CNN/Connie Chung/silentlambs

by silentlambs 81 Replies latest jw friends

  • Imbue
    Imbue

    Fabulous news! How can anyone say they missed this information about Silent lambs without admitting they have their head in the sand.

  • plmkrzy
    plmkrzy

    seedy3

    Connie Chung sorta took a left turn a bit back and had a falling out with 20/20

    She has since become a sorta Joan of Ark in the news world.

    She has been rather particular about her causes and what she goes after regarding whats "news worthy"

    So she isn't on "REGULARLY" as many others are.

    plum

  • LittleOnes
    LittleOnes

    Cool

    I'm gonna add it to the dateline tape.

    Great to hear , Bill

  • sf
    sf

    If you watch 'O'Reilly Factor' on FOXNEWS at 8 pm on the East Coast of U.S.A., turn the channel to CNN. She airs the same time.

    Oh well Bill(OReilly), you snooze, you lose. I kept sendin you all the press releases, documents and news articles, but only YOU know why you haven't touched this yet O'Reilly. Seems Connie has bigger 'balls' then you seem to think you have.

    Thank you CONNIE!

    sKally

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    Someone please please please record it so I can watch it as an mpeg

  • sf
    sf

    http://www.cnn.com/CNN/anchors_reporters/cnn/chung.connie.html

    With more than 30 years of journalism experience to draw from, Connie Chung is anchor of CNN's Connie Chung Tonight. She is based in the network's New York bureau.

    For CNN, Chung has traveled around the world to cover breaking news stories, including Rome to report on the sex-abuse summit called by Pope John Paul II with U.S. cardinals at the Vatican and Karachi, Pakistan after the kidnapping and murder of journalist Daniel Pearl. In anticipation of the May 2002 release of Star Wars' Episode II: Attack of the Clones, Chung also went to George Lucas' famous Skywalker Ranch, north of San Francisco, to interview the creator of the galactic epic.

    Before joining CNN in 2001, the icon journalist co-anchored ABC's primetime news magazine program, 20/20 and worked as a correspondent for the network. She has established herself as a pre-eminent reporter numerous times and been honored for her work with multiple awards.

    Chung began her journalism career in 1969 in her hometown of Washington, D.C., where she worked at WTTG-TV first as a copy person and later as news writer and ultimately, a news reporter. She joined CBS News in 1971 as a national correspondent based in Washington. While at CBS, she covered the 1972 presidential campaign of George McGovern, the 1972 Democratic National Convention, Watergate, the Vice Presidency of Nelson Rockefeller, Capitol Hill and politics in general. Additionally, she traveled around the world to report on the Nixon/Brezhnev SALT I talks and on Nixon's final trip to the Middle East.

    In 1976, Chung moved to Los Angeles, where she spent seven years as an anchor at KCBS. In 1983, she joined NBC News as a correspondent and anchor. Her assignments at NBC included anchoring the Saturday edition of the NBC Nightly News, NBC News at Sunrise, NBC News Digests, several primetime specials and a news magazine. While at NBC News, she often served as a substitute anchor for NBC Nightly News. She was a floor correspondent at the 1984 political conventions and a podium correspondent during the 1988 conventions, and provided political reporting and analysis during the presidential campaigns and elections.

    In 1989 Chung returned to CBS news as anchor and correspondent on Saturday Night With Connie Chung, also anchoring the Saturday edition of the CBS Evening News. In 1990, she became the anchor and senior correspondent for the Emmy Award-winning CBS News primetime series, Face to Face with Connie Chung. During this time, she conducted a series of exclusive interviews, including the first and only national television interview of Joseph Hazelwood, the captain of the Exxon Valdez, and the first interview with L.A. Lakers star Magic Johnson after his announcement that he was HIV positive. She was also the first network television correspondent to report on the controversy over testing rapists for AIDS, for which she earned the American Bar Association's 1991 Silver Gavel Award.

    From 1993-1995, Chung co-anchored with Dan Rather CBS Evening News and was anchor and correspondent on Eye to Eye With Connie Chung. During this time, she covered the historic Israeli/PLO signing ceremony at the White House and the Israeli/Jordan signing ceremony in the Middle East. Additionally, she obtained an exclusive interview with Chinese leader Li Peng five years after the massacre at Tiananmen Square. Chung was a floor

    reporter for CBS News during the 1992 national political conventions and provided analysis during election-night coverage in 1990, 1992 and 1994.

    Chung has won several awards for her work, including three Emmy Awards, a George Foster Peabody Award, an Edward R. Murrow Award, the National Educational Media Network's Golden Apple Award, the CINE Golden Eagle Award and honors from American Women in Radio and Television.

    During the 1999-2000 season, Chung was awarded the Amnesty International Human Rights Award for her report that revealed that young women in Bangladesh are being brutally burned with acid in acts of revenge for turning down a man's advances. Chung's report included the story of Bina Ahkter, a young woman whose face was severely burned in an acid attack, who is speaking out against violence against women. Also during the 1999-2000 season, Chung won the National Association of Black Journalists Salute to Excellence Award for "Justice Delayed," her investigation that uncovered new information in the 1966 murder of a black Mississippi man named Ben Chester White. As a result, the U.S. Justice Department opened the case after more than three decades and announced the indictment of Ernest Avants for the murder. He had lived as a free man since his acquittal on state murder charges in 1966. "Justice Delayed" has won a number of other awards, including the 1999 Chicago International Television Competition's Silver Plaque for Investigative Reporting, the 1999 Communicator Award's Crystal Award of Excellence and the United States International Film and Video Festival's first place Gold Camera Award.

    Additionally, Chung has served as a fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard.

    Ms. Chung graduated from the University of Maryland with a bachelor of science degree. She is married to Maury Povich and lives with him and their son, Matthew, in Manhattan.

  • heathen
    heathen

    I won't be happy till I see you on the jerry springer show

  • LizardSnot
    LizardSnot

    Give 'em hell Bill ....we're all behind you!!!

    Lizard

  • Pathofthorns
    Pathofthorns

    Nice to see the WT getting hit over and over and over again in the mainstream media on this issue. I'm sure many JW's still remain mostly in the dark on this but surely some things must be trickling through that "permafrost" (lol) on their brains. And you know only one JW in about 30 needs to see something before gossip runs away on subjects like these.

    Just a suggestion for what its worth but I'd let the women talk often where possible. Keep it mellow and calm and smooth. Be "PR" conscious.

    Path

  • Mulan
    Mulan

    GOOD GOING, BILL!!

    Next step, Larry King Live. I can't wait. Hehehehehehhe.

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