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137 Sentences With "reportages"

How to use reportages in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "reportages" and check conjugation/comparative form for "reportages". Mastering all the usages of "reportages" from sentence examples published by news publications.

They became protagonists for my reportages and exhibitions in different parts of the world.
I come from documentary and photojournalism, so I'm used to tight 12-picture story reportages.
Now I don't think I could do the same reportages, nor could I take the photos I took back in 1982.
But back in 2004 to 2006, when he was only consolidating his power, Anna published damning reportages about Kadyrovtsy, Chechen security officials under his control who effectively picked up the mantle of egregious abuse from federal forces.
Pour ne pas faire barrage seulement avec les garde-côtes, il a recours aux médias conservateurs — porteurs d'appels au patriotisme et de reportages sur les naufragés, les parents éplorés, les harragas revenus déçus ou les mauvais traitements dans les camps de réfugiés espagnols.
Les Québécois ne sont pas plus ravis des reportages exaltés des médias français qui présentent périodiquement le Québec comme un pays de froidure sauvage couvert d'érables où, comme on pouvait le lire dans un article du magazine Elle à table, on " sacrifie " chaque année, dans les environs de Pâques, un porc qu'on fait ensuite congeler en plein air.
Over the years, he has won several prizes for his reportages.
In 2011, she published Carnets de Reportages du XXIe siècle with journalist Manon Querouil.
He is a trekking and spear fishing enthusiast and is the author of various nature reportages.
Patrick Galbats (born 1978) is a freelance Luxembourg photographer and photojournalist who has completed a number of artistically presented reportages.
Yvon Lambert (born 1955-03-09) is a Luxembourg photographer who has both worked as a freelance photojournalist and completed a number of international reportages on societal issues.
The following are various reportages of the significance of eagles, many likely pertaining to the golden eagles, in early cultures and older religions as well as national and military insignias.
The award is endowed with a grant of €50,000 and aims to support the independence of photojournalists by providing them with the means to carry out in-depth fieldwork for investigative photo reportages.
According to Cernat, they are both written as "experimental reportages". She has also contributed a book on the 1989 Romanian Revolution (Decembrie '89. Deconstrucţia unei revoluţii, "December 1989. The Deconstruction of a Revolution").
It was at the time when Viktoria began to flourish as a sportswoman. During the period of coaching at “Arsenal”, Ukrainian television filmed many reportages about Viktoria. Soon the athlete herself became a TV host.
Fagure and Mille also ran Presa from 1921 to 1923. Various prose fiction and reportages of his appeared in Evenimentul literar, where he served as editing secretary and signed as M. Dobrin, in the Iași Evenimentul and in the Bucharest Pagini literare, Teatrul, Dimineața and Rampa. In the legal field, he published juridical treatises and studies as F. Emilian. Writing lead articles, reportages, investigations, interviews, columns such as Note, Păreri și impresii and Fapte și observații (sometimes signed E.D.F.), Fagure identified and commented on the events and happenings of his time.
Land of Dreams is a 1988 Swedish essay film by Jan Troell. Its original Swedish title is Sagolandet, which means "The land of tales". Through a series of reportages from contemporary Sweden, Troell uses the film to ponder on the country's transformation since his childhood, into a society he argues has become permeated by rationality at the expense of creativity. Interweaved with the reportages are conversations with the American existential psychologist Rollo May, the politician Ingvar Carlsson soon before he became the prime minister of Sweden, and former prime minister Tage Erlander.
Lu Yuegang's reportages are based on the social problems in China. His colleagues always describe him as a "Lively Tiger" due to his ever-glowing spirit of news tracing and verification, and also his passion of disclosing the TRUTH. Lu's goal is to witness and record the change and the reality of the Chinese history in an objective and precise way through writing reportages. He always uses Social Sciences theories and skills to maintain a closed observation and discussion on the problems in the Chinese society, including Literature, Sociology, History, Laws and Economics.
Studio PowNed is a late night talkshow presented by Rutger Castricum. Guests are Dominique Weesie, Erik de Vlieger, Thierry Baudet, Yoeri Albrecht. In the program are news and politics, there are reportages from Jan Roos, Tom Staal and others.
In January 2016, Le Gorafi presents a parodical program retrospective of the news from the previous year. Presented by Pablo Mira, the program is a caricature of the news broadcasting from a continuous news channel, alternating fake reportages and television stage launches.
Lu has written many articles, novels, books and reportages. In fact, there is a close relationship between reportage and journalism. "Reportage", which appeared in Chinese literature in early 1930s, is a combination of news report and literature. It contains the features of both.
The style involved according significant space to politics, having a high-quality literature page, having grand reportages and grand feuilletons (in this case with Pierre Drieu La Rochelle and Francis Carco), satirical cartoons (the main illustrator of Gringoire was Roger Roy), and a simple presentation.
Despite a wide popularity, Czech fire sport in general is not reflected in any artwork. Conventional media usually don't cover fire sport events except national race. However, participants of fire sport publish fanzines and even create reportages in a special TV broadcast via the Internet.
She then went, often with colleague Sean Wellesley Miller, capturing the migration to urban areas in developing countries. Later, she published reportages about Iraq, India, Peru, Yemen and Africa. She worked with Ata Kandó in 1956 to document the situation of Hungarian refugees travelling to Austria.
His reportage during the Nigerian Civil War showed the world what happened between Biafra ans Nigeria He interviewed Martin Luther King just before his death. Until 1973 Van den Heuvel was Brandpunt reporter and presenter, and traveled around the world. Brandpunt became well known due to the reportages.
Rai 5 (pronounced Rai Cinque) is an Italian free-to-air television channel owned by RAI. It was launched on 26 November 2010 replacing Rai Extra. Its programming deals with culture with a particular attention to the arts world, offering documentaries, reportages and highbrow entertainment (music, dance and theater).
Smålandsposten is the recipient of the European Newspaper Award of 2009 in the category of local newspaper for its spectacular reportages on local events. In 2010, the circulation of Smålandsposten was 38,600 copies. The paper had a circulation of 35,400 copies in 2012 and 34,900 copies in 2013.
In addition to cartoons Frigidaire features avant-garde reportages and interviews and covers articles on visual art. It also includes investigative reports. Over time the magazine became a mouthpiece for left-wing counterculture in the country. At the beginning of the 2000s the frequency of Frigidaire was switched to bi- monthly.
Starting from 2011/2012 season, radioeco.it has expanded its News Area and started publishing daily news, leaders and reportages about topics considered of interest for the University community. The radio follows all the important events that take place in Pisa, and provides real-time updates through its website and social networks.
Former Governor General Michaëlle Jean hosted programs for both the English and French language CBC networks. She presented Grands Reportages on Ici RDI and The Passionate Eye on CBC News Network as well as having her own talk show, called Michaëlle. She also served as a substitute anchor on Le Téléjournal.
While being a supporter of fascism in Italy, Shimoi didn't ever promote it in Japan, considering such movement an Italian cultural phenomenon. After the second World War, Shimoi met and became friends with Indro Montanelli, who arrived in Japan to work on a series of reportages. Shimoi became his guide around the country.
During his journalistic career, Nehat Islami has interviewed prominent world personalities, such as: Mother Theresa, Yasser Arafat, the poet Jasques Prevert, the Croatian writer Miroslav Krleza, the president of Iraq Talabani, the King of Jordan Hussein, etc. He is the author of over 200 TV reportages and documentaries and thousands of press reportages and articles from Kosovo and abroad. In December 2013 in Pristina, Kosovo the Publishing House Koha published his first book “Hotel Bejruti” (Hotel Beirut). The book is in Albanian language and is a summary of Nehat Islami’s journalistic reports and analyses from Middle East. His second book “Një adresë në Bukuresht” (An address in Bucharest) was published in 2016, an impressive summary of articles and interviews collected within a period of 40 years.
