We compiled a list of the top 10 journalists throughout the United States and operating in the politics space. It's good stuff!
Американский журналист восхитился Москвой
Breaking news, live coverage, investigations, analysis, video, photos and opinions from The Washington Post. Subscribe for the latest on U.S. and international news, politics, business. get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from MailOnline, Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers. Эксперты ООН призвали немедленно освободить американского журналиста Эвана Гершковича, который, по их словам, был «незаконно арестован» сотрудниками ФСБ России 29. These nominations were compiled and voted on in March 2012. The final list of 100 was announced at a reception in honor of the 100th anniversary of journalism education at NYU on April 3, 2012. 30 марта ФСБ сообщила, что корреспондент The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) Эван Гершкович задержан в Екатеринбурге, возбуждено дело о шпионаже.
Карлсон возвращается: уволенный с Fox News журналист пустился в дебаты
get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from MailOnline, Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers. Газета Русскоговорящего Нью-Йорка Brighton Beach News Brooklyn New York Новости русской америки, юмор, бизнесы, политика, критика, фотографии и видео "русского" США. Российские журналисты, которые работают в США, подвергаются притеснениям, американские спецслужбы пытаются склонить их к сотрудничеству, заявил посол России в США Анатолий. Недавно уволенный с Fox News журналист Такер Карлсон намерен организовать дебаты с участием кандидатов-республиканцев на пост президента США. Госдепартамент Соединенных Штатов Америки в Европе готовит журналистов, которые должны расследовать «вредоносную деятельность России». Your trusted source for breaking news, analysis, exclusive interviews, headlines, and videos at
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"Мы глубоко обеспокоены широко обсуждаемым арестом журналиста с американским гражданством в России. Журналисты также спросили у Дмитрия Пескова: не осложнит ли арест Гершковича работу российских корреспондентов за рубежом? США не будут пока вводить каких-то мер против российских СМИ после задержания и ареста американского журналиста газеты The Wall Street Journal Эвана Гершковича.
США – последние новости
По данным ведомства, журналист занимался шпионажем «в интересах американского правительства». Американца задержали при попытке получения секретных сведений, сообщают в ведомстве. В отношении Гершковича возбудили уголовное дело по факту шпионажа. Ранее появилась информация о том, что журналист пропал — пиарщик Ярослав Ширшиков сообщил, что Гершкович не выходит на связь с 29 марта.
Граждане США, проживающие или путешествующие в России, должны немедленно покинуть страну, как советует Государственный департамент, — добавила пресс-секретарь Белого дома Карин Жан-Пьер. Кроме этого, представители Государственного департамента США заявили, что обратились в консульство. Высшим приоритетом Государственного департамента является безопасность граждан США за рубежом. Мы повторяем наши решительные предупреждения об опасности, угрожающей гражданам США на территории Российской Федерации, — заявил пресс-секретарь Энтони Джон Блинкен. RU следит за делом Гершковича в режиме онлайн. Мы рассказывали всё, что известно о самом журналисте и о его деле.
По его словам, со стороны России и Китая, а также стран Запада, включая США, Великобританию и Германию, будут звучать «пылкие заявления» по этому вопросу.
Ли утверждает, что если бы индийской стороне удалось договориться об итоговом коммюнике, это было бы успехом.
Высылка посла России в США, а также всех работающих здесь российских журналистов — это минимум, на который можно рассчитывать», — цитирует агентство заявление редакции. Ранее в Белом доме заявили , что США не имеют оснований доверять обвинениям в шпионаже против Гершковича. Официальный представитель Белого дома Карин Жан-Пьер назвала обвинения в адрес журналиста нелепыми.
Блинкен осудил задержание американского журналиста в РФ
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По данным журналиста, больше всего нарушений было выявлено при голосовании по почте. Чем завершился «супервторник» и что мешает обоим кандидатам на пути к должности лидера США Накануне, 26 апреля, издание Bloomberg сообщило о потере паритета Байдена в семи «колеблющихся» штатах. Отмечается, что в последние месяцы он был фаворитом избирателей из «колеблющихся» штатов, однако в настоящее время лишился значительной части поддержки в результате депрессивной экономической обстановки в стране. Также известно, что опрос проходил в период с 8 по 15 апреля, участие в нем приняли 4,96 тыс.
