{{short description|American reporter for CBS News (born 1977)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=January 2020}} {{Infobox person | name = Matt Gutman | image = File:Gutman guat.jpg | alt = | caption = | birth_name = Matthew A. Gutman | birth_date = {{Birth date and age |1977|12|5|mf=yes}} | birth_place = [[Princeton, New Jersey]] | death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} (death date then birth date) --> | death_place = | known_for = Television reporter | alma_mater = [[Williams College]] | spouse = | children = 2<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://abcnews.go.com/US/matt-gutman-biography-abc-news-correspondent/story?id=13885811|title=Matt Gutman's biography|website=ABC News}}</ref> | years_active = 2000–present }} '''Matt Gutman''' (born December 5, 1977) is an American journalist and author who is currently the chief correspondent for [[CBS News]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |date=2025-12-09 |title=Matt Gutman joins CBS News as chief correspondent - CBS News |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/matt-gutman-joins-cbs-news-chief-correspondent/ |access-date=2025-12-25 |website=www.cbsnews.com |language=en-US}}</ref>
He has been recognized with multiple awards from organizations including The Emmy Awards, [[RTDNA]], the Peabody<ref>{{cite tweet |user=PeabodyAwards | title = The 2025 wildfires in Southern California were both a local and national story... | author = Peabody Awards |number = 2050228630593339833 | date = May 1, 2026 }}</ref> and the Society of Professional Journalists.<ref name="Matt Gutman biography">{{cite web |url=https://abcnews.go.com/US/matt-gutman-biography-abc-news-correspondent/story?id=13885811 |website=ABC News|title=Matt Gutman biography}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Sigma Delta Chi Awards - Society of Professional Journalists |url=https://www.spj.org/sdxa22.asp |access-date=2023-08-16 |website=www.spj.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=2023 National Edward R. Murrow Award Winners - Radio Television Digital News Association |url=https://www.rtdna.org/2023-national-edward-r-murrow-award-winners |access-date=2023-08-16 |website=www.rtdna.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=News & Documentary Emmy Awards (2018) |url=http://www.imdb.com/event/ev0000493/2018/1/ |access-date=2023-08-16 |website=IMDb}}</ref> He is also the author of the books ''No Time to Panic: How I Curbed My Anxiety and Conquered a Lifetime of Panic Attacks'' (2023)<ref>{{Cite web |title=No Time to Panic by Matt Gutman: 9780385549059 {{!}} PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books |url=https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/709407/no-time-to-panic-by-matt-gutman/ |access-date=2023-08-16 |website=PenguinRandomhouse.com}}</ref> and ''The Boys in the Cave: Deep Inside the Impossible Rescue in Thailand'' (2018) about the [[Tham Luang cave rescue]].<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.harpercollins.com/9780062909916/the-boys-in-the-cave/ |title = The Boys in the Cave – Matt Gutman – Hardcover}}</ref> He was the host of [[The American Weekly|the American weekly]] TV series ''[[Sea Rescue (TV program)|Sea Rescue]]'' when it ended in September 2018 and won an Emmy for Outstanding Children's Series in 2016.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Outstanding Children's Program Nominees / Winners 2016 |url=https://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/2016/outstanding-childrens-program |access-date=2023-08-16 |website=Television Academy}}</ref>
== Early life and education == Matthew A. Gutman was born to a Jewish family<ref>[https://jfcsphilly.org/correspondent-matt-gutman-speaks-at-jfcs/ "Correspondent Matt Gutman Speaks at JFCS"], Jewish Family and Children’s Service of Greater Philadelphia, November 13, 2018.</ref> in [[Princeton, New Jersey]]<ref name="ABC Medianet">{{cite web |url=http://www.abcmedianet.com/web/bios/display_bios.aspx?bio_type=news_correspondents&bio_id=353# |title=Matt Gutman |author=Staff(s) |publisher=ABC Medianet |accessdate=August 29, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140829150524/http://www.abcmedianet.com/web/bios/display_bios.aspx?bio_type=news_correspondents&bio_id=353 |archive-date=August 29, 2014 |url-status=dead}}</ref> on December 5, 1977.<ref name="Birthdate">{{cite web |url=https://twitter.com/mattgutmanABC/status/408550702747631616 |title=Birthdate |author=Matt Gutman |publisher=Ben Sherwood |accessdate=August 29, 2014}}</ref> His father, Paul, was killed in a small plane crash in Georgia on September 25, 1990, when Gutman was 12 years old.<ref>{{Cite web |date=1990-09-25 |title=THREE DIE IN PLANE ACCIDENT 33-YEAR-OLD COPILOT WAS FROM GREENSBORO. |url=https://greensboro.com/three-die-in-plane-accident-33-year-old-copilot-was-from-greensboro/article_dc6841ec-0443-50ca-890e-69847d1a6062.html |access-date=2023-08-16 |website=Greensboro News and Record}}</ref>
Gutman attended [[Newark Academy]], where he was honored as a scholar-athlete football player.<ref>Wilson, Dennis. [http://thejointlibrary.org/archives/TheTimes/1996/1996-03-21/pg_0013.pdf "Matt Gutman to Be Honored by National Football Group"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170910083854/http://thejointlibrary.org/archives/TheTimes/1996/1996-03-21/pg_0013.pdf |date=September 10, 2017}}, ''Scotch Plains-Fanwood Times'', March 21, 1996. Accessed September 9, 2017. "Westfield's Matt Gutman will be honored by the Essex County Chapter of the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame at the annual Scholar-Athlete Awards Banquet to be held at Mayfair Farms in West Orange. A senior at Newark Academy in Livingston, Gutman is the Minutemen's honoree for the Chapter's prestigious scholar-athlete awards which are presented to 28 outstanding players who excel not only on the gridiron but also in the academic classroom."</ref> He graduated from [[Williams College]] in 2000.<ref name="ABC Medianet" />
== Career == Gutman started as a freelance print reporter in Argentina in late 2000. His first published article was for the now-defunct English-language ''Buenos Aires Daily,'' about a robber who serially held up a Buenos Aires restaurant, sometimes showing up with what he said was a knife in his pocket, or a gun, sometimes a syringe. After more than a dozen attempts the proprietors would see him coming, knew him by name, and gave him a few pesos to walk away. The article was about the endemic crime in the city at the time. Gutman was also held up at gunpoint in a restaurant during his six months in the city.
