Veteran Reporters Kick Off WaVe Communications

Two veteran Washington journalists today announced the launch of WaVe Communications, a new writing, editing and consulting enterprise designed to help clients visualize, sharpen and convey their story.

Founded by long-time reporters Jim Kuhnhenn and Charles Babington, WaVe is positioned to take advantage of a new world driven by a demand for compelling and varied content delivered in multiple ways.

Joint statement from Jim and Chuck:

“We are thrilled to get WaVe Communications off the ground and use our experience as deadline writers to continue doing what we love best – researching, synthesizing and communicating. Our audiences may change, but the task remains the same.

“For decades we have reported for major news organizations, covering the White House, Congress and presidential campaigns. We can distill complex information and research into crisp, accessible and succinct content for multiple platforms and general audiences. “And while we are eager to take on those tasks, we can also make clients better writers through thoughtful and engaging seminars and workshops.

“We are eager to join forces and offer clients the kind of writing and advice that will improve and broaden their message.” www.WaVeComms.net

ABOUT US:

Charles Babington has been a high-profile Washington reporter for 25 years. After working for newspapers in North Carolina and Texas, he spent 16 years at , where he covered the White House, Congress, politics and other beats, and served as the paper’s congressional editor. He reported on President Bill Clinton from 17 countries. In 1996 the Post nominated his work for a in investigative reporting.

Babington also covered the White House and Congress for the . He has written for numerous magazines, including The New Republic, Columbia Journalism Review, National Law Journal, Wildlife Conservation and The Journal of NIH Research. He also has written chapters for several books about elections and public policy. For 12 years, Babington was a regular panelist on PBS’s “Washington Week” (with Gwen Ifill). He also has appeared on CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, NPR, The Diane Rehm Show, On Point, To the Point, C-Span’s NewsMaker, and other news programs.

Babington was born and raised in eastern North Carolina. He gradu- ated with honors in Islamic history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he was a Morehead Scholar and member of Phi Beta Kappa. He and his wife, Norma, have three adult children.

Jim Kuhnhenn has spent half of his 40-year journalism career in Washington as newspaper bureau chief, editor and congressional and White House correspondent. He worked for newspapers in Pennsylvania and Missouri before The Kansas City Star put him in charge of the newspaper's Washington reporting team in 1993.

In 1998 he became the political editor for Newspapers, directing coverage of the last two years of the Clinton presidency. He was Knight Ridder's congressional correspondent before joining the Associated Press in 2006 as a national political writer. Kuhnhenn covered the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis and, two years later, the AP assigned him to the White House, where he focused on the economic recovery, jobs policy and immigration.

He is past president of the Washington Press Club Foundation and a former member of the congressional Standing Committee of Correspondents. He has appeared on MSNBC, NPR and C-SPAN and has been a panelist on IRE and Congressional Quarterly seminars. In 1997, he co-led two weeks of journalism and politics workshops in Ukraine.

Kuhnhenn was born in Chile and speaks Spanish fluently. He is a graduate of the Pennsylvania State University. He and his wife, Louise, live in Silver Spring, Md. They are the parents of two adult sons.