Gradually, Telejato turned to investigative reportage, first turning its attention to local polluters. The station has been sued "more than 200 times" from Distilleria Bertolino alone, on account of the many reportages carried out by Telejato into alleged pollution by the distillery factory. The Sicilian Mafia eventually became the station's main subject of reporting.
The first edition contained a thirty-two page fotonovela in black and white, with only the first and the back page being in color. Reportages about social issues and fashion have been added gradually since. Amina has got the highest circulation of French-language magazines for black women with several ten-thousand copies per month.
His work appeared in Cuvântul liber, Dreptatea, Viața Românească, Vremea, Azi, Contemporanul, Flacăra, Iașul literar, România Literară, Tribuna and Albina. He wrote the history play Bălceștii (1948) and the film script for Barbu Lăutaru (1954). The volumes Anotimpuri (1956) and Ritm și viteză (1980) collect travel notes, conferences, articles and reportages. He died in Bucharest.
The response was extraordinary. The national Polish press dedicates a lot of reportages to this project. Since 2005 Henio Zytomirski has become an icon of the Holocaust, not only in Lublin but all over Poland. Today his life story is a part of the curriculum which is learnt in the general education system in Poland.
He was also connected with Piwnica pod Baranami. Lives in Kraków today. Known for his 'kitten' photographs of women in the popular Przekrój weekly in the 1960s, as well as his celebrity portraits, reportages, artistic nudes and magazine covers. Wojciech Plewiński's academic background was founded in architecture - in 1955 he received his diploma from the Kraków Polytechnic University.
"Svetigora" (Serbian: Светигора) is a periodical journal of the Serbian Orthodox Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral, published and edited by "Publishing and Information Institution of the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral". Contains mostly the church teachings, poetry, lectures, spiritual lessons, reportages, news and chronicles from the Metropolitanate, the SPC and the all other Orthodox churches.
The same year, participating in the Grand Prix de la Ville de Vevey, he received the Prix du Grand Format for his Histoires de Frontières."Yvon Lamber" , Centre national de l'audiovisuel. Retrieved 29 November 2010. In Luxembourg, he also published reportages on the last days of a steel production plant and on the decline of Luxembourg's mining district (2000).
After finishing school, Thomas Rusch moved to Hamburg in 1981 to start his education as photographer. His first publication was a series of portraits at Schleswig- Holstein Musik Festival published in weekly magazine Stern. This was followed by a long-term cooperation with Stern, in which Thomas Rusch published many reportages, portraits and cover pictures.H. Karasek, W. Behnken (2002).
He also taught at the School of Visual Arts for two semesters, a course on basic photography and darkroom. In 1989, Schreiber moved to Europe. He travels in Europe, the United States, South and Central America, The Caribbean, Russia, Australia and North Africa. He has shot fashion, portraits, children, a good deal of reportages, travel and lifestyle photographs.
His work is very rich thematically – he photographed in still life, portraits, nudes, landscapes, reportages, advertisements and scientific photography. Šmirous published color postcards of excellent technical quality, and presented lectures and exhibitions with color photographs and 18×24 cm autochrome slides. He also published a number of books, and prepared a representative booklet, “Czechoslovakia”, for the 1958 World Expo in Brussels.
In 1959 he visited KRO director Jan Castelijns for an interview, who thought he came to apply for a job. He was hired. One of his first reportages was in 1961 when the Berlin Wall was built. After this reportage, they founded the actuality program Brandpunt. In 1967 he interviewed the president of Indonesia, Sukarno, just before he was overthrown.
150px On November 3, 2013, MBC (Mauritius) introduced the MBC News Channel which airs between 7AM-6PM on MBC 1, bringing up-to-date local, regional and international news every hour including reportages and documentaries in major Mauritian speaking language. MBC News Channel remained a block on MBC 1, from 7 AM to 6PM until January 31, 2015 where it was removed.
She was interested in people, and wrote many reportages about life of ordinary people outside of big cities. Karjalainen got the passion to read from her childhood home in Viipuri. Her need to write emerged from series of crisis she encountered in age of eleven: First her mother died, then Winter war started and all Finns had to leave Viipuri.
Lørdagsredaksjonen () was a Norwegian entertainment programme that was broadcast by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation from 1980 to 1982. The programme was started and hosted by Erik Bye, while Stein Roger Bull and John Andreassen were project manager and director, respectively. The programme was aired on Saturday evening, and consisted of dialogues, music, reportages, and more. Rolf Just Nilsen was responsible for the music.
Gazeta Praca (classified job advertisements, salary lists, Mondays), Gazeta Sport (Mondays), Komunikaty (properties classifieds, Tuesdays), Gazeta Dom (building and furnishing, Wednesdays), Duży Format (reportages, Thursdays), Gazeta Telewizyjna (TV programmes, Fridays), Gazeta Co Jest Grane (cinema and theatre repertoires, film and book reviews, music events, Fridays), Gazeta Turystyka (travelling extra, Saturdays) and Wysokie Obcasy, Wysokie Obcasy Extra (women's extra, Saturdays, since April 1999).
The English Garden Profile for Marianne Majerus In 2010, Majerus was one of three people named "International Garden Photographer of the Year" for her picture "Layered landscape: a moment captured"."International Garden Photographer of the Year 3" . Retrieved 3 December 2010. Patrick Galbats (born 1978) is a freelance photographer and photojournalist who has completed a number of artistically presented reportages.
Jean Leymarie is a French radio journalist who takes the Saturday morning and Sunday evening news slots on France Info. With a diploma from the Centre de formation des journalistes, Jean Leymarie started at France Info in 2001. After time in "Reportages", he joined "Économie et social". He presented "Une de l’économie", morning edition, for 4 years, from September 2001 to June 2005.
He still claims to be the voice of "those who are never listened to" . His various columns and chronicles have included throughout the years J'informe, Le Figaro, L'Express, Jeune Afrique, Le Quotidien de Paris, Grands Reportages (1976-1987) and Valeurs actuelles (1995). He has also translated in French various novels and essays such as Wonder Boys by Michael Chabon or The Face of Battle by John Keegan.
Since 2000, four books in the series "Les trésors de la photothèque" have been published. Each volume presents the work of one of the Photothèque's best represented photographers. Those published to date cover Pol Aschman (photojournalism from 1935 to 1988), Marcel Schroeder (local history up to 1999), Théo Mey (photojournalism from 1950 to 1980), Tony Krier (reportages from 1939 to 1972). All are available at the Photothèque.
His reportages were sold all over the world and bought by CBS, France 3 and NBC. These important networks would subsequently hire Grilz as correspondent in other parts of the world. On a direct NBC request Grilz followed the Communist Philippine Guerrilla and the elections that led to the fall of the late Philippines dictator Ferdinand Marcos and the subsequent election of Corazon Aquino.
Her first story, Ak Kiz, was published in the weekly Yedigün in 1935, which was followed by her stories, reportages and novels in the newspapers Son Posta, Cumhuriyet, Tan and Milliyet. Her literary career can be divided into two parts: During the first half, she wrote mostly romantic novels. During the second half, she focused on the twisted and corrupt lives of the Turkish bourgeoisie.
Jean became a reporter, filmmaker, and broadcaster for Radio-Canada in 1988, hosting news and affairs programmes such as Actuel, Montréal ce soir, Virages, and Le Point; she was the first person of Caribbean descent to be seen on French television news in Canada. She then moved in 1995 to Réseau de l'information (RDI), Radio-Canada's all-news channel, in order to anchor a number of programmes, Le Monde ce soir, l'Édition québécoise, Horizons francophones, Les Grands reportages, Le Journal RDI, and RDI à l'écoute, for example. Four years later, she was asked by CBC's English language all-news channel, CBC Newsworld, to host The Passionate Eye and Rough Cuts, which both broadcast the best in Canadian and foreign documentary films. By 2004, Jean was hosting her own show, Michaëlle, while continuing to anchor RDI's Grands reportages, as well as acting occasionally as anchor of Le Téléjournal.