=== Middle East === In mid 2001, Gutman moved to Tel Aviv during the peak of the Palestinian uprising known as the Second Intifada and worked for ''[[The Jerusalem Post]]'' from 2001 to 2005 covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He also worked for ''[[USA Today]]'' before officially joining ''[[ABC News Radio]]'' in 2006. Gutman lived in the Middle East for nearly eight years, covering most major conflicts, including the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Lebanon, filing dispatches from nearly every country in the region.<ref name="Matt Gutman biography" />
He was working In August 2005, during Israel's controversial and tumultuous evacuation of it's Gaza Strip settlements, Gutman was the lone foreign reporter on the rooftop of a synagogue in Kfar Darom, the last building in the last settlement to be evacuated. The young settlers had barricaded the building and were waging a last ditch battle on the rooftop, pelting soldiers below with projectiles. After a day-long siege by Israel's military, the Israeli military loaded baton-wielding soldiers onto shipping containers which there then hoisted onto the Synagogue's roof by cranes and detained the (and Gutman), and pushed them all into shipping containers and then bused them out of Gaza. During that confrontation, and in the haze of chemical irritants and sprays of water cannon, Gutman received a call from ABC News Radio asking him to describe the scene.
It was the start of what became Gutman's 20 year association with ABC News. He has continued to report from the region during major outbreaks of violence for both ABC News and CBS News.
=== ABC News === In 2008, Gutman moved to [[Miami]], Florida for ''[[ABC News (United States)|ABC News]]'' and began appearing on various programs and platforms for the network including ''[[ABC World News Tonight]]'', ''[[Good Morning America]]'', ''[[Nightline]]'' and the network's magazine show ''[[20/20 (U.S. TV program)|20/20]]''. From 2010 on he filed reports from more than 50 countries for ''[[ABC News (United States)|ABC News]]''. In 2014, he took over the hosting duties for ''Sea Rescue'' and hosted about 120 episodes of the show. In late 2016, while reporting on the collapsing health care system of Venezuela, he was detained and interrogated for five days by Venezuelan police and intelligence services.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Gutman |first1=Matt |title=Reporter's notebook: How a look inside Venezuela's crumbling health care system got me kicked out of the country |url=https://abcnews.go.com/International/reporters-notebook-inside-venezuelas-crumbling-health-care-system/story?id=44291337 |accessdate=February 4, 2017 |agency=ABC News}}</ref>
He was named ABC News' Chief National Correspondent in January 2018. In his years with ABC News he covered wars from Ukraine to Gaza, and every kind of natural disaster, from earthquakes in Japan, to volcanoes in Chile to tornados in Oklahoma.
On the morning of January 7, 2025 he was among the first network reporters on scene at the Palisades fire in Pacific Palisades, California. He would report on the devastating impact of those fires on multiple Los Angles-area cities for the next two weeks, while packing up his own family for evacuation.
On December 9, 2025, it was announced that he would leave ABC for CBS News.
=== CBS News === On December 9, 2025, CBS News announced that Gutman would be joining the network as chief correspondent on January 5, 2026, to be based in Los Angeles.<ref name=":0" /> He also serves as lead correspondent for ''[[48 Hours (TV program)|48 Hours]]'' and is a contributor for ''[[60 Minutes]]'', in addition to being a relief anchor for flagship broadcasts. He is considered the first major hire by CBS News' first editor-in-chief, [[Bari Weiss]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Johnson |first=Ted |date=2025-12-09 |title=Matt Gutman Departs ABC News For New Post At CBS News |url=https://deadline.com/2025/12/matt-gutman-joins-cbs-news-chief-correspondent-1236643238/ |access-date=2025-12-25 |website=Deadline |language=en-US}}</ref> Since then Gutman has covered the arrest of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis and the war with Iran for the network.
