating civilians and exchanging gunfire with militants. The UN accused both sides of committing war crimes during the conflict, while families of over 100 remaining hostages continue to wait for their safe return.