TV journalism After a short stint on the Western Mail, Morgan joined
ITN as a graduate trainee in 1989. He worked as a producer for
News at Ten and as a foreign affairs producer and on-screen reporter for
Channel 4 News, covering stories such as the
LA Riots, the
Eritrean Civil War and the Troubles in Northern Ireland. During his time at Channel Four News, Morgan spent three years covering the conflict in the Former Yugoslavia, working closely with the late
Gaby Rado. Morgan was also part of the reporting team which won 1994 BAFTA and Amnesty International Awards for their coverage of the siege of Srebrenica. During these years, Morgan also wrote regularly for
The Guardian, the
Times Literary Supplement, the
New Statesman, Index on Censorship and the
New Welsh Review. In 1999, he returned to Oxford as a
Reuters Fellow at
Green Templeton College. His teen drama
Spit Game was nominated for a BAFTA in 2004. He also wrote episodes of
Doctors and
The Bill and over a dozen radio dramas, for which he received the Richard Imison Award (for
A Matter of Interpretation) and a Sony Radio Academy Award nomination (for "Milosevic in Black and White"). In 2002, Morgan published
Fire Mountain: a non-fiction account of the 1902 volcanic eruption of Mont Pelée in Martinique. a drama documentary series produced by
National Geographic. Around this time, Morgan also undertook archival research for Professor Kathy Burk's biography of the historian A.J.P. Taylor.
US work In 2005, Morgan moved to the United States. While in the US he wrote and produced several documentaries:
Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired (winner of the 2009 Emmy for Best Writing in Non-Fiction Programming),
Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic,
Revenge of the Electric Car and
Fantastic Lies. Morgan has also worked as a series producer on two CNN series:
The Eighties and
The History of Comedy and was a story consultant on the Beatles documentary
Eight Days a Week. He was an Executive Producer on
Flint Town, a Netflix documentary series about the police department of Flint, Michigan. In 2019, he continued his connection with Netflix by being one of the executive producers on
Diagnosis, a seven-part Netflix documentary series produced in association with Scott Rudin, the
New York Times and Lightbox. In 2020, Morgan was one of the producers on
LANCE, a two-part feature documentary about the disgraced cyclist
Lance Armstrong. The film premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival and then debuted on ESPN in May 2020. Morgan has written several feature film scripts and a TV pilot for Anonymous Content. His feature script
Dear Norman Mailer was performed at the Hay Festival in 2015 by
Tatiana Maslany and
Tom Cullen. Other recent executive producer credits include
What Happens in Hollywood,
The Way Down: God, Greed and the Cult of Gwen Shamblin and
Desperately Seeking Soulmate: Escaping Twin Flames Universe. Morgan is a member of the Writers Guild of America (West) and an Associate Fellow of the
Royal Historical Society. He is also a member of the
Seren Network, a Welsh government initiative that helps students in Wales to achieve their full academic potential. ==Personal life==