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Alt 04.08.2009, 22:10
KINGTND (Offline)
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Moderatorin Suzanne Malveaux

Suzanne M. Malveaux (pronounced /suːˈzɑːn mɑːlˈvoʊ/; born December 4, 1966), is an American television news reporter. She is currently the White House correspondent for CNN and primary substitute host on CNNs "The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer". She joined CNN in 2002.

In August 2007, Malveaux was the moderator of the 31st annual convention of the National Association of Black Journalists [1] and has served on various panels at previous conventions of the NABJ, of which she is a member. [2]

Personal

Malveaux, whose first name is pronounced Sue-zahn [3], was born in Lansing, Michigan into a New Orleans-based family of African, Spanish, and French descent. Her father is of Louisiana French Creole descent [4].

Her father, Floyd J. Malveaux, is a prominent doctor who became the dean of the College of Medicine at Howard University; he is now the executive director of the Merck Childhood Asthma Network and a founder of Howard University's National Human Genome Center.[1] [5] [6]. Her mother, the former Myrna Maria Ruiz, is a retired schoolteacher. The economist Julianne Malveaux is a distant cousin [7].

She has three siblings:

* Suzette M. Malveaux (twin with Suzanne and an associate professor at the Columbus School of Law, Catholic University of America)[8]
* Courtney M. Malveaux (an assistant attorney general for the state of Virginia and chairman of the Richmond Republican Committee)[9][10]
* Gregory F. Malveaux (an associate professor of English at Montgomery College).[11]

Her family lived in New Orleans and later Howard County, Maryland, and she attended Centennial High School in Ellicott City, Maryland.

Malveaux graduated cum laude from Harvard University with a degree in sociology; a classmate was future CNN reporter Soledad O'Brien.[12] She graduated with a master's degree in broadcasting from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1991.

Career

Malveaux's first television job was with New England Cable News as a general assignment reporter in Boston, Massachusetts, during 1993–1996.[citation needed] She then moved back to Washington, D.C., and worked for NBC affiliate WRC-TV during 1996–1999 as a self-described "rock-and-roll" reporter reporting local and crime news.[citation needed]

In 1999 she joined NBC Network News, three years in Washington, including as a Pentagon correspondent, and three years in Chicago.[citation needed] She covered national stories such as Bill Clinton's impeachment, Elián González, the Kosovo War, the 2000 Presidential Election, the 9/11 attacks, and the 2001 war in Afghanistan.[citation needed]

Since May 2002, she has been a White House correspondent for CNN, based at their Washington, D.C. bureau. She covered the 2008 presidential election cycle from the campaign trail as a member of the network's political team. In advance of the Democratic and Republican national conventions, Malveaux anchored a 90-minute documentary on then-Senator Barack Obama as part of a two-part series on the 2008 general election presidential candidates. Additionally, she served as a panelist questioning the candidates in the Democratic presidential primary debate in South Carolina sponsored by CNN and the Congressional Black Caucus Institute in January 2008. She also played a key role in CNN's 2004 election coverage and its Emmy-winning 2006 election coverage. Most recently, she has augmented her White House reporting by serving as the primary substitute anchor for The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer, a three-hour-long program that airs every weekday on CNN.

Ms. Malveaux recently started tweeting on Twitter, the popular microblogging platform. She has posted tweets from all over the world as she covered President Obama's trips to Europe and throughout Latin America. Her posts can be followed on Twitter at Suzanne Malveaux (SuzanneMalveaux) on Twitter.

Role as a black journalist

As Malveaux said in an interview about her position as an African American journalist “When I think of my grandparents and I think about the time of segregation, I think what would they think of their grandchild sitting in that seat, that CNN seat in that small little [White House] briefing room? There [are] only about 20 seats and I’m sitting in one of them. It’s so important that I feel like I’m representing people who couldn’t even imagine that we could be in that kind of position.” [14]

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Alt 04.08.2009, 22:12
KINGTND (Offline)
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Standard Suzanne Malveaux - Capital File Host White House Correspondents Dinner After Party - May 9, 2009 2y

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