Natalie Chuck Joins FOX News Channel as Correspondent
FOX News Channel has announced that Natalie Chuck will join their team as a correspondent based in Los Angeles. She comes on board with an impressive background as an award-winning investigative reporter, having worked her way up through local newsrooms in both Colorado and California, eventually landing roles with some major networks in the West.
Chuck recently transitioned to FOX from her role at ABC affiliate KMGH-TV in Denver, where she focused on investigative reporting for Denver7 Investigates.
Since joining the FOX team in May 2024, she has tackled various significant issues, including shortcomings in Colorado’s mental health laws influencing criminal cases, extensive immigration enforcement operations, and high-profile criminal trials, like the one involving the suspect tied to the tragic Boulder attack.
Before her time in Denver, Chuck was a multimedia journalist at ABC affiliate KGTV-TV in San Diego. During her tenure there, she reported on a wide range of impactful stories across Southern California, such as historic flooding incidents, wrongful death lawsuits, and cold cases that had long gone unsolved.
Her career in television journalism kickstarted at KOAA-TV, an NBC affiliate in southern Colorado, where she covered news from both Pueblo and Colorado Springs.
Chuck’s contributions to the field haven’t gone unnoticed; she received the 2025 Regional Emmy Award for Investigative Reporting and was honored with the Colorado Broadcasting Corporation’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2022 for her work in investigative journalism.
A South Carolina native from Fort Mill, Chuck earned a bachelor’s degree in broadcast journalism from the University of South Carolina.
FOX News Channel, which is part of Fox Corp, has maintained its position as the most-watched television news network for over 24 consecutive years. Its viewership makes up nearly 60 percent of the cable news audience, and the network has consistently ranked as the top cable news provider for the past decade, according to Nielsen Media Research.