In Burkina Faso, the authorities have periodically announced their respect for freedom of the media; RadioDiffusion Burkina states that the country's transmission facilities are open to "all political and social sensibilities".Radio Burkina Nationale, Service des Informations et Reportages Privately owned newspapers, television, and radio stations are allowed. The Information Code of 1990 provided for freedom of speech and freedom of the press. However, there are serious exceptions to this freedom.
In 2013, a prosecutor overturned the acquittal and ordered Vaxevanis to undergo a new trial. The retrial ended in November 2013 with another acquittal. In October 2019 he stated that the new Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis is trying to struggle economically the Documento. He claims that the reason is his reportages about Mitsotakis' financing, his personal loans for Kyrix Chanion newspaper, his family's offshores, such as his general politics.koutipandoras.
Specially his reportages were popular in Bengali readers. Increased political and organisational activity reduced his literary activity which decreased to a trickle in his twilight years. Bandyopadhyay was posthumously awarded a Bangladesh Freedom Honour, the highest state award given by the government of Bangladesh for foreigners or non-nationals."Awards Bestowed by Government of People’s Republic of Bangladesh to Indian nationals," list created 20 October 2012, accessed 6 March 2017.
His father introduced him to future International Tennis Hall of Famers Bud Collins and John Barrett. In 1972 Collins, who was aware of Steve's flair for statistics and historical facts, hired the youth to help him at Wimbledon and the US Open. Steve was feeding Collins various facts and statistics during his reportages. The same year Flink first met Jack Kramer, who later became one of his mentors.
As he had warned before his departure for Chamdo, "the Tibetan forces were no match for the PLA who [...] had liberated the whole of China by defeating several million Kuomintang soldiers".Puncog Zhaxi, La libération pacifique du Tibet comme je l'ai vécue, in Jianguo Li (ed.), Cent ans de témoignages sur le Tibet: reportages de témoins de l'histoire du Tibet, 2005, 196 p., pp. 72-82, esp. p.
Toni Schneiders took up an apprenticeship as a photographer at Menzel Studio in Koblenz in 1935 graduating with a master's certificate in 1938. During the Second World War he was drafted and deployed as war correspondent in France and Italy. After the war, he returned to Koblenz and photographed reportages as well as advertising and landscape photographs. In 1946 he moved to Meersburg, where he opened a photo studio in 1948.
Together with Gherasim Luca, he edited Alge magazine in 1930-1931, and also contributed to Unu. His Poeme cu orbi, a volume of avant- garde poetry, appeared in 1933. Between 1934 and 1940, he submitted reportages, satirical pieces and drama reviews to Facla, Cuvântul liber, Reporter, Azi and Lumea românească. After the King Michael Coup of 1944, he became an editor of România Liberă, and also worked at Radiodifuziunea Română (1945), Urzica (editor, 1949-1979), the National Theatre Bucharest (1949-1953; 1958-1961) and Viața Românească. He published a volume of reportages, Ninge peste Ucraina (1945); dealing with the Holocaust in Transnistria Governorate, it was among the few accounts on the topic published in immediate postwar Romania.Radu Ioanid, "Romania", in David S. Wyman, Charles H. Rosenzveig (eds.), The World Reacts to the Holocaust, p. 238. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996. Avant-garde elements persisted in his 1946 book of poetry, Marea furtună. Baranga wrote the lyrics to "Zdrobite cătușe", Romania's national anthem between 1948 and 1953.
He worked as a chief operator for images and as researcher for the documentary film Tonnerre roulant sur Bagdad, by Jean- Pierre Krief, broadcast on Arte for the tenth anniversary of the invasion. He performed several assignments on crisis in Sudan, Somalia and Yemen as correspondent for Le PointVoir la page de ce journal relatant son enlèvement et donnant accès à "Quelques-uns des reportages de Nicolas Hénin pour Le Point" : Le Point 9 octobre 2013 as well as for TV reportage, most of them by the Solas Films agency, broadcast notably on Arte.« Lettre à Nicolas Hénin : un collègue témoigne » , suivi de "Quelques reportages de Nicolas Hénin" - site d'Arte Since the events of the Arab Spring, Nicolas Hénin has covered events in Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria, where he made five trips from 2011 to June 2013. Nicolas Hénin has been nominated several times for the Bayeux- Calvados Awards for war correspondents in radio (2004 and 2011), TV reporting (2008) and printed press (2013).
A few years later he took up theatre photography. He ended up developing a long-lasting relationship with the Stary Teatr in Kraków but offers came knocking on his doors from all sides. Throughout the years Plewiński shot nearly seven hundred plays. He also photographed musicians, authors, painters and reportages, sometimes in very close quarters, such as the Jazz Camping,1959, a meeting of the creme de la creme of polish jazz musicians and fans.
Kristof Magnusson, Leipzig Book Fair 2015 Kristof Magnusson (born Kristof Weitemeier-Magnusson; 4 March 1976 in Hamburg) is an Icelandic-German novelist and translator. He lives in Berlin. After his training as a church musician he studied literary and scenic writing in Leipzig and Berlin as well as Icelandic literature in Reykjavík. His works include not only novels and plays but also short stories and reportages in both German and foreign newspapers.
He studied law at the Università Statale di Milano to please his authoritarian father, but he started writing short journalistic essays without even trying to have them published. After his graduation in 1935, he served in the Italian Army, attending the officer course for the Alpini corps. He then was sent to an infantry regiment in Milan. Subsequently, he lived for a long time abroad (1936–37), writing reportages and short stories which remain unpublished.
As a teenager, he showed a considerable ability as photographer, and sketcher. He was also an avid reader particularly enjoying war stories, and comics in general. During this time he likes to walk in the city taking picture and short films over city’s everyday life. It is been reported that, his political passion started one day during one of his early reportages, when he was around with his camera taking pictures of a demonstration.
Wrzesień żagwiący was based on the author's 1943 collection of reportages, published in British Palestine in 1943 during the Mediterranean Campaign. It was titled Wrześniowym szlakiem. Wańkowicz wrote it under pen name Jerzy Łużyc.Aleksandra Ziółkowska-Boehm: Na tropach Wańkowicza – po latach, Warszawa, Prószyński i S-ka, 2009, pages 79-81 In 1947, after coming to London, Wańkowicz expanded Wrześniowym szlakiem, adding new stories, and changing the name of the publication into Wrzesień żagwiący.
NPO Nieuws is a 24-hour news channel operated by the NOS, the public broadcaster which supplies news and sports to all national public television and radio networks. NOS also provides programming for the political channel, NPO Politiek. NPO Nieuws broadcasts all editions of the NOS Journaal news bulletin, and repeats the last news broadcast. NPO Nieuws also shows four extra programmes named NOS Journaal Chat, NOS Journaal Plus (extra information), NOS Journaal Reportages and NOS Journaal Weekoverzicht.
Since June 2009, she presents the society program TMC Reportages on TMC, a channel of the TF1 Group. In summer 2009, she became the replacing presenter of the news on LCI, a continuous news channel of the same group. In 2010, she replaced Bénédicte Le Chatelier after her maternity leave, to present the evening news on LCI. In December 2010, she reported on both TF1 and LCI the Ivorian presidential election opposing Laurent Gbagbo and Alassane Ouattara.
