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'''Laura Lynch''' is a Canadian television and radio journalist for [[CBC News]],<ref>"Journalists recount thrilling career moments". ''[[Winnipeg Free Press]]'', November 7, 2015.</ref> who hosts [[CBC Radio]]’s weekly show ''[[What on Earth (Canadian radio show)|What on Earth]]''. Previously, she was a frequent guest host of CBC Radio's daily morning news program ''[[The Current (radio show)|The Current]]''.<ref name=galloway>"Matt Galloway set to take over as host of CBC Radio’s The Current". ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'', October 25, 2019.</ref>
'''Laura Lynch''' is a Canadian television and radio journalist for [[CBC News]],<ref>"Journalists recount thrilling career moments". ''[[Winnipeg Free Press]]'', November 7, 2015.</ref> who hosts [[CBC Radio]]’s weekly show ''[[What on Earth (Canadian radio show)|What on Earth]]''. Previously, she was a frequent guest host of CBC Radio's daily morning news program ''[[The Current (radio show)|The Current]]''.<ref name=galloway>"Matt Galloway set to take over as host of CBC Radio’s The Current". ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'', October 25, 2019.</ref>


After studying law at the [[University of Victoria]] and journalism at [[Carleton University]], she began her career with the CBC as a legal affairs reporter covering stories in the [[Department of Justice (Canada)|Department of Justice]] and the [[Supreme Court of Canada]].<ref name=quinn>Jennifer Quinn, "CBC reporter wins fellowship ; Goodman prize pays for a year at Harvard". ''[[Toronto Star]]'', May 25, 1999.</ref> She won the [[Law Society of British Columbia]]'s award for Excellence in Legal Journalism,<ref>"CBC Radio News Reporters, Monday Magazine writer named winners of Law Society's journalism awards". ''[[Canada NewsWire]]'', November 22, 1999.</ref> and was nominated for a [[Jack Webster Award]], for her reporting on the Supreme Court case ''[[R v O'Connor]]''.<ref>"3 Sun reporters in finals for Webster awards". ''[[Vancouver Sun]]'', September 1, 1999.</ref> She received the Martin Wise Goodman Nieman Fellowship the same year, and spent a year studying [[human rights]] at [[Harvard University]].<ref name=quinn/>
After studying law at the [[University of Victoria]] and journalism at [[Carleton University]], she began her career with the CBC as a legal affairs reporter covering stories in the [[Department of Justice (Canada)|Department of Justice]] and the [[Supreme Court of Canada]].<ref name=quinn>Jennifer Quinn, "CBC reporter wins fellowship; Goodman prize pays for a year at Harvard". ''[[Toronto Star]]'', May 25, 1999.</ref> She won the [[Law Society of British Columbia]]'s award for Excellence in Legal Journalism,<ref>"CBC Radio News Reporters, Monday Magazine writer named winners of Law Society's journalism awards". ''[[Canada NewsWire]]'', November 22, 1999.</ref> and was nominated for a [[Jack Webster Award]], for her reporting on the Supreme Court case ''[[R v O'Connor]]''.<ref>"3 Sun reporters in finals for Webster awards". ''[[Vancouver Sun]]'', September 1, 1999.</ref> She received the Martin Wise Goodman Nieman Fellowship the same year, and spent a year studying [[human rights]] at [[Harvard University]].<ref name=quinn/>


She was subsequently a foreign correspondent based in Washington, D.C., and London, as well as travelling to report from various international locations including [[Afghanistan]], [[Pakistan]], Israel, [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Zimbabwe]], and [[Syria]], before returning to Canada as a national affairs reporter in [[Vancouver]].
She was subsequently a foreign correspondent based in Washington, D.C., and London, as well as travelling to report from various international locations including [[Afghanistan]], [[Pakistan]], Israel, [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Zimbabwe]], and [[Syria]], before returning to Canada as a national affairs reporter in [[Vancouver]].
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[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Jack Webster award recipients]]
[[Category:Jack Webster award recipients]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian women]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian women journalists]]
[[Category:Canadian women radio hosts]]
[[Category:Canadian women radio hosts]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian women journalists]]





Latest revision as of 02:39, 9 November 2024

Laura Lynch is a Canadian television and radio journalist for CBC News,[1] who hosts CBC Radio’s weekly show What on Earth. Previously, she was a frequent guest host of CBC Radio's daily morning news program The Current.[2]

After studying law at the University of Victoria and journalism at Carleton University, she began her career with the CBC as a legal affairs reporter covering stories in the Department of Justice and the Supreme Court of Canada.[3] She won the Law Society of British Columbia's award for Excellence in Legal Journalism,[4] and was nominated for a Jack Webster Award, for her reporting on the Supreme Court case R v O'Connor.[5] She received the Martin Wise Goodman Nieman Fellowship the same year, and spent a year studying human rights at Harvard University.[3]

She was subsequently a foreign correspondent based in Washington, D.C., and London, as well as travelling to report from various international locations including Afghanistan, Pakistan, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Zimbabwe, and Syria, before returning to Canada as a national affairs reporter in Vancouver.

In addition to her appearances as a guest host of The Current, she was the program's regular interim host in 2019, between the retirement of Anna Maria Tremonti and the debut of new host Matt Galloway in January 2020.[2] She is currently the host of What on Earth, a weekly CBC Radio show on environmental issues.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Journalists recount thrilling career moments". Winnipeg Free Press, November 7, 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Matt Galloway set to take over as host of CBC Radio’s The Current". The Globe and Mail, October 25, 2019.
  3. ^ a b Jennifer Quinn, "CBC reporter wins fellowship; Goodman prize pays for a year at Harvard". Toronto Star, May 25, 1999.
  4. ^ "CBC Radio News Reporters, Monday Magazine writer named winners of Law Society's journalism awards". Canada NewsWire, November 22, 1999.
  5. ^ "3 Sun reporters in finals for Webster awards". Vancouver Sun, September 1, 1999.