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National TV network news anchors Ken Kashiwahara and Connie Chung rose to prominence in the 1970s and 1980s, resulting in high visibility. With the development of international business cable news broadcasting, especially for broadcast from East Asia, the careers of many Asian American broadcast news journalist has seen a large growth of ...
Women Maya Kobayashi, entertainment news anchor of "Watch!" and cast of cooking show "Saturday Night Chubou". Ikumi Kimura, co-host of morning show "Watch!". Hiroko Ogura, co-anchor of "JNN News Forest, The Evening News" (Present: "JNN Evening News"). Tomoko Kubota, co-host of game show "Amazing Animals".
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:American women journalists. It includes journalists that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Wikimedia Commons has media related to American women journalists of Asian descent .
Sachi Koto, former CNN news anchor; Lori Matsukawa, former evening news anchor, KING5, Seattle; Rob Mayeda, NBC Bay Area Weather Plus meteorologist; Denise Nakano, anchor, WCAU NBC 10, Philadelphia; Ellen Nakashima, journalist, The Washington Post; Kent Ninomiya, anchor, reporter and news executive
Shaula Vogue (born 28 August 1986) is a Japanese-American radio and television presenter, DJ and fashion model raised in Honolulu and, as of 2023, living in Japan. She hosts Recorrer on InterFM plus 25 JFN stations nationwide and cohosts Design Talks Plus (NHK E and NHK World-Japan) and Biz Stream (NHK World-Japan), as well as her own podcast Greenhouse Radio with Shaula.
She is the president of production company Jan Yanehiro, Inc., a partner of Fair Advantage, a director of Bank of Marin, a board member on Kristi Yamaguchi's Always Dream Foundation, a board member of the Center for the Pacific Rim at the University of San Francisco, and a board member of the National Board of Visitors at California State University, Fresno.
Kent Ninomiya is the first male Asian American broadcast journalist to be a primary news anchor of a television station in the United States. [1] The Asian American Journalist Association, often referred to as the AAJA, notes that there are numerous Asian American women on the air at American television news stations but very few Asian American men. [2]
Ettinger met with Michael Bloomberg and returned to journalism to help build New York's first all-business news radio station, Bloomberg Radio, joining Bloomberg, L.P. as an anchor for his newly acquired WBBR-AM. In 1994, Ettinger helped launch Bloomberg Television and served as its weekday morning news anchor on the USA Network. She anchored ...