Pierre Bénard (17 November 1898 – 22 December 1946) was a French journalist. Bénard was born in 1898; his father was clerk to an attorney. He began as a journalist in the 1920s, for L'Œuvre, where he held the judicial brief, and for Bonsoir. He was the author of upbeat novels and of many prefaces for works on contemporary law, at the same time doing large-scale reportages for various weekly publications including Gringoire (from which he distanced himself in 1934).
The literary section published works by some of the most renowned Polish writers and poets of the epoch, including Adolf Dygasiński, Jan Kasprowicz, Bolesław Leśmian, Maria Konopnicka, Władysław Orkan, Eliza Orzeszkowa, Wacław Sieroszewski, Stanisław Przybyszewski and Leopold Staff. Głos also frequently published translated literary works of contemporary foreign writers. Among the notable journalists of the weekly was also Janusz Korczak who authored numerous editorials, reportages and feuilletons, as well as had one of his novels published there in 1904 and 1905.
Mariusz Szczygieł graduated in journalism and political science at the University of Warsaw in 2000. At 16, he began writing for the weekly-paper Na przełaj. In spite of communist-era censorship, he published a shocking collection of reportages titled The Shrift, which were about gay and lesbian youth in Poland. As a TV presenter of the popular program Na każdy temat (On Every Topic), Szczygieł was the first person in Poland to publicly speak the word "orgasm" on screen.
It was there she met future Quebec premier René Lévesque with whom she would go on to co-host the radio program Carrefour. In 1953, Jasmin entered Radio-Canada's television news service where she made a name for herself with such programs as Reportages and Conférence de presse. All the while, Jasmin continued to take to the streets, listening to the people in order to denounce injustices. She was a founding member of the Mouvement laïque de langue française ("The Francophone Secular Movement").
Kalwas's life and work in Egypt became the main theme of his literary work – reportages for Polish media and several books. Kalwas lived in Egypt for eight years, but after publishing the book "Egypt: Haram, Halal" he left the country because of concerns about personal and family safety, considering the critical nature of his books and reports about Egyptian society, even the Egyptian government in some instances. He currently lives in Gozo, Malta. He's married and has a son, Hasan Kamil Kalwas.
He succeeded in several competitions, among others that of the École nationale d'administration (class France Combattante, 1946–47), but he quickly abandoned public service for writing. In 1953 Serge Groussard was a military parachutist. From October 1956 to October 1957 then recalled voluntary in 1959, lieutenant then captain in Algeria, to which he dedicated a narrative Écrivain. His career was devoted to the writing of novels and reportages for Le Figaro from 1954 to 1962 ; for l'Aurore from 1962 to 1969.
René Puissesseau (25 September 1919 – 7 July 1970, Siem Reap) was a French journalist and chief reporter working for the ORTF. For a long time he headed the political service of France-Soir In 1957, he received the Albert Londres Prize for his reportages compiled under the title Quelqu'un mourra ce soir aux Caraïbes, Éditions Gallimard. He later participated in the famous television magazine . He died age 50 in Cambodia in the exercise of his duties, as did Raymond Meyer (26 years), cameraman.
His reportages appeared under this pseudonym in the Münchner Illustrierte Presse, where he met Stefan Lorant. During 1929 to 1932, he created 110 photo reports, such as his photo essay A day in the life of Mussolini from 1931. Man toured North Africa, Canada, and the Canadian Arctic, from where he delivered his photo reports for the Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung. In 1933, he returned to Berlin and received no work permit because he refused to enter the Reichspressekammer and so he emigrated to England in May 1934.
The announced an acoustic mini-tour, using all the new instruments they had used in their new disc, with a special staging due to the different auditoriums in where they played. The disc included a special DVD with videos and reportages. For the first time in their career, they realized a tour out of Spain. In May and September 2007, they visited Argentina, Uruguay and Chile, countries in where they had a great reception and they played with the Uruguayan band La Chancha and the Argentineans Bulldog.
In 1997 he was the main presenter for the KRO television program De Nieuwsgier,DutchMedia Editie 37b/1997 (mailing list), 20 April 1997 a program of quality interviews, columns and persiflages. He was assisted by Coen van Vrijberghe de Coningh, Wivineke van Groningen, Fred Florusse and Han Oldigs. To make more reportages about the Third World, like he did during his Brandpunt period, he founded De Nieuwe Omroep in 2000. In 2004 it merged with Nútopia into De Nieuwe Omroep Nútopia and in 2005 into LLiNK.
Bucharest: Editura Hasefer, Federation of Jewish Communities of Romania & Elie Wiesel National Institute for Studying the Holocaust in Romania, 2008. Besides short stories and novels, she wrote much children's literature, as well as a romanticized biography of Dimitrie Cantemir, the 1963 Între pană și spadă. Her 1933 30 de zile în studio was among the first books of reportages in the country, and also represented an early example of Romanian-language works about the cinema. Mihaela Mudure, "Sarina Cassvan: scriitura se lasă sedusă", in România Literară, nr.
The program consists of a variety of reportages about the life of Bosnians in Australia, the United States and Europe and it is made by direct contact with people in the Diaspora. The most significant TV shows from the Hayat TV production are adjusted for people in other time zones, without commercials and interruptions. Hayat Plus cooperates with local TV stations in BiH and often broadcast their weekly chronicle. Hayat Plus is available via cable systems throughout the Bosnia and Herzegovina and former Yugoslavia (Balkan countries).
The magazine was not oriented only to computer games, the game topics was only about one-third of the whole content. The other topics that the magazine was focused to were the manuals to user programs and utilities, hardware description (either own ZX Spectrum hardware, either peripherals), courses of programming, introduction to electronics. Some issues contains reportages from actions organized by ZX Spectrum community and interviews with authors of ZX Spectrum programs. As a speciality, the magazine Intro was put at the last page of the magazine.
Stanko Abadžić (born 1952 in Vukovar) is a Croatian photographer and photojournalist. He lives and works in Zagreb, Croatia. Stanko Abadžić began his professional career in photography as a photojournalist for the Croatian daily newspaper Vjesnik. During that period he made well-known reportages from Tunisia, Malta, Turkey and other countries.Tenžera, Marina, Praška "knjiga sjećanja", Vjesnik, (27/02/2001), accessed 14/02/2011. After the onset of the Croatian war of independence in 1991, Abadžić moved abroad and would not return to Croatia for many years.
He has written several books, ranging from history to news and reportages about the Soviet Union and Russia. His first book, though, harks back to his first months as a journalist in Italy. It is an accurate reconstruction of the events describing the failed attempt to rescue the American hostages from the embassy in Tehran in 1979, Operazione Teheran (Operation Tehran, 1980). Afterwards, from Moscow, he wrote L’URSS che cambia (The Changing USSR, 1987) together with Roy Medvedev, at the time a Russian political dissident.
Jean-Claude Bourlès (22 November 1937, Rennes) is a French writer-traveler from Brittany. A passionate with the camino de Santiago, he wrote three books on the subject, relating, for the first two, his own experience as a pilgrim of the path of paths, the third being a sort of collection of testimonies on the motivations of the many pilgrims he met. As a writer he participated to many magazines such as Grands Reportages, Terre Sauvage, Pays de Bretagne. His work Chronique du bel été earned him the Prix Louis-Guilloux in 1983.
Traian Coșovei (24 March 1921, Somova, Tulcea County - 16 July 1993, Bucharest) was a Romanian writer and poet. Traian Coșovei was born in the Danube Delta in a fisherman's family, and graduated from the Letters and Philosophy Department of the University of Bucharest in 1947. A follower of socialist realism, he is known for having written highly positive reportages and journey accounts from his trip to the Soviet Union, and for having compared Nicolae Ceaușescu to national bard Mihai Eminescu. The school in his home village is called in his honor.
