Paul Gross WDIV-TV Bio, Age, Wiki, Wife, Family, Height and Net Worth

Paul Gross Profile

Paul Gross is an American award-winning certified broadcast meteorologist who works for Detroit, Michigan’s WDIV-TV Channel 4, an NBC affiliate.

When his second-grade teacher took him to the school library and pointed out a section of books about weather, his initial dread of storms transformed into fascination. Paul became more interested in reading about thunder and lightning, and at the young age of seven, he told his family that he would someday work as a weatherman at Channel 4.

The Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Space Science at the University of Michigan offers a particularly difficult program because it is housed in the esteemed College of Engineering. Paul studied meteorology there.

Paul Gross
Paul Gross

Most Asked Questions About Paul Gross

Who is Paul Gross?

Paul Gross is an award-winning American-certified broadcast meteorologist who works for the NBC station WDIV-TV Channel 4 in Detroit, Michigan.

How old is Paul Gross?

Detroit is his place of birth. Information about his date, month, and year of birth is not available but will be updated as soon as possible.

How Tall Is Paul Gross?

He stands at an average height of 5ft 7in.

Is Paul Gross Married?

A married man, Gross. He is married to Nancy Gross, and they have two wonderful sons. He attends Temple Kol Ami in West Bloomfield, Michigan, a Reform Jewish synagogue.

Where Is Paul Gross Now?

Paul is a journalist who currently works as a meteorologist for the NBC station WDIV-TV Channel 4 in Detroit, Michigan.

How Much Does Paul Gross Make?

Paul’s annual salary at WDV-TV News, where he works as a journalist, falls somewhere in the range of $70,000 and $90,000 on average.

Paul Gross WDV-TV

Paul was chosen by WDIV meteorologist Mal Sillars to be the first weather intern in station history during his sophomore year. Paul was hired for a part-time, off-camera position by WDIV news director Bob Warfield in the middle of his senior year. Later that year, Paul added the weekend on-air meteorological position at Lansing’s WJIM-TV (now WLNS-TV), and two years later, when WKBD-Ten TV’s O’Clock News debuted, he also acquired the backup meteorologist post there.

In 1986, Paul was broadcasting simultaneously on all three television stations, and occasionally on two of them on the same day!

Paul became one of the youngest meteorologists ever chosen to serve on the American Meteorological Society’s Board of Broadcast Meteorology in 1987 and was designated chairman in 1990. His enthusiasm for meteorology rapidly garnered his attention among his peers. However, Paul’s reporting on science and the environment is what has significantly altered the way broadcast meteorology is thought of.

Paul began pressuring producers early in his career to allow him to work on science-related stories. Since then, Paul has done extensive research and written and produced eight WDIV half-hour documentaries, in addition to several stories about science, history, and the environment. At conferences at this time, Paul continued to exhort his colleagues to carry out more of the same kind of study.

When his documentary “Forecast: Overlord,” which tells the story of how the weather affected D-Day in World War II, was deemed to be of such historical significance that it was added to the D-Day archives at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library, the British Meteorological Archives, and the permanent collections of the Museums of Television and Radio History in New York and Chicago, his work began to garner Emmys and other awards, as well as even national attention.

Paul was chosen to chair the American Meteorological Society’s (AMS) new Committee on the Station Scientist, a post he held for seven years when the AMS recognized in 2006 that broadcast meteorologists needed to develop into all-encompassing “station scientists.” Paul was in charge of the AMS’s national initiative to enable and encourage broadcast meteorologists to include more science and environmental information in their broadcasts.

Paul received the highest award bestowed by any professional scientific society when the AMS made him a Fellow of the Society in 2017. Paul is now one of just four meteorologists in history to have the titles of Certified Consulting Meteorologist, Certified Broadcast Meteorologist, and AMS Fellow.

Paul’s discovery in 1997 that Michigan law did not compel public schools to practice tornado protection drills led to one of his most significant professional achievements. Paul got in touch with a state lawmaker, who agreed and put out legislation to change the state constitution to mandate tornado protection drills. Paul testified about the tornado threat in Michigan before the State House and Senate Education Committees, and he later stood with Governor John Engler for the official signing of the “Gross Weather Bill.”

Paul Gross Age

Detroit is his place of birth. Information about his date, month, and year of birth is not available but will be updated as soon as possible.

Paul Gross Family

Paul has not yet revealed any details concerning his family. However, information about his parents and siblings will be updated as soon as possible.

Paul Gross Height

He stands at an average height of 5ft 7in.

Paul Gross Wife

A married man, Gross. He is married to Nancy Gross, and they have two wonderful sons. He attends Temple Kol Ami in West Bloomfield, Michigan, a Reform Jewish synagogue.

Paul Gross Awards

Paul has received nine Emmy awards from the Michigan Chapter of the National Association of Television Arts and Sciences, and the Michigan Association of Broadcasters recognized his live, 45-minute webcast on climate change from 2014 that was broadcast on ClickOnDetroit.com with the top honor.

Paul enjoys gardening, working out, playing softball, bowling, golf, and collecting vintage stamps, coins, maps, and books on meteorology.

Paul Gross Salary

Paul’s annual salary at WDV-TV News, where he works as a journalist, falls somewhere in the range of $70,000 and $90,000 on average.

Paul Gross Net Worth

It is estimated that Paul’s net worth falls somewhere in the range of $700,000 to $2 million. His primary source of financial support comes from his work as a journalist.

Paul Gross WDIV-TV Colleagues

  1. Evrod Cassimy 
  2. Steve Garagiola
  3. Sandra Ali 
  4. Ben Bailey
  5. Devin Scillian
  6. Jamie Edmonds