He was inside City Hall at the time of the shooting and was
the first television reporter on the air with the story.
Not exact matches
Mychajliw, a former
television reporter, has now won three elections in five years since his
first victory in a 2012 special.
Kim gets a brief, and comical, introduction to Afghanistan from the
first Western woman she meets,
television reporter Tanya Vanderpoel (played by the impossibly lovely Australian Margot Robbie).
The ostensible subject is Christine Chubbuck, the Florida news
reporter who shot and killed herself on live
television in 1974, in what's considered the very
first televised suicide.
Connie Chung —
television reporter Ann Curry — news anchor woman, Today Show S. I. Hayakawa (1906 - 1992)-- U.S. senator, college president Dr. Feng Shan Ho — saved thousands of Austrian Jews during the Holocaust David Henry Hwang — playwright, M Butterfly Colonel Young Oak Kim —
first Asian American to command a battalion in combat Ang Lee — movie director: Hulk; Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Bruce Lee (1940 - 1973)-- movie star and martial artist Gary Locke — governor, state of Washington Norman Y. Mineta —
first Asian - American member of U.S. president's cabinet Patsy Mink — Congresswoman, Hawaii Ralph Nader — consumer advocate, presidential candidate Yoko Ono — artist, musician; was married to Beatle John Lennon Dalip Singh Saund —
first Asian elected to Congress (1956) Donna E. Shalala — secretary, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services John Sununu — congressman, New Hampshire Amy Tan — author, Joy Luck Club Tiger Woods — golfer Kristi Yamaguchi — Olympic figure skater Jerry Yang — co-founder of Yahoo! Laurence Yep — author, young adult fiction (Dragonwings, Rainbow People)
His
first appearance on
television found him chasing
reporters of a spill - impacted sight in the middle of a news segment for WDSU in New Orleans.
Some of our notable entertainment and media attorneys are: John Quinn, General Counsel of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, who has also represented entertainment and media clients in a number of high profile cases; Kathleen Sullivan, the former Dean of Stanford Law School,
First Amendment scholar, and nationally renowned appellate advocate, who heads the firm's appellate practice group; Bob Raskopf, an expert in the sports, entertainment and media bars in New York, who is perhaps best known for his work on behalf of professional sports leagues and teams, newspapers and publishers; Claude Stern, who has represented a broad array of leading software developers, videogame manufacturers, online publishers and other media clients in all forms of intellectual property litigation, including copyright, patent, trade secret, trademark, and licensing disputes; Bruce Van Dalsem, who has tried and resolved disputes for studios, producers and performing artists in the film,
television, music and finance businesses, securing a top five verdict in California based on the misappropriation of a film library; Gary Gans, an expert litigator in motion picture financing, production and distribution disputes, as well as copyright and idea theft cases, who has been named in 2012 by The Hollywood
Reporter as one of America's «Top Entertainment Attorneys;» Jeff McFarland, who has litigated entertainment related cases for more than 20 years, including cases involving motion picture and
television series profits, video game licenses, idea theft and the «seven year rule;» and Michael Williams, who represents a satellite exhibitor and other media clients in trademark, copyright, patent, antitrust and other commercial litigation.
One example Bolles uses for making the «long jump» is if you are an accountant in the
television industry and you want to become a
reporter in the medical field (no direct connection between the two jobs), it helps to
first get a job as accountant in medicine or
reporter in
television, each jump easier since there is some direct connection to what you do now.
Also, Toronto associate broker Desmond Brown, who would change careers and become
first a newspaper
reporter and now a
reporter with CFTO
television, writes a guest column about real estate's «golden rule».