Marian Fuks was born in 1884 in Warsaw, then in Russian-held part of Poland. Initially a photojournalist for the Świat weekly, after 1906 Fuks opened up a photographic atelier in Warsaw which he expanded in 1910 into one of the first press photo agencies in Central Europe. In 1912 he also started filming newsreel reportages on important contemporary events, such as the trial of Damazy Macoch, the 1914 trial of Count Bogdan Jaksa-Ronikier or police officers apprehending criminals in Łódź. He also filmed the funeral of Bolesław Prus in May 1912.
Eloy Urroz (born 1967) is a Mexican writer and Professor of Spanish and Latin American Literature at The Citadel in South Carolina. Though born in New York, Urroz grew up in Mexico City and is of Mexican nationality. He is one of the founding members of the Crack Movement, along with such writers as Ignacio Padilla and Jorge Volpi. Urroz has written eight novels, four books on literary criticism, four books of poetry, three political reportages and dozens of essays, articles, and reviews on Latin American and Peninsular Culture and Literature.
Over the next several decades, Riboud traveled around the world. In 1957, he was one of the first European photographers to go to China, and in 1968, 1972, and 1976, Riboud made several reportages on North Vietnam. Later he traveled all over the world, but mostly in Asia, Africa, the U.S. and Japan. Riboud has been witness to the atrocities of war (photographing from both the Vietnam and the American sides of the Vietnam War), and the apparent degradation of a culture repressed from within (China during the years of chairman Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution).
Rein was born in Givataim (Israel) where he grew up and attended "Shimom Ben Tzvi" High School. He is married to Dr. Mónica Esti Rein and father of two children. During the 1980s he held several positions in the Israeli press and media, among them: Foreign News Editor of the I.D.F. Radio Station, Commentator on foreign affairs in Al Hamishmar, Member of the founding group of Hadashot daily newspaper and its first Foreign News Editor. During this period he published hundreds of articles and reportages in a number of Israeli newspapers and magazines.
Climate Change by NOOR is a long-term group project that focuses on two issues. The first, ‘Consequences by NOOR’ is an eyewitness record of the devastating effects of climate change around the globe. Produced in the autumn of 2009, these visual reportages show not ‘what might happen’ in the future but what is happening right now, emphasizing the urgency of addressing the issues at stake. NOOR continued the project in autumn 2010, with 'Solutions' a visual project investigating what is and what can be done to slow down or reverse climate change.
Yvon Lambert (born 1955) has both worked as a freelance photojournalist and completed a number of international reportages on societal issues. In 1990 and 1991, he spent long periods in Naples, which led to his first book, Naples, un hiver (1993). From 1993, he travelled to several Central European countries. In 1995, under the project: D'est en ouest, chemins de terre et d'Europe (From east to west, roads through Europe's farmlands) organized by the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, he was responsible for photographing rural scenes in Romania.
In April 2017, a bronze plaque commemorating the Cistercian foundation "House of the Ladies of Trzebnica" was placed in the facade of the building and the name Dom Panien Trzebnickich (House of the Ladies of Trzebnica) came back into official use . Foto-Gen Gallery specializes in showing photography and new media. There are regular exhibitions for home and international artists, presentations as well as lectures organized there. Media reportages from these events can be seen on Centre for Cultural Arts in Wrocław (OKiS) video channel, local and nationwide media.
In 2011, she reported the Dominique Strauss-Kahn affair in May, and the wedding of Albert II, Prince of Monaco. In July 2012, she replaced Claire Chazal to present the afternoon and evening news on weekends and the program Reportages on TF1. During autumn 2012, she is a correspondent for TF1 in the United States to report the presidential election of 2012. Since 2013 Anne-Claire Coudray has presented the military parade of 14 July on TF1, with Gilles Bouleau and Jean-Claude Narcy in 2013 and with Louis Bodin and Denis Brogniart in 2014.
In terms of his overall perspective regarding documentary photography and photojournalism, Picone made the following statement in 2011: > Documentary photography enables me to approach people from cultures vastly > different to my own and communicate with them. As I document people and tell > their stories, communication is exchanged between myself and them. Finally > when those photographs are published in another place, it becomes a catalyst > for further communication between different cultures. I like the idea that > my reportages can be a conduit of communication between different cultures > in different places.
On 29 April 2011, she presented on the same channel a special program dedicated to the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton. She conceived and presented a documentary in three parts on W9 in March and April 2012 titled La vie, la nuit. In these series of reportages, she is in immersion with people who work at night like firemen, policemen and emergency doctors. Since September 2008, she presented on W9 the program Enquêtes criminelles : le magazine des faits divers during eight consecutive years until June 2015 and then being replaced.
From March 2006 to June 2008, Aymeric Caron hosts from Friday to Sunday the morning news of the weekend on I-Télé. He presents at the same time i>Matin infos, a morning program common to Canal+ and I-Télé, during summer 2006 and 2007. Matin Week-end is a news segment alternating reportages, chronicles and interviews. In October 2007, one of his interviews strongly opposed him to Nadine Morano, who was the official spokesperson of the French Union for a Popular Movement, close of president Nicolas Sarkozy.
Gabriele Alexandra Lesser (born 16 May 1960) in Frankfurt/Main is a historian and journalist, who specializes in the history of World War II and the occupation of Poland, the Baltic Republics, and Ukraine 1939-1945. As Warsaw- based correspondent of newspapers published in Germany (Taz-Berlin), Austria (Standard-Vienna), and Switzerland (Tages-Anzeiger-Zurich) she publishes regularly news, reportages, analysis about Poland, Ukraine, the Baltic Republics and the oblast Kaliningrad. She wrote and edited several books about the contemporary Poland, the history of the Underground University in Cracow in World War II and a guidebook about Masuria and the Masurian Lakeland.
She moved on from fashion to photograph first her own country, East Germany, and later the rest of the world. In 1990, together with Ute Mahler and Harald Hauswald, she founded the Ostkreuz agency, which now represents a score of photographers. Perhaps Bergemann's most important legacy is the series of black-and-white photographs she took of everyday life in East Germany as it evolved over the years. Later, she compiled photographic reportages about New York City, Tokyo, Paris and São Paulo; and even more recently, turning from black and white to colour, she travelled through Africa and Asia on assignments for Geo.
Later in 1939, he traveled to London, and continued his job as a journalist for Ta Kung Pao until 1946. While the British took part in the Second World War, he gave up his place at the University of Cambridge in 1944, and became the only Chinese war correspondent in Western Europe. As World War II came to an end, he produced a number of reportages such as "Symphony of Contradictions," "Bloody September" and "London under Silver Kites", which all reflected the (often harsh) reality during wartime. Thereafter, he worked for several newspaper companies such as the English version of People's China ().
Born in Lucca to Massimo and Sara Urro, Gabriele Del Grande studied history and oriental studies in Bologna and trained as a journalist at the 'Lelio Basso Foundation' in Rome. In 2006, he founded the blog Fortress Europe, one of the main observatories of the victims of migration along the European borders. Since then he has been traveling as a freelance journalist around Southern Europe, Northern and West Africa and the Middle East reporting about migrations, wars and jihadism. His reportages has been published in Time, Al Monitor, Vocativ, Taz, Internazionale, Rai, Radio3, RSI, Jungle World, Roads & Kingdoms, L’Unità, Redattore Sociale and others.
Slioor moved to the United States in the mid-1960s and married Matti Kosonen, a Finnish American pilot and Vietnam veteran. The marriage lasted from 1965 to 1968.Turun Sanomat, 3 September 1997. During the years in the States, Slioor worked as a reporter and photographer, living in San Francisco. She met, interviewed, and photographed various public figures, including Ronald Reagan, Robert F. Kennedy, Henry Miller, Bing Crosby, Harry Belafonte, and Rita Hayworth, and sent numerous reportages from the States to be published in Jallu magazine in Finland, appearing on the Jallu covers with the likes of Tom McCall,Jallu, 9/1968.
