Tanji Patton is a familiar face to anyone who’s watched television news in Texas. A former investigative reporter, Tanji owned the 6 and 10pm news as the anchor at San Antonio’s NBC affiliate, WOAI-TV, working for the station more than 17 years. “It was rewarding to be able to meet these amazing people and to be a conduit to help them with the problems they had, find a solution, or shine light on something that needed fixing.”
Journalism and television news wasn’t Tanji’s original career path. “I was going into medicine, but couldn’t do the math, and thought, this isn’t going to work. Then Watergate broke. That story fascinated me, and I was hooked. I knew that was it. It’s journalism!”
While Watergate inspired many of Tanji Patton’s peers to become journalists, the road she took to get there was anything but a straight shot. “I had a BA in Journalism and experience as a TV reporter and anchor for two years in college, but after I graduated, stations told me ‘You’re too young. Your voice sounds like a child. You need to go to a smaller market. Come back later.’” Along the way, Tanji detoured into public relations, real estate, got married, had a son and became a stay-at-home mom until her son was five-years-old. “I turned 30, and a light went off. What are you going to do with the rest of your life?”
Tanji took a job in the TV production department at USAA, the San Antonio based, Fortune 500 insurance and investment giant. She also volunteered at WOAI-TV, answering phones. When the Gulf War broke out, the station needed reporters, and Tanji was there.
“I GUEST HOSTED REGIS AND KATHIE LEE… I WAS TOLD ‘LAUGH AT HIS JOKES. LET HIM FINISH HIS STORY.’”
“They hired me as a freelancer, and I broke a big, big story out of Wilford Hall (the Defense Department’s largest surgical center, located in San Antonio), and everybody picked it up. I was at the right place, the right time. I worked hard, but I’ll take luck any day. I also think there was a little divine intervention in there. I do.
“I don’t know if people realize how much journalism has changed. There are still some good journalists, but it’s very different now. It was the true last bastion between the establishment and the people. For any society to thrive, they’ve got to have a healthy information stream, with someone shining a light on those who are supposed to be making good decisions based on common sense and worthy endeavors, not necessarily the almighty dollar.”
When Tanji left WOAI, she combined her producer/on-camera skills with her love of food and wine, and GoodTaste.TV was born. Whether she’s taking viewers inside the top restaurants in Texas and around the country; exploring vineyards in California and Italy, or teaching us how to make Grilled Red Snapper Tacos and Milagro Margaritas, Tanji’s extensive knowledge of food and wine is the backbone for her mouthwatering site.
“I wanted GoodTaste.TV to be video-driven, but like navigating the cover of a magazine. You know what you’re getting with each story, and you can dig deeper if you want. I’m constantly thinking about the next way to tell these stories. There’s always something to do.”
3 thoughts on “Tanji Patton”
Tanji, I watched you from your beginning days in San Antonio and I have always enjoyed your bright spunky personality. I live in Austin now and continue to watch you on Good Taste. I just turned 70 and after 30 years of nursing, there are many days I feel my age! I have always loved your hair and would love to have a new style for my new life as a grandmother (the best). Where do you have your hair styled?
Thank you for all the fun entertainment all these years–you are the best! God bless you always.
Maggie
Hi Maggie, I’ll email Tanji about your sweet comment. I believe she’s been going to the same stylist in San Antonio for a number of years. Love her hair as well. In a few more years I’ll be 70, and some days my body lets me know it. If I don’t exercise three times a week, I feel like I’m 105. Thanks so much for your comment. Brenda
Nice to have seen you at Menil on Friday 8/17 at lunch. I’m watching your show now on Saturday afternoon and thought it appropriate to say “thanks “ for your gracious response to being recognized in public in Houston. We were out for a birthday lunch celebration and you made it more special for me. The whole experience was truly in “Good Taste.” See you again soon.
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