FSU students honor victims, begin to heal after mass shooting
The growing memorial outside the Student Union stood as a fragile symbol of solidarity on a campus still reeling from tragedy.
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Multiple Emmy Award-winning journalist Ted Scouten has traveled the world and your neighborhood to chronicle South Florida since 1998.
Ted's true passion is to bring you the news of the day; stories that effect your lives. He has been based in Broward County since 1999.
Ted watched the news from the age of 3.
"My mom thought I was an odd child," Ted laughs. "When we had company, I would grab them by the hand and lead them into the living room to watch the news. It was evident that I didn't choose journalism. It chose me."
Ted has reported from all over the U.S., Caribbean, and Latin America. He was on the scene of the devastating earthquake in Haiti less than 24 hours after it happened. He also arrived in NYC within a day after the 9/11 attacks.
"As devastating as both of those stories were, I would never give up the experience of being there," Ted said. "To see firsthand the horror of terrorism and the pain of that tragic quake in Haiti have not only made me a better journalist but more importantly, a better human being. You can't experience something like that and not be moved and changed for the better."
Perhaps one of Ted's most meaningful pieces of work was the 2012 award winning documentary "March of the Living: Return to Auschwitz." He followed three Miami holocaust survivors back to Auschwitz for an emotional journey. "These incredible men are living testament to the ugliness of bigotry and hate," Scouten said. "They also are a shining example of how tolerance, education and love can change hearts and minds."
Ted received two Emmy Awards for his work on this incredible project.
Ted was also honored with a 2002 Emmy for his report on pet overpopulation in South Florida. Ted is an animal advocate having rescued several dogs.
Ted loves working in his yard when he's not out reporting.
And whenever he gets free time you can bet Ted and his husband Dave are traveling the world.
Some of Scouten's favorite destinations have been Australia, New Zealand, Venezuela, Antarctica and Palm Springs, California.
At any given time they have three future trips planned and have visited all seven continents.
"I've lived in my home in Hollywood longer than I have lived anywhere in my life. South Florida is my home, my community and it's an honor to tell the stories of my neighbors and what impacts their lives."
Ted is a graduate of The University of Texas at Austin with a degree in Journalism, and minors in Spanish, English and Psychology.
He also studied at Universidad de Valencia in Valencia, Spain.
Ted began his television career in 1986 on the Texas-Mexico border, in Laredo, Texas, followed by gigs in the Rio Grande Valley, Austin and Orlando.
Ted is also a proud member of the NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists.
Ted takes pride in his stories celebrating the contributions of LGBTQ+ Pioneers in South Florida and the impact they've had on the community.
"After years of seeing the pain and sadness reporting the news, it's always a wonderful experience when you can focus on a story showing our similarities and bringing people together."
Ted's philosophy: "I love having a front row seat to life's events, at home and around the world."
The growing memorial outside the Student Union stood as a fragile symbol of solidarity on a campus still reeling from tragedy.
Susan Stocker, who took her brother in when he couldn't live on his own anymore, said it can be frustrating and exhausting.
Their story, rooted in love and resilience, began more than three decades ago in Miami.
The fire broke out around 1:30 p.m. at an industrial park located in the 3800 block of West 108th Street.
From Honduras to Ethiopia, the beans fueling the region's caffeine fix could cost more.
A Cessna 310 carrying three people departed Boca Raton and was bound for Tallahassee before it crashed, the FAA said.
The Monroe County Sheriff's Office said Dylan Lamb was taken into custody in Key Largo in connection with the death of 43-year-old Nadyne Tillman.
Investigators combed through sediment Monday at the pond near Flamingo Road and Sunrise Boulevard.
From music stars to concertgoers, Day One kicked off to a booming start and for some, getting there was half the fun.
Festival organizers are expecting some 100,000 people in Fort Lauderdale over the next three days.
In July 2021, a structural recertification report deemed the building unsafe and residents were evacuated.
Prosecutors accused the pair of running a scheme in which they obtained high-end items without paying for them.
The Department of Homeland Security officially posted the notice to end protections for 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans to the Federal Register.
Authorities said a crowd of up to 150 people on motorcycles and ATVs gathered in the parking lot of a Racetrac gas station.
The documentary "No Other Land," made by a Palestinian-Israeli team, shows a group of Palestinian villages' interaction with the Israeli military in the West Bank.