Born in Syria, Katcha spent his childhood in Lebanon, immigrating to France in 1945 when he was just 17 and where he pursued studies at IDEC in film screenwriting and won the Pelman prize in 1962 for 2 film reportages, Pas de pitié pour les aveugles et Les cancéreux. He published his first book at age 20 titled Les mégots du dimanche on Gallimard followed up by Œil pour œil. The latter was adapted to film directed by André Cayatte. Katcha wrote 25 novels including Un homme est tombé dans la rue in addition to two theatre pieces.
Michael Pitiot shot his first reportages in Zaïre in 1991. He was then recruited as audiovisual attaché at the French embassy in Vietnam, responsible for cooperation with radio and television in Ho Chi Minh City, a position he occupied from 1993 to 1998. From 1998 to 2000, he travelled back to France aboard a Chinese junk christened Sao Mai and specially built for the journey, with Marielle Laheurte and a team of 30 volunteers from widely differing backgrounds (including the former naval lieutenant Pierre Guillaume, also known as Crabe-Tambour). He produced a documentary for France2 and wrote two accounts of this expedition.
President Díaz recognized the importance of cinema and appeared in many films placing him at the center of action with his cabinet ministers; in a parade; and in the zócalo. In 1906, he is seen in La entrevista de los presidentes Díaz-Taft, the first-ever meeting of a U.S. President with Mexico's, one of the first filmed reportages produced in Mexico. It was filmed by the Alva brothers. The first fiction film to be created in Mexico was based on a recreation of the duel between two deputies, called Duelo a pistola en el bosque de Chapultepec (Gun duel in the Chapultepec forest).
Its slogan was Du Top 50, du jeu crétin, du Top Albums, des reportages de Super Bolloc'h, du cinéma, des cadeaux par milliers et des invités Top niveau (The Top 50, crazy games, Top Albums, reports by Super Bolloc'h, films, gifts by the thousand, and top-notch guests). Delarue presented a television news programme called Mon œil (My eye) every afternoon during 1991-1992, then between 8:40 and 9:00 in the morning in 1994. Additionally, and again at Europe 1, he presented a programme called L'Équipe du matin (The Morning Team) for the station's 7:00-9:00 news slot, attracting 300,000 listeners.
In 1983 together with Gian Micalessin and Fausto Biloslavo, he founded the “Albatros Press Agency”. This agency would produce reportages, documentaries and articles, from every part of the world, where revolutions and war were fought. The agency sold a lot of its productions to foreign television networks, in particular in US and UK; also in Italy Albatros managed to sell its products to important networks, such as the Panorama weekly magazine and the Italian 1st TV channel news or TG Uno, this despite the high prejudice of the major Italian network for those who were considered culturally close to the MSI-DN right-wing party.
One of his reportages of the period notably discussed the widespread poverty he had encountered during his travels to the eastern province of Bessarabia, and was titled Basarabia: Țară de pământ ("Bessarabia: Land of Soil").Cristina Petrescu, "Contrasting/Conflicting Identities: Bessarabians, Romanians, Moldovans", in Nation-Building and Contested Identities: Romanian and Hungarian Case Studies , Regio Books, Polirom, Budapest & Iași, 2001, p.161, 175. In it, the writer spoke of how most tailors were almost always commissioned by locals not to produce new clothes, but to mend old ones (at a time when the larger part of family incomes in the region were spent on food and clothing).
Khouloud Al-Gamal (born in Cairo 1971) (also spelled Khouloud ElGamal and خلود الجمل) is an Egyptian journalist/TV producer based in London since 2001. She started as reporter for French speaking outlets like Al-Ahram Hebdo and Radio Cairo and also for Youm7 She received few awards on her reporting on citizen journalism, Foreign Policy, sufism, exorcism, bedouins, Islamic extremism and her Grand reportages and travel writings. She is consultant and guest speaker on citizen journalism, social medias and filmmaking. She was married to Hosam El Sokkari, the former head of the BBC Arabic and Former head of Yahoo Inc in the Middle East.
In the 1870s, the divorce was expensive and forfeited Gossauer's independence: as it was customary at that times, a legal guardian was assigned, and every contract had to be confirmed by the custodian. Nevertheless, in his annual reports the custodian also mentioned Gossauer's business acumen, her eagerness, that she was able to earn money and to find her own living without having to take any financial help. Around the 1890s and 1900s, Gossauer used a folding camera type Engel-Feitknecht for reportages and landscape photography. Alfred Engel Feitknecht was the designer of the camera made in Switzerland; between 1878 and 1894 about 6000 cameras were produced.
Martim Avillez Figueiredo was the editor-in-chief of the daily and Mónica Bello served as the editor-in-chief of the online version. i is published in compact format. The paper covers in- depth news analyses, reportages and news stories and is composed of four main sections: Opinion, Radar, Zoom and More. In 2009 i won the European Newspaper Award in the category of nationwide newspapers. The paper was also awarded the World’s Best-Designed™ newspaper by the Society for News Design in 2011. In May 2009 i had a circulation of 11,000 copies and it was 16,000 copies in August 2009.
Throughout the post-war years, Montanelli retained an idiosyncratic and particularly undiplomatic style, even when this made him very unpopular among his peers and employers. This is well illustrated in his book La stecca nel coro (which translates as "The false note in the chorus" with the meaning of "Going against the current") which is a list of leading articles he composed between 1974 and 1994. After the war, Montanelli resumed his career at Corriere della Sera, famously authoring deeply sympathetic articles from Hungary, during the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. His first hand reportages inspired him to write the play, I sogni muoiono all'alba (Dreams Die at Dawn), later adapted to film.
It also rebroadcasts the main supper-hour bulletins from CBVT-DT Quebec City, CBAFT-DT Moncton and CKTV-DT Saguenay. The channel also broadcasts factual programs in the form of food program L'épicerie, current affairs in Les Grand Reportages (The Big Reports), science in Découverte (Discovery) and Tout le Monde en Parlait - a look back at past culture seen through the eyes of current events. During the weekend there is a greater amount of these programs, much in the same format as its English-language counterpart, the CBC News Network. Ici RDI also carries Journal de 20 heures from France 2, rebroadcasting it the following weekday at 4:30 p.m. (Eastern).
In 1990 he began his studies of Cinema and Psychology in the Tel Aviv University, where he also directed his first movies. In 1992, at the time of birth of his first daughter, he returned to the Kibbutz where he was born and raised and dedicated himself to establishing a local education system, with intent to provide an ideal environment for his and his friends' children. Afterwards he worked as a director of documentaries reportages for the show "Ha'She'elah Ha'ba'ah" on Keshet Broadcasting, produced by Yaron London and Nurit Kedar. In 1997 he directed and produced his first documentary film, along with Maya Bar, The First Will Be the Last.
After receiving a degree in languages from Université Paul Valéry in Montpellier, Leenhardt studied at the School of Journalism in Paris. Previously chosen to host variety shows by La Cinq, he presented from 1990 to 1991 at Télématin, on France 2. Leenhardt presented the news show 20 heures of France 2 from 1994 to 1995.. Placed in special operations, he then become the correspondent of France 2 for Washington, D.C., and then London. In 2003, he became editor of the service Enquêtes et reportages (investigations and reports), then in March of the following year, he became Deputy Director of Information of France 2, alongside Arlette Chabot.
After graduating in French literature and Conservatoire of Cinema (Paris), he joined the French Navy in 1990 for two years on Aircraft-carrier Foch during the Lebanon war and was in charge of the ship’s Television production unit where he made his first reportages and documentaries for the Navy. In 1991 in Paris, Jeauffre founded the nonprofit Jules Verne Adventures along with Frédéric Dieudonné. Dedicated to exploration, conservation, and education, the organization is now based both in Paris and in Los Angeles. In 1992, Jeauffre and Dieudonné launched the annual Paris Jules Verne Festival and the Jules Verne Awards, inaugurated by Jacques-Yves Cousteau.
