Dr. Charles G. Bailey

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Dr. Charles Gene Bailey has been the Faculty Manager of WMUL, Marshall University's student operated radio station, since 1986. He is also an associate professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Communications. Dr. Bailey was raised in Proctor Bottom, Logan County, West Virginia, where as a child he listened to Cleveland Browns games on the radio and dreamed of becoming a broadcaster. He graduated from Man High School in 1970, and seldom missed Man Hillbilly football games (wherever in the state they were played) for the next thirty years. His father owned a trucking company that hauled coal for local coal mines. For a time Bailey himself worked for his father's company before obtaining a master's degree from Marshall University in 1985. He subsequently accepted the position of faculty manager with WMUL, which at that time had won 3 awards in broadcasting championships. After two decades of Bailey's leadership WMUL has now won over 700 awards for broadcasting excellence, and he has guided hundreds of young broadcasters into careers in mass communications. Shortly after becoming WMUL's faculty manager Bailey purchased a 1987 red and white Ford Bronco, which he still drives to this very day. He has been awarded the Distinguished Four-Year Broadcast Adviser Award (1995), The John Marshall Award for Extraordinary Service to West Virginia Higher Education (2000), and Significant Impact Award (also 2000) from the West Virginia Associated Press Broadcasters Association. In 2007 he won his most prestigious award: a Lifetime Achievement Award from the West Virginia Associated Press Broadcasters Association. He currently resides in Huntington.

References

  • "Dr. Charles G. Bailey, Marshall University's website". 2002.
  • "Dr. Charles G. "Chuck" Bailey, WMUL's website". 2002.
  • "WMUL Concludes Banner Year, Garnering Awards in 3 Contests (includes Bailey's Lifetime Achievement Award)". May 5, 2007.
  • "Morehouse, MU's Bailey Honored For Their Work", Huntington Herald-Dispatch, April 23, 2007