Rosemary Church | |
---|---|
Born |
Belfast, Northern Ireland | 10 November 1962
Education |
Australian National University University of Canberra |
Occupation(s) | CNN International anchor and correspondent (1998–present) |
Years active | 1991–present |
Rosemary Church (born 10 November 1962) is an Australian CNN International news anchor. Based at the network's world headquarters in Atlanta, she anchors the 2 to 4 a.m. ET edition of CNN Newsroom. She previously worked as a reporter and newsreader for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, news and current affairs division.
Born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, Church has lived in England and Australia. She has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the Australian National University in Canberra and has completed graduate studies in Media and Law. [1] [2]
Church joined CNN International in August 1998 as an anchor on World News, based in the network's Atlanta headquarters. [3]
At ABC News, she primarily worked for the international arm Australia Television as Senior Anchor. [4] [2] She also reported for the program Foreign Correspondent and anchored the evening news in Tasmania [5] and the summer edition of The World At Noon. [3]
Previously she presented weekend weather on Ten Capital [6] and worked for five years in Canberra for the National Media Liaison Service. She was also an news anchor on Ten Capital. [3]
Church spent several years in the late 1980s to early 1990s as the host of a Sunday morning radio show "Church on Sunday" on 2SSS-FM, [3] later called Triple S, [7] [8] covering music and happenings in Canberra with notable guests such as Marilyn Dooley, National Film and Sound Archive [9] and regular phone in guests like Keith (KC Bell) from Scullin, a rock and roll trivia buff, among others. [10] 2SSS-FM was a community sports radio station, managed by James Patterson, [7] covering the Canberra region. It ran from 1986 to 2003. [8] [11] Another notable that started out on Triple S was Gaven Morris, [12] who was later with CNN before returning to Australia to rejoin the ABC as Director of News (2015). [8]
Church won the New York Festival's TV programming award (silver) for coverage of the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997. [2]
Rosemary Church | |
---|---|
Born |
Belfast, Northern Ireland | 10 November 1962
Education |
Australian National University University of Canberra |
Occupation(s) | CNN International anchor and correspondent (1998–present) |
Years active | 1991–present |
Rosemary Church (born 10 November 1962) is an Australian CNN International news anchor. Based at the network's world headquarters in Atlanta, she anchors the 2 to 4 a.m. ET edition of CNN Newsroom. She previously worked as a reporter and newsreader for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, news and current affairs division.
Born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, Church has lived in England and Australia. She has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the Australian National University in Canberra and has completed graduate studies in Media and Law. [1] [2]
Church joined CNN International in August 1998 as an anchor on World News, based in the network's Atlanta headquarters. [3]
At ABC News, she primarily worked for the international arm Australia Television as Senior Anchor. [4] [2] She also reported for the program Foreign Correspondent and anchored the evening news in Tasmania [5] and the summer edition of The World At Noon. [3]
Previously she presented weekend weather on Ten Capital [6] and worked for five years in Canberra for the National Media Liaison Service. She was also an news anchor on Ten Capital. [3]
Church spent several years in the late 1980s to early 1990s as the host of a Sunday morning radio show "Church on Sunday" on 2SSS-FM, [3] later called Triple S, [7] [8] covering music and happenings in Canberra with notable guests such as Marilyn Dooley, National Film and Sound Archive [9] and regular phone in guests like Keith (KC Bell) from Scullin, a rock and roll trivia buff, among others. [10] 2SSS-FM was a community sports radio station, managed by James Patterson, [7] covering the Canberra region. It ran from 1986 to 2003. [8] [11] Another notable that started out on Triple S was Gaven Morris, [12] who was later with CNN before returning to Australia to rejoin the ABC as Director of News (2015). [8]
Church won the New York Festival's TV programming award (silver) for coverage of the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997. [2]