In December 2007, due to the departure plan organized by the direction, Stéphanie Renouvin lest the channel and the Canal+ Group. In November 2010, Stéphanie Renouvin joined the channel France 4 to present Certains l'aiment show, a program between news and entertainment, where according to EDEN, who produced her program, she wanted to associate her two passions that are information and artistic creation. In March 2011, after two episodes of 90 minutes with four columnists and reportages, the program was reduced to 60 minutes with two columnists and became weekly to be broadcast on Friday during the second part of the evening. The program was ended in April of that year due to lack of audience.
Together with writer Sebastian Junger, he made several reportages for Vanity Fair about the mass killings in Kosovo, blood diamonds in Sierra Leone, the civil war in Liberia, women-trafficking on the Balkans, American army units in Afghanistan and the controversial Chinese entrepreneurs in Africa. In 2001, together with writer Andrew Cockburn, he covered the trail of conflict diamonds in Sierra Leone, DR Congo and Angola for National Geographic magazine. Voeten arrived in Baghdad just after the American-led invasion of 2003 and photographed the immediate aftermath of the war. Six months later he returned to Iraq and was embedded with the US forces for Maclean's magazine with Canadian writer Sacha Trudeau.
The founder, editor and publisher of the magazine is Lebanese poet and journalist Joumana Haddad who is also culture editor of An Nahar daily. Jasad is distributed to readers worldwide through bookshops and/or by rapid courier via a yearly subscription system. It is a glossy magazine, 200 pages, sized 22 x 28 cm, and consists of different sections and columns, ranging from reportages, testimonies and articles, to essays, translations and creative writings, all covering the fields of cinema, literature, arts, theater, philosophy, science, revolving around the axis of the body. Saseen Kawzally regarded the magazine on 2 February 2009 as "very confusing" and as covering varied material that is not "entirely coherent".
He has been studying and enjoying the process ever since.GamesBids.com: About us Livingstone has been quoted and used as a resource by print, broadcast and Web media around the world including major publications in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Japan, South Korea, Australia, France, Brazil, Austria, Germany and many other countries. He regularly provides commentary on radio and television news shows internationally (including an appearance on an Investigative Reports episode, "Tarnished Gold" that originally appeared on the A&E; network on September 15, 2000 and an episode of Les Grands Reportages from Ici Radio- Canada Télé network in Canada titled "De Sotchi à Pyeongchang" on January 25, 2018). "IMDb, Robert Livingstone", IMDb, January 25, 2020.
Manny the Hippie (born Micah Papp in 1976) was a San Francisco Haight-Ashbury regular in 1996 when Late Show with David Letterman was being hosted from there and David Letterman "discovered" him on the street. Letterman interviewed Manny on the air and subsequently made him a national celebrity.Manny the Hippie Now Living the Dank Life Lodi News Sentinel, May 18, 1996 He became a regular movie reviewer on the show and renowned for his slang, like "schwag" for bad, "dank" for good, "diggity dank" for excellent and "schwiggity schwag" for worst. David Letterman sent him scouring the streets of San Francisco on reportages, and also dispatched him on newsbeats across the nation, for instance to Roswell .
Retrieved on 26 January 2015. In 2014 he published Tańczące niedźwiedzie ("Dancing Bears"), a collection of reportages about nations across Central Europe and their way to freedom, in which he writes about the creation of reserves for bears previously used as dancing bears to entertain people. He uses the experiences of the former dancing bears to explore differences between communist and capitalist systems.xiegarnia.pl "Witold Szabłowski – wywiad, część I". Video interview with Witold Szabłowski about his book Dancing Bears (in Polish). Retrieved on 26 January 2015. The book received rave reviews: The New York Times called it “a pearl” (in Orlando Figes’s review) and Timothy Garton Ash (from “Foreign Affairs”) wrote: “This is a Milan Kundera remake of Dances With Wolves”.
He contributes to music magazines Il Mucchio Selvaggio and Mucchio Extra, which released in 2014 the two music reportages Los Angeles: the sound of the desert and The sound of Berlin.Vittorio Bongiorno, Il suono di Berlino, Mucchio, 17 July 2014 In January 2015 Mucchio Extra released the reportage The sound of Detroit.Vittorio Bongiorno, Il suono di Detroit, Mucchio, 15 January 2015 In 2012 he produced a musical reading of Il Duka in Italy and New York,"I Love You Madly: reading + music", Fiorentini & Baker, 16 March 2012 and in 2013 he performed the new musical novel No Strangers Blues, reading pages of the book and playing a self-built cigar box guitar as used in Mississippi Delta blues. Vittorio Bongiorno lives in Bologna.
Since he already belonged to the SED's Bezirk of Potsdam leadership since 1964, he was a member of the SED's Central Committee from 1967. Between 1953 and 1972, he was an unofficial informer of the East German Stasi. Bernhard Seeger wrote reportages, narratives, novels and poems though best known for his radio and televised dramas. Seeger's party politic works dealt with the prominent problems of the building phase of the East German society, that of the East German critic highly praised work"Herbstrauch" about the collective farming of the East German agriculture in 1959/60 had strong influence of Sholokhov's "New Land under the Plough". Bernhard Seeger belonged to the Schriftstellerverband of East Germany since 1952 and the Academy of Arts, Berlin between 1969 and 1991.
As the author claimed, most of his reportages had been written in the final months of 1939, and were based on personal interviews with soldiers of the Polish Army and Polish civil servants, who witnessed or fought in the Invasion of Poland. Due to his work, the defenders of Westerplatte, and Major Henryk Dobrzański became legendary figures in Polish historiography. Nevertheless, Wrzesień żagwiący should not be considered a history books, as in some cases Wańkowicz's interlocutors did not give truthful testimonies. Among others, in August 1946 in Italy, Wańkowicz interviewed Major Henryk Sucharski, who did not mention the fact that in the first days of the Battle of Westerplatte, he suffered a nervous breakdown, and the defence was commanded by Captain Franciszek Dąbrowski.
In 2003 he quit France 2 to work in radio again, heading the press review at France Info radio. In the meantime he became deputy manager of the Centre de formation et de perfectionnement des journalistes in charge of the "Audiovisual" section. In December 2006 he participated in the launching of a French international news TV channel broadcasting 24/7: France 24, where he presented the morning session in French and a weekly show devoted to grand reportages called Reporters, as well as some debates and special shows, e.g. Sur la route de Pekin (On the road to Beijing) during the 2008 Summer Olympics, USA 2008 during the 2008 presidential elections in America, and Haïti, un an après (Haiti, one year later).
The collection comprises war reportages by Alexander Ustinov, Mikhail Trakhman, Yevgeny Khaldei, Dmitri Baltermants, Robert Diament, Yakov Ryumkin, Georgy Lipskerov, Vasily Kunyaev. Reportage photography from the late 1940s-early 1950s is presented by works of Nikolay Khorungy, Alexey Gostev, Semen Fridlyand. The center holds a unique collection of works by photojournalists and club photographers from the 1960s-1970s: Valentin Khukhlaev, Andrey Knyazev, Vasily Egorov, Mikhail Savin, Vsevolod Tarasevich, Alexander Abaza, Lev Borodulin, Nina Sviridova and Dmitri Vozdvyzhensky, Igor Gavrilov, Nikolay Drachinsky, Yuri Krivonosov, Vladimir Lagrange, Yuri Lunkov, Lev Sherstennikov. The center also houses an important collection of works by the founders of the Lithuanian school that emerged during the period: Antanas Sutkus, Alexander Maciyauskas, Vitaly Butirinas, Romualdas Požerskis, Vaclav Straukas, Vergilius Shonta.
