Journalism

Filipinas to Watch: Filipina-American Journalist Elaine Quijano to Moderate U.S. Vice Presidential Debate

Filipinas to Watch: Filipina-American Journalist Elaine Quijano to Moderate U.S. Vice Presidential Debate

CBSN anchor Elaine Quijano will moderate the Oct. 4 debate between U.S. Vice Presidential candidates Tim Kaine and Mike Pence at Longwood University in Farmville, VA.

The Chicago-based journalist becomes the first anchor of a digital news service and the FIRST Filipina woman to land a moderator slot in one of the national general-election debates organized by the Commission on Presidential Debates.

The forum will begin at 9 p.m. EST and run through 10:30 p.m. EST without commercial breaks. The debate will be broadcast live on major TV networks, including ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC. It will also be shown on C-SPAN, CNN, Fox News and MSNBC and online at ABC News, Buzzfeed News, CBS News,  PBS or Politico.

Journalist Janet Nepales (Global FWN 100™ '13) Wins Third Los Angeles Press Club Award

Journalist Janet Nepales (Global FWN 100™ '13) Wins Third Los Angeles Press Club Award

GMA News Correspondent Janet Nepales (Global FWN100™ ''13) won second place in the Los Angeles Press Club's 8th National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards in the Celebrity News-Print category for her Manila Bulletin article on Spotlight on Fil-Am Co-Director of Pixar's 'Inside Out.' This is her third Los Angeles Press Club award. News story from GMA News Online.

Filipina-American Journalist Cielo Buenaventura at the New York Times

Filipina-American Journalist Cielo Buenaventura at the New York Times

For Filipina-American journalist Cielo Buenaventura, getting into The New York Times and now holding the title of staff editor for the Culture section, was a combination of “audacious dreaming and dumb luck.”

In 1988 while on a scholarship at Ohio State University, one of her professors, a former Times editor, suggested that she try to apply to the paper after completing her master’s degree in public-affairs reporting and acquiring experience from small and medium-size papers . She said to herself, “Wow, the NYT was like Mount Everest, the mountain I’ll never be able to climb.” But he planted the idea in her head.

The Albay-born Cielo is one of two Filipinos at The Times newsroom. The other is restaurant critic Ligaya Mishan, whose mother is a Filipino immigrant.

“I learned on the job,” Cielo shared during a June 26 Kapihan forum organized by the Fil-Am Press Club of New York, where she was the guest speaker. “I didn’t have the Harvard, Yale and Ivy League credentials that other people had. But I found that The Times is a collegial place.”

News story courtesy of TheFilAm.net