Ранее, 1 апреля, опрос продемонстрировал, что молодежь в США больше всего недовольна работой нынешнего президента Джо Байдена из-за экономики страны.
Du Bois: a sociologist, civil rights activist, editor, and journalist who is best-known for his collection of articles, The Souls of Black Folk, and for his columns on race during his tenure as editor of The Crisis, 1910—1934. David Douglas Duncan: a photographer who covered the Korean War and other conflicts. John Gregory Dunne: a journalist, essayist, literary critic, screenwriter and novelist, Dunne wrote nonfiction books and essays on Hollywood, crime and politics from the 1960s until his death in 2003.
Alice Dunnigan: a journalist and civil rights activist, in 1948 she became the first African-American female correspondent to receive White House credentials. Barbara Ehrenreich: a journalist and political activist who authored 21 books, including Nickel and Dimed, published in 2001, an expose of the living and working conditions of the working poor. Nora Ephron: a columnist, humorist, screenwriter and director, who wrote clever and incisive social and cultural commentary for Esquire and other publications beginning in the 1960s. Rowland Evans: Evans co-founded the column Inside Report, the longest running syndicated political column in US history, in 1963 with Robert Novak, and was one of the first prominent journalists to join CNN.
Clay Felker: with Milton Glaser in 1968 launched New York magazine, which he had edited when it was a supplement to the Herald Tribune, and helped invent what became the most widely imitated style of magazine journalism in the late twentieth century and beyond. Dexter Filkins: a wartime reporter and author who writes for the New Yorker, Filkins won the Pulitzer Prize in 2009 along with several other New York Times journalists for reports from Pakistan and Afghanistan. Frances FitzGerald: a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who went to Saigon in 1966 and in 1972, published one of the most influential critiques of the war, Fire in the Lake: The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam. Thomas Friedman: a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, columnist and author, Friedman began writing his column on foreign affairs, economics and the environment for the New York Times in 1995.
Joe Galloway: a respected United Press International foreign correspondent who first went to Vietnam in 1965; his recollections of one of the first major US battles in that war, for which he later won a Bronze Star for helping to rescue a soldier, won a National Magazine Award in 1991. Floyd Gibbons: a wartime correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, he became well known for his coverage of the 1916 Pancho Villa Expedition, and for his early appearance on NBC radio news. Milton Glaser: an influential graphic designer who launched New York magazine with Clay Felker in 1968, thereby introducing perhaps the most widely imitated late-twentieth century style of magazine journalism. Pedro J.
Gonzalez: a radio host who created a Spanish-language morning radio show in 1929, which he continued from Tijuana after his deportation from the US. Stephen Jay Gould: a paleontologist and Harvard professor, Gould was also a premier science journalist whose thoughtful, gracefully written, much-loved essays appeared in Natural History. Helen Gurley Brown: wrote the bestselling Sex and the Single Girl in 1962; edited Cosmopolitan magazine from 1965 to 1997, helping introduce a successful mix of sex and self help. Carol Guzy: a photojournalist who began working at the Washington Post in 1988 and has won the Pulitzer Prize four times for her work around the world.
David Halberstam: a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author, known for his coverage of Vietnam, the civil rights movement, politics, and sports. Henry Hampton: an award-winning filmmaker, Hampton made many films that dealt with social justice and inequality in America, including Eyes on the Prize about the civil-rights movement. Paul Harvey: his news and comment program on ABC Radio debuted in 1951 and lasted into the twenty-first century. Ben Hecht: a reporter, screenwriter, playwright and novelist, beginning in 1921 he expanded the focus of journalism with impressionistic portraits of non-extraordinary city life for the Chicago Daily News, collected in the book, One Thousand and One Afternoons in Chicago.
Ernest Hemingway: a novelist and journalist, who reported on Europe during war and peace for a variety of North American publications. Nat Hentoff: who with his Village Voice column, which began in 1957, crusaded, even against some liberal orthodoxies, for civil liberties. Bob Herbert: who wrote a column for the New York Times from 1993 to 2011 that dealt with poverty, racism, the Iraq War, and politics. Michael Herr: who covered the Vietnam War with unprecedented rawness and cynicism for Esquire and wrote the book Dispatches, a partially fictionalized account of his experiences in Vietnam.
