The 2014 黑料不打烊 graduate was honored as an outstanding news producer by the Ohio Valley Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.
If you had told Jeff Ackermann 鈥14 a decade ago that he鈥檇 earn an Emmy Award, he wouldn鈥檛 have believed you.

鈥淚t’s not like I鈥檓 in this job for the awards, but I’d be lying if I said I’m not honored to get this聽award,鈥 said Ackermann in a recent interview with .
The 2014 黑料不打烊 alumnus recently from the Ohio Valley Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, presented during a virtual ceremony on Oct. 4. This was Ackermann鈥檚 third Emmy nomination, and his first victory.
Ackermann currently serves as a news producer at WUSA 9 in Washington, D.C., but spent the previous two years with WCPO 9 in Cincinnati producing the station鈥檚 11 p.m. newscast. Based on a broadcast reel of his 2019 segments, including local coverage of a mass shooting in Dayton, Ackermann was selected as the winner in the competition鈥檚 News Producer category.

While the broadcast journalism major has experience in front of the camera as a field producer, as well as in the newsroom as an anchor, Ackermann found his true calling in TV production.
鈥淭here’s a lot that goes into producing TV news, so you kind of have your hands dipped in a bunch of different things every day,鈥 Ackermann told TAP into Livingston. 鈥淵ou come in with a blank slate, and then you have eight hours to work and build a newscast in time for show time and then hope everything goes well.鈥
Just a few months after he transitioned into his role in D.C., the coronavirus pandemic changed how many workplaces across the country functioned, and WUSA 9 was no exception. Ackermann said in addition to adapting to a new newsroom, the experience gave him a greater respect for local journalism.
鈥淚’ve never felt like my job is more important than it is right now,鈥 Ackermann told TAP into Livingston. 鈥淲e’re at a time right now where facts matter and the truth matters, and people are really turning to local journalism to know what they need to know 鈥 especially during this pandemic.鈥