
Web Publisher - Pacific Science Center
Greater Seattle Area

Web Publisher - Pacific Science Center
Greater Seattle Area
Stan Orchard is a Seattle-based writer, journalist, broadcaster, Pacific Science Center Web Publisher, rookie photographer and all-around great guy who lives in Hobart, WA.
Online content writer/producer, Broadcast news manager, anchor, reporter, writer, Web producer. Proficient with Adobe Photoshop, RapidWeaver, html, CSS, Joomla!, php, asp. Also photographer/videographer.
(Non-Profit; 201-500 employees; Museums and Institutions industry)
March 2006 — Present (3 years 9 months)
Oversee all online content and distribution for a non-profit educational institution in Seattle, WA
(Privately Held; 1-10 employees; Events Services industry)
June 2002 — Present (7 years 6 months)
Vice President and Partner, Storyteller Communications, Everett, WA, (storycom.com) providing event production, marketing and communications consulting to organizations nationwide.
(Public Company; 501-1000 employees; FSCI; Broadcast Media industry)
January 1983 — March 2006 (23 years 3 months)
Managed a staff of world class broadcast journalists, morning news anchor, reporter, bureau manager, started the first broadcast Web site (KOMO) in the Northwest in August of 1994, produced thousands of stories for air and online.
(Public Company; 501-1000 employees; Broadcast Media industry)
1983 — 2006 (23 years )
(Public Company; 501-1000 employees; Broadcast Media industry)
1982 — 2006 (24 years )
(Privately Held; 501-1000 employees; Broadcast Media industry)
December 1976 — December 1982 (6 years 1 month)
Directed news operations, morning news anchor and reporter. Proficient with automation systems.
(Privately Held; 11-50 employees; Broadcast Media industry)
December 1975 — December 1976 (1 year 1 month)
Hosted the morning show, news reporter/anchor, managed the station's staff, pretty much did everything.
(Privately Held; 11-50 employees; Broadcast Media industry)
March 1975 — October 1975 (8 months)
News anchor for radio/TV operation in a small Alaska town. In that era before satellite distribution we were the only source of live news content for that isolated area of about 10,000 people.
Broadcasting 1974 — 1976
professional networking, catching up, reference requests, photography, video production