John Hersey: a journalist and novelist whose thoroughly reported and tightly written account of the consequences of the atomic bomb America dropped on Hiroshima filled an entire issue of the New Yorker in 1946 and became one of the most read books in America in the second half of the twentieth century. Seymour Hersh: a long-time investigative reporter, specializing is national security issues, who earned acclaim for his Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the massacre by American soldiers at My Lai in Vietnam in 1968, as well as his 2004 reports about American mistreatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib. Don Hewitt: a television news producer who helped invent the evening news on CBS, produced the first televised presidential debate in 1960, extended the CBS Evening News from 15 to 30 minutes in 1963, and later introduced and served as the long-time executive producer of 60 Minutes. Carl Hiassen: a journalist and novelist who has been writing his acclaimed column for the Miami Herald since 1985.
Lorena Hickok: an Associated Press reporter, beginning in 1928, who covered politics and the Lindbergh kidnapping. Marguerite Higgins: a wartime correspondent who advanced the cause of equal access for female war correspondents and won a Pulitzer Prize for her coverage of the Korean War. Christopher Hitchens: a prolific journalist with a large vocabulary and no fear of controversy, who wrote many widely discussed books and wrote columns for the Nation and Vanity Fair. Arianna Huffington: a columnist and co-founder of the Huffington Post in 2005.
Langston Hughes: a poet and playwright, Hughes also wrote a weekly column for the Chicago Defender from 1942 to 1962. Michael Isikoff: an investigative journalist at NBC News who had worked as an investigative reporter for Newsweek from 1994 to 2010, Isikoff has written about the war on terrorism, Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse, politics, among other issues. Molly Ivins: a feisty, often outrageous humorist and populist, who wrote about national and Texas politics mostly for Texas publications before her death from breast cancer in 2007. Frances Johnston: one of the earliest and best-known female photojournalists, Johnston covered a range of stories, including the Spanish-American War, photographed many politicians and, in the 1920s, focused on architecture.
Ward Just: a correspondent from 1959 to 1969 for Newsweek and the Washington Post, where he covered, with considerable skill, Vietnam; left journalism to write fiction. Kaltenborn: popular radio newsman who got his start at CBS in 1928, he pioneered the reporting of news with analysis and opinion on the radio. Al Kamen: an award-winning national columnist who created the In the Loop column for the Washington Post in 1993, Kamen has covered local and federal courts, as well as the Supreme Court and the State Department. James J.
Kilpatrick, Jr. Yunghi Kim: an award-winning photojournalist who has covered many international events, including the conflicts in Somalia and South Africa, and the genocide in Rwanda. Larry King: a television and radio talk-show host whose CNN show Larry King Live brought politicians and other well known personalities into the homes of millions of Americans for 25 years, before his retirement in 2010. Willard M.
Kiplinger: newspaper pioneer who started the weekly Kiplinger Washington Letter in 1923. Ezra Klein: who began blogging while still in college, now writes a blog for the Washington Post and columns for the Post and Bloomberg; he specializes in public policy.
Она также известна как бывший редактор новостей и политический обозреватель в Bustle, где она также вела серию видеороликов Bustle «Love, Factually». Узнайте больше на ее Wiki, биографии, возрасте, Axios, Msnbc, замужем, зарплате, день рождения, возраст, рост, образование, муж, карьера, Дональд Трамп, зарплата, чистая стоимость и многое другое.
"Русские точно знали": журналиста из США шокировала фатальная беспечность ВСУ
Читайте последние статьи из зарубежных СМИ по теме США: Помощь от США – последний шанс для Украины? Новая надежда Украины. Американский журналист Джексона Хинкла сообщил в своем профиле в соцсети X (ранее Twitter), что его задержали на границе США после возвращения после поездки в Россию. Американское издание, сообщает, что администрация Байдена готовится к заключению ряда контрактов с американскими компаниями на производство вооружений для ВСУ. Американский журналист, репортер агентства Associated Press Мэтью Ли заявил, что в мировом сообществе возникнет раскол во мнениях касаемо обстановки на Украине. читайте, смотрите фотографии и видео о прошедших событиях в России и за рубежом!
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Возбуждено уголовное дело о шпионаже. В сентябре прошлого года на 22 года строгого режима осуждён бывший журналист «Коммерсанта» и «Ведомостей», советник главы «Роскосмоса» Иван Сафронов. Ранее он был задержан по обвинению в госизмене.
