Ann Curry
Ann Curry has worked as a journalist for 45 years. Her reporting focuses on natural disasters as well as war zones. Curry has covered wars across the globe, including Kosovo Iraq Syria Lebanon Palestine Afghanistan Darfur Congo. Ann Curry is an American journalist, anchor of a television newscast and reporter born in 1956. Her most well-known work is on the Today Show, which is a morning news program airing across the country by NBC. Curry is well-known for her reporting of catastrophes caused by natural or human causes particularly in nations affected by conflicts. Curry's father served as a sailor in the U.S. Navy and her mother was Japanese. After World War II, her parents had a meeting when her father was serving in Japan. Her father served serving in the military, and her family moved around a lot. They finally relocated to Ashland Oregon where Curry attended the high school. Her graduation with a journalist certificate from the University of Oregon in 1978. Her exposure to different cultures and the experiences she had during her growing up could have contributed to her compassionate method of expressing her views on global issues. Ann Curry, a journalist who works for NBC and anchor of the news from the United States, is renowned. Her biography provides details about the woman. The couple relocated frequently so Curry was not confined to one school for more than two years traveling to various locales such as San Diego Alameda Oregon and Virginia. Ashland was her last high school. Her path to success in her career when she started her broadcasting career by working as an intern for KTVL Channel 10 in Medford Oregon. She later became the first female news reporter for KTVL Channel 10 at around 22. Following that, she went into anchor and reporter at KGW, an NBC affiliate station located in Portland. In Los Angeles, she became a reporter at KCBS TV just four years after arriving in the city. It was during her association with this channel for 6 years that she was awarded the two Emmy Awards.






Comments
Post a Comment