Niels Heithuis (born 4 June 1972, Zaandam, Netherlands) is a Dutch journalist and radio presenter. Currently, he hosts an investigative news show on NPO Radio 1 [1] and weekend breakfast on classical radio NPO Radio 4. [2] He won the 2008 Marconi Award , an industry prize for best radio program.
In the 90's, Niels Heithuis worked as a reporter and presenter for the Dutch branch of Classic FM. From 2000 he was an investigative reporter for public broadcaster VARA. [3]
Later in the decade he joined the commercial news station BNR Nieuwsradio, where he hosted the political weekend talk show, De Lobby. [4] At the same time he was a news reporter for the station covering, inter alia, the murder of Theo van Gogh, the Hofstad terrorist group and the first anniversary [5] of the Haiti earthquake. In 2007 he became the presenter of the evening drive time current affairs program On the Move . The show broadcast live from the USA during the 2008 elections. He left the station in 2011 and continued to be a freelance journalist for radio and television. [6]
Media related to
Niels Heithuis at Wikimedia Commons
Niels Heithuis (born 4 June 1972, Zaandam, Netherlands) is a Dutch journalist and radio presenter. Currently, he hosts an investigative news show on NPO Radio 1 [1] and weekend breakfast on classical radio NPO Radio 4. [2] He won the 2008 Marconi Award , an industry prize for best radio program.
In the 90's, Niels Heithuis worked as a reporter and presenter for the Dutch branch of Classic FM. From 2000 he was an investigative reporter for public broadcaster VARA. [3]
Later in the decade he joined the commercial news station BNR Nieuwsradio, where he hosted the political weekend talk show, De Lobby. [4] At the same time he was a news reporter for the station covering, inter alia, the murder of Theo van Gogh, the Hofstad terrorist group and the first anniversary [5] of the Haiti earthquake. In 2007 he became the presenter of the evening drive time current affairs program On the Move . The show broadcast live from the USA during the 2008 elections. He left the station in 2011 and continued to be a freelance journalist for radio and television. [6]
Media related to
Niels Heithuis at Wikimedia Commons