Nowadays even Mt. Baekdu or another view of Pyongyang is used as the background for the newscasts; however, a newer studio was introduced in September 2012, including a background LCD panel (paid by CCTV of PRC) where live images (such as a revolving globe or the flag of North Korea) are shown. This technological advancement allows live reportages, though it has not been used for that purpose. North Korean newscasts were long known for being melodramatic. Newsreaders use one of five tones—a lofty, wavering one for praising the nation's leaders, an explanatory one for weather forecasts, a conversational one for uncontroversial stories, one denouncing the West and a mournful tone for announcing the death of a North Korean official or leader.
After 1989, she started new job as secretary and editor of Czech diary ("Český deník"), then editor of Week ("Týden") (a rural magazine), reporter of the picture supplement of tabloid newspaper Blesk, editor of Europress (Bauer Media) and finally as co-author of the supplement Science and people ("Věda a lidé") of the newspaper Hospodářské noviny. She cooperated externally with newspapers Lidové noviny and MF DNES, Czech journals Reflex, Print and Publishing, Packaging, Sanquist, Listy, and with Rozmer and Prometheus in Slovakia. In the nineties, she hosted the programme called Our theme ("Naše téma") on the Czech Radio station Vltava and contributes essays for the Radio weekly since then. In addition to articles popularising science, she has mainly been writing reportages, interviews and essays.
She intended to study the dramatic arts in Paris, but did not obtain her father's consent. Under the pen name Valer Donea, she published reportages in Universul literar și artistic. Her first novel was Mormolocul (1933), followed by Naufragiații din Aukland (1937). Her fairly extensive output included books of interviews (Domniile lor domnii și doamnele, 1937, republished in 1969 as Stele și luceferi), memoirs and volumes recalling Mihail Sadoveanu (O zi cu Sadoveanu, 1955; Viața lui Mihail Sadoveanu, 1957, republished in 1966 as Ostrovul zimbrului; În umbra stejarului, 1965; Planeta părăsită, 1970), prose poems (Ploi și ninsori, 1940), poems (Somnul pietrei, 1971; Cântecele lui Ștefan Vodă, 1974; Flori de piatră, 1980; Ora violetă, 1984) and children's verses (Balaurul alb, 1955; Ochelarii bunicii, 1969).
She was a presenter of the NDR Hamburg Harbour Concert broadcasts, and by the mid 1950s had become a regular presenter of a number of popular television series, such as "Umschau/Mittag am Abend", the radio travel programme "Zwischen Hamburg und Haiti", Hamburg Harbour Concert and "Funkbilder aus Niedersachsen" ("Radio pictures from Lower Saxony"). This last series involved pitching up in the main square of a succession small town with an outside broadcasting unit and one of the iconic Übertragungswagen ("broadcasting trucks") and from there producing live transmissions to audiences without studio intervention. Many of these reportages were broadcast across German and gave their presenter a national profile. By 1956 her reporting roles were complemented increasingly by editorial duties in the broadcaster's features department and main editorial office.
During this time he also wrote an essay titled "Talnoe", about the extermination of Jews by the Nazi Army in the Ukraine, that was included in The Black Book: The Nazi Crime Against the Jewish People, a collection of testimonies and first-hand accounts of the perpetuation of the Holocaust, which was used as evidence during the Nuremberg Trials, but was never published in the Soviet Union. Joseph Stalin's displeasure with one of his reportages made Lidin fall out of favour with the Soviet authorities. He was demoted to a position at a regional military newspaper and between 1943 and 1946 there he had no works published, a significant gap in his otherwise prolific and constant output. It wasn't until the late 1940s that he was once again able to publish his work.
15, 87 In 1952, he was working on translating Stepan Schipachov's poem about Pavlik Morozov, a Soviet boy who had denounced his family for opposing Soviet collectivization, and, after being killed by them, had been celebrated as a communist hero.Selejan, p.15 He was in the process of publishing a series of reportages about the lives of Romanian workers, and, in 1952, stated that he intended to write poetry about life in the factories at Brad, which he had visited. Some of his poems were published in the 1952 volume Poezie nouă în R.P.R. ("New Poetry in the P[eople's] R[epublic of] R[omania]"), together with those of Maria Banuş, Dan Deşliu, Mihu Dragomir, Eugen Frunză, Ştefan Iureş, Eugen Jebeleanu, Veronica Porumbacu, Alexandru Toma and twenty-four others.
She has realized numerous music theatre projects inspired by the social scene,L.Ronchetti_Über die Linie-2010_Programbooklet MaerzMusik 2010.pdf exploring, in the dramaturgy, the concept of otherness (BendelSchlemihl, Strasse-opern, 2000, text by Ivan Vladislavic); outsider groups and dysptopia (Narrenschiffe, in-transit action, 2010, text after Sebastian Brant);Munchener Opernfestspiele 2010, Narrenschiffe, Materialen 1-2-3, Siebner 2010 limen/border (Der Sonne entgegen, chamber opera, 2009, text by Steffi Hansel);Stefano Nardelli, Declinazione della frontiera Der Sonne entgegen (Verso il sole) di Lucia Ronchetti, Giornale della Musica 14. Mai 2007 transitory mental illness (Le voyage d’Urien, drammaturgia, text after Gide and 19th century psychiatric reportages, 2008); sub-urbanity (Rumori da monumenti, drammaturgia, text by Ivan Vladislavic, 2007); and Sebenza e-mine, Radio Play, in collaboration with Philip Miller, 2010).
In 2007, China Metallurgical Group Corporation, a Chinese state-owned conglomerate, bid $3.4 billion for the rights to mine deposits near the village of Aynak. The New York Times reported: "Over the next 25 years, it plans to extract about 11 million tons of copper — an amount equal to one-third of all the known copper reserves in China." Reading further reportages on The New York Times on the involvement of China and U.S. government in the mineral reserves in Afghanistan, Huffman began his research into this subject and began filming in Mes Aynak on his own in 2011. On top of the copper reserve in Mes Aynak, it turns out, is an archaeological excavation site, uncovering "thousands of Buddhist statues, manuscripts, coins, and holy monuments...Entire monasteries and fortifications...dating back as far as the third century," according to a National Geographic reportage.
Sidonie Bonnec began her career on television in 2005 at the beginning of the digital terrestrial television, presenting the program Choc, l'émission on NT1. She then presented on Canal+ a sports chronicle on the program Jour de sport, also appearing on France 4 where she participated at the program Les Agités du bocal until its end. In September 2007, she presented the musical program Musicronik on W9, where she gave information, commented new albums, concerts and web tendencies, and also interviewed celebrities. From 2005 to 2009, Sidonie Bonnec presented live every Wednesday evening during 5 seasons Nouvelle star, ça continue with Jérôme Anthony and Alexandre Devoise, where she interviews the contestants, musicians, technicians, and members of the jury. In March 2010, Sidonie Bonnec presented Destins extraordinaires on W9, a weekly program of 70 minutes of several reportages portraying people with an uncommon path like anonymous heroes and personalities.
Out of the CNN correspondents the one who received the most attention was Peter Arnett who became known for the controversy of his reportages. His reports on the Coalition’s POWs, on the bombing of what was claimed to be a milk factory by the Iraq authorities, and on the bombing of the bunker outside Bagdad where nearly 400 civilians were killed, were particularly controversial and resulted in him being tilted as anti-patriotic by some. right Overall media and television reporting during this first Gulf War has received several criticisms. People like Columbia’s professor Douglas Kellner have argued that the media framed the war as an exciting narrative, turning it into a kind of dramatic, patriotic spectacle and that the anchors of the major American TV networks such as CBS presented a view that seemed to identify solely with the American Military point of view.

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