Ogle was born in Edmond, Oklahoma, the son of Jack Ogle, a veteran television journalist who worked for NBC affiliate WKY-TV as a news anchor and later news director from 1962 to 1977, and Karen Ogle. He is the eldest of their three sons, all of whom would eventually follow their father into the broadcasting industry. His younger brothers, Kent Jacob Ogle and Walter Kelly Ogle, also work as television journalists in the Oklahoma City market. Kevin attended Kansas State University on a basketball scholarship; he left the Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team for personal reasons in 1978, and transferred from KSU after his freshman year to join Oklahoma State University–Stillwater; there, he graduated with a journalism degree from the Paul Miller School of Journalism and Broadcasting in 1982.
Career
Kevin began his career in Oklahoma City as a television sports photographer and editor. Prior to working at KFOR-TV, Ogle had worked at CBS affiliateKFSM-TV in Fort Smith, Arkansas, ABC affiliate KSWO-TV in Lawton, Oklahoma and KWCO radio in Chickasha, Oklahoma. In 1983, he received one of four Associated Press Awards for Best General News Reporting. He received honorable mention from the Arkansas Associated Press in 1987 for the investigative reporting series, Road to Recovery. He joined KFOR as the station's weekend anchor and general assignment reporter in 1993, before being promoted to weeknight anchor in 1996. Ogle has also headed up the project "Keep the Music Alive," which collects musical instruments for the Oklahoma City Public School system. Ogle also has a monthly column on family and children issues in the local publication Metro Family magazine.
Awards and honors
Ogle has been honored with the Arkansas Associated Press first place reporting award for the documentary The Family Farm: An Endangered Tradition, the Oklahoma Associated Press first place reporting award for the feature report Windmill Man and the Oklahoma Society of Professional Journalism first place reporting award for the feature On the Edge of Nowhere, and in 1998 was also nominated for an Emmy for his feature report Power of Prayer. Ogle was also awarded the Oklahoma Association of Broadcasters Outstanding Achievement Award in 2004 for Best Feature on his report Survivor's Story. The New York Times Company also awarded Ogle the Chairman's Team Award in 2004 for the station's Presidential election coverage.
Personal life
Since 1984, Ogle has been married to Ginger Renae Burns; they raised their family in Edmond, Oklahoma, where the two continue to reside. They have two daughters: Abigail Ann and Katelyn. Abigail, the eldest of his daughters, has since become a journalist in the Oklahoma City market; she followed her father and uncles into television news in 2010 as a sports host at KSBI, before moving to ABC affiliate KOCO-TV as a sports anchor/reporter in 2012 as its weekday morning Live Desk/Alert Center anchor. It leaves KOKH-TV.