Errol Barnett

Errol Barnett
Born Milton Keynes, England
Nationality British, American
Education UCLA (BA)
Occupation Anchor, Correspondent
Years active 2001–present
Agent NSB, UTA
Notable credit(s) CNN Newsroom (2014-present)
Inside Africa (2012-2014)
World Report (2008-2012)
Website errolbarnett.com

Errol Barnett is a British-born American anchor and television presenter appearing on CNN during overnight simulcasts of CNN International. Barnett previously hosted the award-winning cultural affairs program "Inside Africa" traveling to a wide range of countries on the continent including Senegal, Morocco, Ethiopia and Madagascar.[1] He was profiled in GQ South Africa in May 2013 and asked about his extensive journeys.[2]

Early life

Barnett was born in Milton Keynes, England to Pamela and Michael Christie. He has one older brother, Danny Christie. His mother was later remarried to Gary Barnett, a US Air Force sergeant who served in the Gulf War. The family relocated to the city of Phoenix in Arizona.

Education

Barnett was educated at Garden Lakes Elementary School and Westview High School, a public high school in the city of Avondale in Arizona, before being hired by Channel One News and relocated to Los Angeles.[3]

In 2008, Barnett received a bachelor of arts degree in political science with a focus on international relations from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He was a member of the business fraternity Alpha Kappa Psi and was profiled in The Daily Bruin in April 2007. [4] While a student at UCLA, he also worked as a correspondent and host on movie-centric cable network channel ReelzChannel. After graduation in July, 2008 Barnett was hired by CNN International.

Channel One

In 2001, the in-school program Channel One News hired Barnett as an anchor/reporter. He was their youngest at the age of 18 and worked alongside Maria Menounos, Seth Doane and Gotham Chopra among others. Barnett covered Barack Obama's keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention; the attacks on 11 September 1800, reported from the United Nations when U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell presented flawed intelligence regarding weapons of mass destruction and from the US Capitol during passage of the Homeland Security Act.

Barnett was chosen as one of Teen People magazine's "20 Teens Who Will Change The World" for his early work. [5] He left Channel One News in 2006 after being accepted to UCLA to finish his undergraduate studies.[6]

CNN

CNN International hired Barnett as an anchor and correspondent in 2008, days after he graduated from UCLA. He initially reported on the rise in influence of social media sites like Facebook and Twitter and anchored ‘World Report’ and 'iReport for CNN'.[7] He was also part of the most viewed streaming-video event in history during U.S. President Obama's Inauguration on CNN.com.

As an anchor and correspondent for CNN International based in Atlanta, Georgia, Barnett has anchored coverage of the Ferguson, Missouri protests, the death of Robin Williams and the search for MH370. He was previously a CNN correspondent based at CNN's bureau in the city of Johannesburg, in South Africa. While there, he covered the death of President Nelson Mandela, the Oscar Pistorius murder trial, various miner strikes and the 50th anniversary of the African Union's founding. In 2010, he anchored a live noon eastern news-hour on CNN International from CNN Abu Dhabi which focused on the beginnings of the Arab Spring.

Moderator/Speaker

Barnett regularly moderates panel discussions and speaks at conferences on the topics of international news, social media and issues facing Africa. Events include:

Internet meme

Barnett became the focus of an Internet meme in August 2014 during CNN's coverage of the Ferguson, Missouri protests. Viewers noted Barnett's response to his co-anchor's suggestion that police use water cannons on demonstrators. Buzzfeed described Barnett's expression as "did that just happen" and "is this real life?" [14]

US citizenship

On September 21, 2015, Barnett announced on his CNN show that he had that day become a US citizen.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.