Daniel Granger |
| Account Executive |
| Clear Channel Radio, U.S. |
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About Daniel Granger
Daniel Granger has served as an Account Executive with a strict focus on business development at Clear Channel Radio since 2003. Based in the company’s southern California offices, Daniel Granger assists businesses of all sizes seeking a larger scale of visibility; Granger works to implement advertising campaigns in the radio industry, from concept to direct application and long-term supervision. Daniel Granger serves as a liaison between his clients and his company, working toward delivering profitable results for client campaigns with Clear Channel's premium advertising assets.
Since joining Clear Channel Radio, Daniel Granger has earned recognition for his consistently successful performance. Daniel Granger has received the National Innovation Award twice and has also won the Pinnacle Award, the highest honor at Clear Channel Radio. Noted as a leader in his sector, Daniel Granger took charge of two of the top three local direct accounts in Los Angeles radio.
Daniel Granger graduated Cum Laude from Biola University, maintaining a 3.6 GPA as a Communications major. During college, Daniel Granger obtained an internship with the Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn, as well as hosting the Biola Film Festival.
Currently working in Burbank, California, Daniel Granger resides in Valencia, California, with this wife and two daughters.
Daniel Granger Links
About Clear Channel Radio, U.S.
Daniel Granger: International Justice Mission (IJM)
I am a proud supporter of the International Justice Mission, a human rights agency that works to promote justice for victims of violent oppression, including slavery and sexual exploitation. IJM combines the work of lawyers, aftercare professionals, and investigators to approach the goals from all aspects, ensuring that the victim is rescued, that perpetrators are prosecuted, and that the community’s public justice systems are strengthened. Since its inception in 1997, IJM has responded to the need for restraint of violent oppressors who prey on vulnerable populations. In the past, humanitarian organizations provided vital services, such as health care, education, and food, to impoverished people around the world, but they were unable to stop the rampant violence in some regions. A number of lawyers, human rights workers, and public officials conducted a comprehensive, landmark study of over 65 aid organizations representing more than 40,000 international development workers. In the survey disseminated, volunteers and staff acknowledged the presence of government and police brutality but reported lacking the resources and expertise needed to confront the abusers. Gary Haugen, United States Department of Justice lawyer and United Nations’ Investigator in Charge after the Rwandan genocide, officially formed IJM in 1997 to assist in combating the problem. IJM now encompasses over 300 professionals striving to fight injustice in 12 countries around the world. IJM mainly functions through individual casework, exposing abuse against widows, orphans, children, and other groups. Operating under the belief that violence is not perpetrated because of the power of aggressors, but because of the vulnerability of victims, IJM strives to empower victims through the law. In this way, further violence is discouraged, and residents are given confidence that the law and justice will protect them. Through its casework, IJM is able to collaborate directly with functioning public justice systems and advocates for victims in specific instances of oppression.