Ann Curry
Ann Curry, an American photojournalist and journalist who has covered wars as well as natural disasters for more than 45 years. She focuses on the plight of those in these areas. Curry has covered wars across the world, including in Kosovo Iraq Syria Lebanon Palestine Afghanistan Darfur Congo. Ann Curry (born on November 19, 1956 in Agana) was an American anchor, television reporter as well as a journalist. She was most famous for her work as a reporter on the Today Show, which was a morning news program that was broadcast by National Broadcasting Co. Curry's work was praised by its coverage of human situations that were affecting war-ravaged nations as well as natural disasters. Curry's father served as a sailor in the U.S. Navy and her mother was Japanese. They met during the time her father was stationed in Japan shortly after World War II. Due to her father's service in the military as well as the fact that they were constantly moving. Curry went to high school in Ashland, Oregon. Curry graduated in 1978 with an undergraduate degree in journalism at the University of Oregon. She is likely to have created an empathic communication style due to her exposure to various cultures as a child. Ann Curry, a journalist at NBC and anchor of the news in the US, is a household name. Her biography provides details about the woman. Their family moved around frequently and Curry didn't stay in one school for longer than two years, and she traveled to different locations including San Diego Alameda Oregon and Virginia. She finally graduated in Ashland secondary school. In Medford where she began her career in broadcasting when she was a KTVL Channel 10 intern. at the age of 22, she became the station's the first newscaster female. She subsequently moved to the role of anchor as well as reporter at KGW which was an NBC station in Portland, Oregan. She moved back into Los Angeles four years later in the role of a reporter at KCBS TV. The time she worked with the channel for six years that she received two Emmy Awards.
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