Luisa Baldini

Luisa Baldini
Born Luisa Baldini
Tanzania
Ethnicity Anglo-Italian
Occupation Journalist, Presenter
Notable credit(s) News Direct 97.3
EuroNews
Five News
BBC Breakfast
BBC News

Luisa Baldini (born in Tanzania) is Anglo-Italian freelance news reporter and presenter, previously having worked for BBC News.

Biography

Born in Tanzania to an Italian father and English mother, she first came to the UK when the family moved to North London. She attended St. Helen's School and then Haileybury College, Hertford. After graduating in modern languages from Exeter University, she did a Post Graduate Diploma in Broadcast Journalism at Falmouth College of Arts.

Career

On graduation she worked for London-based rolling news radio station News Direct 97.3FM, she then moved to satellite channel EuroNews, and then Five News.

She then moved to the BBC, first as a regional reporter in London, before becoming a roving reporter for BBC Breakfast. On creation of the BBC News Channel, she started undertaking major incident reports. She remains a reporter, and undertakes occasional presenting roles as a relief presenter on BBC News.

In 2004, Otis Ferry tried to contact Baldini before he and his friends raided the House of Commons in support of the hunting debates.[1]

Being trilingual (she speaks Italian, English and French),[2] Baldini has been sent to Italy to report on major news stories for BBC News, including the death of the Pope John Paul II, the 2009 Italian earthquakes, the trial concerning the Murder of Meredith Kercher, the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI and the Costa Concordia incident.

References

  1. Wells, Matt (2004-09-17). "BBC left red-faced after it failed to act on tip-off from rock star's son". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-05-28.
  2. "Luisa Baldini". Gordon Poole. Retrieved 2009-05-28.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.