News presenters female

The TF1 group reorganises its operations, setting up three core business segments: Broadcasting, Production and Digital. In line with its core social values, the Group signs up to a charter against sexual harassment and sexist behaviour in the media, and to a manifesto supporting the integration of people with disabilities into the workplace. Newen Studios creates its own charitable foundation with a mission to encourage and support the broadcasting talents of tomorrow in all their diversity. Production activities continue to expand with the acquisitions of Reel One and De Mensen, while TF1 sells off its Home Shopping business. At the same time the takeover of Play Two puts down a further marker of the Group’s ambition to become a leading partner to the music industry. In-house ad agency TF1 PUB launches Box Entreprises, a simple online platform targeted at SMEs that enables advertisers of any size to develop TV ad campaigns.On television, the Group carries live coverage of the entire women’s Football World Cup for the first time ever, including the classic victory of the USA in

List of news presenters

This is a list of news presenters by nationality.

List of news presenters by nationality

American news anchors

  • Roz Abrams, formerly of CBS News, ABC's Eyewitness News
  • Christiane Amanpour, CNN
  • Ernie Anastos (retired), formerly of WNYW, WABC-TV and WCBS-TV
  • Sade Baderinwa, WABC-TV
  • Bret Baier, Fox News
  • Rudi Bakhtiar, formerly at CNN and last seen at Fox News as a correspondent
  • Errol Barnett, CBS News, formerly CNN and CNN Newsroom
  • Dana Bash, CNN
  • Martin Bashir, MSNBC, formerly ABC's Nightline
  • Pat Battle (anchorwoman), WNBCWeekend Today in New York
  • Bill Beutel (deceased), WABC-TV formerly ABC News
  • Wolf Blitzer, CNN
  • David Bloom (deceased), NBC News and co-anchor of the Today
  • Bill Bonds, formerly of WXYZ-TV, WABC-TV and KABC-TV
  • Sandra Bookman, WABC-TV
  • Ed Bradley (deceased), CBS News
  • Kate Bolduan, CNN
  • David Brinkley (deceased) The Huntley–Brinkley ReportNBC
  • Tom Brokaw (retired), formerly NBC News
  • Pamela Brown, CNN
  • Campbell Brown, formerly NBC News
  • Dara Brown, MSNBC
  • Aaron Brown, formerly at CNN and ABC News

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    Nicolas Sarkozy’s entry to the Elysée in May 2007 was hailed not just by the right-wing press—‘What a victory!’ exclaimed Le Figaro—but even more sonorously by the liberal centre-left. At Le Monde, Jean-Marie Colombani confidently affirmed that the result showed ‘the country wants to be more dynamic, more offensive, more efficient’—in a word, summed up by the paper’s headline, ‘To Change’. Even the nominally left-wing ‘Anyone But Sarko’ Libération served its mourning readers a dose of stoic realism: ‘he owes his victory to his provocative honesty . . . in keeping with the wishes of the public . . . get ready’. Over the past ten years, the French media had been more inclined to chastise the populace than applaud its political choices—in its rebellious votes for the candidates of the far left and right in the 2002 presidential elections, for example. The 2007 vote seemed to represent a realignment of the electorate with the unanimous opinion—la pensée unique—of the media: that France should comply with the orderly alternation between centre-left and centre-rig

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