Обвиняемый гражданин США арестован на 2 месяца до 29 мая на период следствия.
Американцу по ст. Эван Гершкович родился в 1991 году в Нью-Йорке. Окончил Принстонскую среднюю школу и Боудин-колледж, получив степень бакалавра искусств.
Изучал философию и английский язык. Материалы посвящены американской политике и России.
Heywood Broun: an editor, drama critic, sports writer and columnist who helped found the American Newspaper Guild in 1933. Tina Brown: a writer, journalist and editor, known for livening up staid publications, Brown edited Vanity Fair and then the New Yorker, from 1992 to 1998, before co-founding the Daily Beast; she is currently editor-in-chief of the Daily Beast and Newsweek. Ron Brownstein: an influential national-affairs reporter and columnist, beginning in the 1980s, mostly for the Los Angeles Times; Brownstein has received multiple awards for his coverage of presidential campaigns. Pat Buchanan: in and out of politics himself beginning in the 1960s, Buchanan has been a popular conservative columnist and television commentator. Art Buchwald: a Pulitzer Prize-winning satirist whose humor column, which began in the International Herald Tribune in 1949, was eventually syndicated to more than 550 newspapers.
William F. Buckley, Jr. Herb Caen: a Pulitzer Prize-winning, must-read culture columnist at the San Francisco Chronicle from 1938 into the 1990s. Hodding Carter Jr. Frank I. Cobb: editor of the New York World, then perhaps the top newspaper in the United States, from 1904 to 1923. Steve Coll: a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who also served as managing editor at the Washington Post, Coll is now a foreign-policy reporter and blogger for the New Yorker.
Charlie Cook: a journalist and political analyst; his Cook Political Report has provided respected election forecasts since 1984. Howard Cosell: an aggressive, even abrasive, sports broadcaster, Cosell was one of the first Monday Night Football announcers in 1970 and was on the show until 1983; he was known for his unvarnished commentary and sympathetic reporting on Muhammad Ali. Katie Couric: award winning co-host of the Today show on NBC from 1991 to 2006; anchor of the CBS Evening News from 2006 to 2011, for which she conducted a revealing interview with Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin in 2008. Walter Cronkite: a reporter who became the best known and perhaps most respected American television journalist of his time as the anchor of the CBS Evening News from 1962 to 1981. Richard Harding Davis: journalist and fiction writer, whose powerfully written reports on major events, such as the Spanish-American War and the First World War, made him one of the best-known journalists of his time. Frank Deford: an award-winning sports journalist and columnist, his articles have appeared in Sports Illustrated since 1962. Peggy Hull Deuell: covered World War I as the first female war correspondent accredited by the US government; later a respected columnist.
Matt Drudge: editor and creator of one of the first successful Web news sites, the Drudge Report, which broke the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal in 1998. Du Bois: a sociologist, civil rights activist, editor, and journalist who is best-known for his collection of articles, The Souls of Black Folk, and for his columns on race during his tenure as editor of The Crisis, 1910—1934. David Douglas Duncan: a photographer who covered the Korean War and other conflicts. John Gregory Dunne: a journalist, essayist, literary critic, screenwriter and novelist, Dunne wrote nonfiction books and essays on Hollywood, crime and politics from the 1960s until his death in 2003. Alice Dunnigan: a journalist and civil rights activist, in 1948 she became the first African-American female correspondent to receive White House credentials. Barbara Ehrenreich: a journalist and political activist who authored 21 books, including Nickel and Dimed, published in 2001, an expose of the living and working conditions of the working poor. Nora Ephron: a columnist, humorist, screenwriter and director, who wrote clever and incisive social and cultural commentary for Esquire and other publications beginning in the 1960s.