===Suspension and return=== In January 2020, Gutman in a live special report broadcast minutes after the helicopter in which Kobe Bryant was traveling crashed, was suspended for a month by ABC News for incorrectly reporting that, during the death of [[Kobe Bryant]] in the [[2020 Calabasas helicopter crash]], all four of Bryant's children had died when only Bryant's 13-year-old daughter [[Gianna Bryant|Gianna]], "Gigi", was on board the helicopter and perished in the crash.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/business/story/2020-01-29/abc-news-has-suspended-correspondent-who-said-four-kobe-bryant-daughters-were-on-his-helicopter-matt-gutman|title=ABC News suspends correspondent over erroneous report on Kobe Bryant crash|date=January 29, 2020|website=Los Angeles Times|access-date=January 30, 2020}}</ref> Gutman's book indicates that experience served as a jumping off point "for a personal journey into the science and treatment of panic attacks," which his book says he has suffered for decades.<ref>{{Cite web |title=No Time to Panic by Matt Gutman |url=https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/709407/no-time-to-panic-by-matt-gutman/9780385549059 |access-date=2023-08-17 |website=Penguin Random House Canada}}</ref>
That February, Gutman resumed reporting for ABC and appeared on the network's shows. Later in the year, on October 23, 2020, his work appeared in an episode of [[20/20 (American TV program)|''20/20'']] entitled "The Perfect Liar," a documentary about wrongful conviction, in which he interviewed jailhouse informant Paul Skalnik and death row inmate James Dailey.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Newsdesk|first=Laughing Place Disney|date=2020-10-19|title="20/20" to Air "The Perfect Liar" About Jailhouse Snitch Paul Skalnik on October 23|url=https://www.laughingplace.com/w/news/2020/10/19/20-20-the-perfect-liar-about-jailhouse-snitch-paul-skalnik-october-23/|access-date=2020-11-22|website=LaughingPlace.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Calendar|first=The Events|title=ABC 20/20: "The Perfect Liar" Preview {{!}} October 23, 2020|url=https://www.discusspw.com/event/abc-20-20-perfect-liar-preview-october-23/|access-date=2020-11-22|website=DiscussPW}}</ref>
In February 2021, Gutman was again suspended from ABC News for a short time for violating Disney [[COVID-19]] policies for reporting in a Los Angeles-area hospital for newsgathering purposes. Despite being invited into the hospital by it's CEO and medical staff, Gutman had not received the advance permission of ABC News management.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Johnson|first=Ted|date=2021-02-15|title=ABC News Suspends Correspondent Matt Gutman For Violating Company Covid-19 Policy In Hospital Visit|url=https://deadline.com/2021/02/matt-gutman-abc-news-covid-19-1234694009/|access-date=2021-02-21|website=Deadline}}</ref>
In September 2025 he was criticized for describing messages, read out to a packed press conference by Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray, between Tyler Robinson (alleged assassin of [[Charlie Kirk]]) and his partner as "a very intimate portrait," "fulsome" "speaking so lovingly about his partner" and "very touching."<ref>{{Cite web |last=McHardy |first=Martha |date=2025-09-17 |title=ABC faces calls to fire Matt Gutman over Tyler Robinson texts remark |url=https://www.newsweek.com/abc-matt-gutman-tyler-robinson-text-messages-2131116 |access-date=2025-09-17 |website=Newsweek |language=en}}</ref>
== Books == Gutman's first book, ''The Boys in the Cave'', tells the story of the little known true events behind the miraculous rescue of 13 Thai boys and their coach from the [[Tham Luang cave rescue|Tham Luang cave]] in July 2018. It was published in November 2018. It has been translated into six languages.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Harper Collins |url=https://www.harpercollins.com/9780062909916/the-boys-in-the-cave/ |website=HarperCollins.com |publisher=Harper Collins|title=The Boys in the Cave – Matt Gutman – Hardcover}}</ref>
Gutman's second book, ''No Time to Panic'', published in 2023, and which became a best seller USA Today chronicles Gutman's previously undisclosed 20-year battle with panic attacks.
== References == {{Reflist}}
== External links == *[https://web.archive.org/web/20140829150524/http://www.abcmedianet.com/web/bios/display_bios.aspx?bio_type=news_correspondents&bio_id=353 ABC Medianet biography]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Gutman, Matt}} [[Category:20th-century American journalists]] [[Category:21st-century American journalists]] [[Category:21st-century American memoirists]] [[Category:American television reporters and correspondents]] [[Category:ABC News people]] [[Category:CBS News people]] [[Category:American foreign correspondents]] [[Category:American expatriates in Israel]] [[Category:Jewish American journalists]] [[Category:Jewish American non-fiction writers]] [[Category:Journalists from Florida]] [[Category:Journalists from New Jersey]] [[Category:Williams College alumni]] [[Category:Newark Academy alumni]] [[Category:People from Westfield, New Jersey]] [[Category:1977 births]] [[Category:Living people]]