MURFREESBORO — Award-winning
broadcast journalist Soledad O’Brien will be the keynote speaker for MTSU’s
celebration of National Women’s History Month.
The former CNN anchor/reporter will deliver an address on
“Diversity: On TV, Behind the Scenes and In Our Lives” at 7 p.m. Wednesday,
March 26, in the Student Union Building ballroom.
O’Brien’s address is free and open to the public. However,
early arrival is recommended since seating is limited. A searchable campus map
with parking details is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap13-14.
O’Brien joined Al-Jazeera America last year as a special
correspondent. She and her production company, Starfish Media Group, provide
short-form segments to “America Tonight,” the network’s primetime current
affairs magazine program. Starfish also produces hourlong documentaries for the
network.
In 2013, O’Brien also joined the team of correspondents for
HBO’s “Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel.” Starfish develops scripts and long-form
programming concepts for HBO as well.
At CNN from 2003, O’Brien distinguished herself as co-anchor
of “American Morning” and “Starting Point with Soledad O’Brien” and with
reports on the London terrorism attacks of 2005, Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and
the Japan earthquake and tsunami in 2011.
O’Brien hosted and produced acclaimed documentary series on
diversity for CNN as well, including “Black in America,” “Latino in America”
and “Unwelcome: The Muslims Next Door,” which looked at the controversy
surrounding the construction of the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro.
She won an Emmy Award in 2011 for Outstanding Live Coverage
of a Current News Story — Long Form for “Crisis in Haiti,” a segment of CNN’s
“Anderson Cooper 360.”
In 2010, the National Association of Black Journalists named
O’Brien its Journalist of the Year, and the Edward R. Murrow Awards honored her
with the RTNDA/UNITY award for “Latino in America.”
With her husband, O’Brien created the Soledad O’Brien &
Brad Raymond Foundation to help young women gain the experiences, education and
resources to overcome barriers to success. The foundation provides several scholarships
for young girls across the country.
O’Brien’s visit is made possible by the MTSU Women’s History
Month Committee, the Black History Month Committee, the Center for Innovation
in Media, the Distinguished Lecture Fund, the Department of Electronic Media
Communication, the Intercultural and Diversity Affairs Center, the School of
Journalism, the June Anderson Center for Women and Nontraditional Students, the
African-American Studies Program, Delta Sigma Theta sorority, the student
organization Futuro, the Hispanic Heritage Month Committee, the University
Honors College, the College of Liberal Arts and the Department of Political
Science.
For more information, contact Barbara Scales, director of
MTSU’s June Anderson Center and chair of the Women’s History Month Committee,
at 615-898-2193 or barbara.scales@mtsu.edu.
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