Rowland Evans: Evans co-founded the column Inside Report, the longest running syndicated political column in US history, in 1963 with Robert Novak, and was one of the first prominent journalists to join CNN. Clay Felker: with Milton Glaser in 1968 launched New York magazine, which he had edited when it was a supplement to the Herald Tribune, and helped invent what became the most widely imitated style of magazine journalism in the late twentieth century and beyond. Dexter Filkins: a wartime reporter and author who writes for the New Yorker, Filkins won the Pulitzer Prize in 2009 along with several other New York Times journalists for reports from Pakistan and Afghanistan. Frances FitzGerald: a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who went to Saigon in 1966 and in 1972, published one of the most influential critiques of the war, Fire in the Lake: The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam. Thomas Friedman: a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, columnist and author, Friedman began writing his column on foreign affairs, economics and the environment for the New York Times in 1995. Joe Galloway: a respected United Press International foreign correspondent who first went to Vietnam in 1965; his recollections of one of the first major US battles in that war, for which he later won a Bronze Star for helping to rescue a soldier, won a National Magazine Award in 1991. Floyd Gibbons: a wartime correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, he became well known for his coverage of the 1916 Pancho Villa Expedition, and for his early appearance on NBC radio news.
Milton Glaser: an influential graphic designer who launched New York magazine with Clay Felker in 1968, thereby introducing perhaps the most widely imitated late-twentieth century style of magazine journalism. Pedro J. Gonzalez: a radio host who created a Spanish-language morning radio show in 1929, which he continued from Tijuana after his deportation from the US. Stephen Jay Gould: a paleontologist and Harvard professor, Gould was also a premier science journalist whose thoughtful, gracefully written, much-loved essays appeared in Natural History. Helen Gurley Brown: wrote the bestselling Sex and the Single Girl in 1962; edited Cosmopolitan magazine from 1965 to 1997, helping introduce a successful mix of sex and self help. Carol Guzy: a photojournalist who began working at the Washington Post in 1988 and has won the Pulitzer Prize four times for her work around the world. David Halberstam: a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author, known for his coverage of Vietnam, the civil rights movement, politics, and sports.
Henry Hampton: an award-winning filmmaker, Hampton made many films that dealt with social justice and inequality in America, including Eyes on the Prize about the civil-rights movement. Paul Harvey: his news and comment program on ABC Radio debuted in 1951 and lasted into the twenty-first century. Ben Hecht: a reporter, screenwriter, playwright and novelist, beginning in 1921 he expanded the focus of journalism with impressionistic portraits of non-extraordinary city life for the Chicago Daily News, collected in the book, One Thousand and One Afternoons in Chicago. Ernest Hemingway: a novelist and journalist, who reported on Europe during war and peace for a variety of North American publications. Nat Hentoff: who with his Village Voice column, which began in 1957, crusaded, even against some liberal orthodoxies, for civil liberties. Bob Herbert: who wrote a column for the New York Times from 1993 to 2011 that dealt with poverty, racism, the Iraq War, and politics. Michael Herr: who covered the Vietnam War with unprecedented rawness and cynicism for Esquire and wrote the book Dispatches, a partially fictionalized account of his experiences in Vietnam.
John Hersey: a journalist and novelist whose thoroughly reported and tightly written account of the consequences of the atomic bomb America dropped on Hiroshima filled an entire issue of the New Yorker in 1946 and became one of the most read books in America in the second half of the twentieth century. Seymour Hersh: a long-time investigative reporter, specializing is national security issues, who earned acclaim for his Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the massacre by American soldiers at My Lai in Vietnam in 1968, as well as his 2004 reports about American mistreatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib.
Обвиняемый гражданин США арестован на 2 месяца до 29 мая на период следствия. Американцу по ст. Эван Гершкович родился в 1991 году в Нью-Йорке. Окончил Принстонскую среднюю школу и Боудин-колледж, получив степень бакалавра искусств.
Изучал философию и английский язык. Материалы посвящены американской политике и России.
100 лучших телеграм каналов про США
Журналисты также спросили у Дмитрия Пескова: не осложнит ли арест Гершковича работу российских корреспондентов за рубежом? В украинской тюрьме умер журналист, который рассказывал о преступлениях киевского режима Негатив, Политика, Украина, Общество, Новости, США, Журналисты, СМИ и пресса. репортер MSNBC и реакция прохожих: Они уже создали значительную задержку. Sputnik International is a global news agency keeping you updated on all the latest world news 24/7. Browse Sputnik for breaking news and top stories on politics, economy, social media and the most. Журналист из Америки Джексон Хинкл прилетел в Россию и записал ролик для своего YouTube-канала, в котором восхитился красотой Москвы. Get in-depth global news and analysis. Our coverage spans world politics, business, tech, culture and more. Subscribe for free trial.