Bryan Llenas | |
Birth Date: | 1988 7, mf=yes |
Education: | University of Miami |
Occupation: | National Correspondent |
Employer: | Fox News |
Bryan Llenas (born July 12, 1988) is an American television news correspondent on the Fox News Channel. He has covered both national and international stories, including mass shootings, terror attacks and natural disasters.
Llenas is from Boca Raton, Florida. He attended the University of Miami and graduated in 2010[1] with a degree in broadcast journalism and political science. There he was inducted into the Iron Arrow Honor Society, the “highest honor attained at the University of Miami,” [2] and in 2017 won the University of Miami "Communicator of the Year" Award.[3]
Llenas is a correspondent at Fox News. Some of his first stories covered at Fox News were the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, the inauguration of Pope Francis in Rome, and the Pope's visit to the United States.[1]
He has reported on the trial of Mexican Drug lord Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman in New York,[4] the Bill Cosby trial,[5] the Trump administration family separation policy,[6] the mass shooting at a church in Sutherland Springs, Texas,[7] Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico,[8] President Donald Trump's transition team,[9] and the September 2016 terrorist bombings in both Manhattan and New Jersey.[10]
Llenas is gay and has talked openly about working for a conservative company as a gay minority and being accepted at Fox News.[11]