Curtis began his broadcasting career in Florida, working at
WRUF-AM/
FM Radio and
WUFT-TV5 (PBS) in
Gainesville and
WCJB-TV 20 (ABC) in
Ocala. He became a nationally known journalist in 1987, when he was at
WEAR-TV 3 (ABC) in
Pensacola. He won numerous awards, between 1989 and 1992, for his five-years of coverage in what came to be known as the
Gulf Breeze UFO Sightings. His work appeared on
NBC's
Unsolved Mysteries with
Robert Stack,
A Current Affair and in
Time-Life Books. In 1991 the
Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSICOP) awarded Curtis the
Responsibility in Journalism Award for the Gulf Breeze incident, exposing trick photography. Curtis is one of a select group of national reporters who have spent time working in Congress. He served as a Legislative Aide and Congressional Fellow through the
American Political Science Association, in the offices of
Rep. Charles Schumer (D-NY) and
Sen. Herb Kohl, (D-WI), 1992-93. Curtis is perhaps best known for the 15 years he spent with
KTVU-TV2, the former
Cox Media Group station and
FOX affiliate in the
San Francisco Bay Area. He served as
Chief Washington, D.C. Correspondent for Cox-owned stations from 1993 to 1999,
Morning News co-anchor from 1999 to 2007 and a freelance reporter and political analyst through the balance of the
2008 campaign as he traveled from
Iowa and
New Hampshire in January, through the entire
primary season ending in
South Dakota and
Montana in June. He also covered both
political conventions for KTVU. He was also a host of
Comcast Newsmakers in the Bay Area. In January 2010, Curtis joined
WLNE-TV ABC6 in
Providence, Rhode Island as the weekend evening news anchor and
Chief Political Reporter. He would go on to anchor the
ABC affiliate's weekday morning and 5 o'clock weeknight newscasts. He was also a substitute host for the weekend public affairs program
ABC6 News On the Record, hosted by former Providence mayor and the station's chief political analyst
Vincent "Buddy" Cianci. During his time at
ABC6, Curtis covered many events surrounding the
2012 U.S. presidential election, including the
Republican National Convention in
Tampa, Florida and the
Democratic National Convention in
Charlotte, North Carolina. He also served as a correspondent for all of WLNE owner
Citadel Communications' stations (
WOI-DT in
Des Moines, Iowa,
WHBF-TV in
Rock Island, Illinois,
KLKN in
Lincoln, Nebraska and
KCAU-TV in
Sioux City, Iowa) while covering the conventions. Curtis left WLNE in March 2015. Before leaving
Rhode Island, he appeared as a panelist on two episodes of the public affairs program
A Lively Experiment on
WSBE-TV Rhode Island PBS. In October 2015, Curtis joined
West Virginia Media Holdings as
Chief Political Reporter. Based at
WOWK-TV in
Charleston, he reports for the
CBS affiliate as well as the group's other stations (CBS affiliates
WTRF-TV in
Wheeling,
WVNS-TV in
Bluefield/
Beckley and NBC affiliate
WBOY-TV in
Clarksburg). He also contributes to the company's weekly newspaper, the
State Journal, in addition to all company internet platforms. In November 2015, West Virginia Media Holdings announced that it was selling its stations to the Nexstar Broadcasting Group (now better known as
Nexstar Media Group). Curtis would continue on with the group. Curtis continues to be a regular political contributor on
KGO-AM 810 and
KGO-TV in
San Francisco. He also has contributed occasionally on
KQED-TV 9,
KPIX-TV5, and
KRON-TV4 in San Francisco, as well as
KTXL-TV Fox 40 News in
Sacramento and
KTLA-TV5 in
Los Angeles. He is also an occasional newspaper reporter, covering the Inauguration in Washington, D.C. for the
Danville Weekly and
Pleasanton Weekly in California, as well as writing for his own blog, which includes his weekly political column, "The Sunday Political Brunch." He is now a National Contributing Writer on politics for Patch.com Patch - Everything Local: Breaking News, Events, Discussions ==Writing career==