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| name = Mariana Atencio
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| birth_place = [[Caracas]], [[Venezuela]]
| birth_place = [[Caracas]], [[Venezuela]]
| birth_date = April 2, 1984
| birth_date = April 2, 1984
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'''Mariana Atencio''' (born April 2, 1984) is a bilingual journalist working for [[MSNBC]] and [[NBC News]]. Atencio is a native of Venezuela and holds a master's degree from the [[Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism]]. She has also worked as an [[news presenter|anchor]] for [[Fusion TV]] and [[Univision]].
'''Mariana Atencio''' (born April 2, 1984) is a Peabody Award-winning bilingual journalist, author and public speaker. She is currently a national correspondent for [[MSNBC]] and [[NBC News]]. Previously, she was an anchor and correspondent for Univision News and the millennial start-up FUSION.


She was named one of AdWeeks’s Young Influentials 40 under 40 in November 2019<ref>[https://www.adweek.com/brand-marketing/29-savvy-stars-changing-the-way-we-think-about-branding/#/ 29 Savvy Stars Changing the Way We Think About Branding]</ref>.
==Early life and education==
Atencio grew up in Caracas, Venezuela and received her undergraduate degree from the [[Universidad Católica Andrés Bello]] in Caracas.<ref name="univision bio"/> In 2008 she attended [[Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism]] on a merit scholarship and graduated with a master's degree.<ref name="univision bio">{{cite web|url=http://www.univision.com/noticias/univision-investiga/mariana-atencio|title=Mariana Atencio|publisher=Univision|date=27 September 2012}}</ref><ref name="People mag">{{Cite news|url=http://www.peopleenespanol.com/article/periodista-mariana-atencio-comienza-nuevo-capitulo-boda-casa-Miami-feliz-univision|title=La periodista Mariana Atencio comienza un nuevo capítulo en su vida (FOTOS)|newspaper=PeopleenEspanol.com|access-date=2016-11-19}}</ref> She has also studied at [[Georgetown University]], the [[London School of Economics]], and the [[University of California, Los Angeles]] (UCLA).<ref name="univision bio"/>


== Early life and education ==
==Career==
Mariana del Carmen Atencio Cervoni was born in [[Caracas]], [[Venezuela]] to Alvaro Atencio and Diana Cervoni. She is the oldest of three children.
Atencio started her journalism career in 2009 at Globovision in New York City.and as an anchor for the [[V-me|Vme-TV]] network.<ref name="univision bio"/><ref name="univision bio"/> In 2012, she began working as an investigative reporter at [[Univision]].<ref name="univision bio"/> Atencio was one of five reporters who worked on the [[Peabody Award]] winning documentary Rapido y Furioso (Fast & Furious) for which they received an [[Investigative Reporters and Editors]] Award.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://abcnews.go.com/ABC_Univision/Politics/peabody-award-winning-univision-investigation-fast-furious/story?id=18840809#.UdTpceArjTQ |title=Behind the Peabody Award-Winning Univision Investigation of 'Fast and Furious" - ABC News |publisher=Abcnews.go.com |date=2013-03-30 |accessdate=2013-09-02}}</ref><ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite web|url=https://www.ire.org/publications/ire-journal/search-journal-archives/2206/ |format=PDF |title=IRE Award Winners: Spring 2013 |publisher=Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. |accessdate=8 January 2018}}</ref> In 2014, Atencio received a [[Gracie Award]] from the [[Alliance for Women in Media]] for her work on the Univision documentary, "Pressured: Freedom of the Press."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://wearefusion.tumblr.com/post/78142596070/fusions-mariana-atencio-recognized-with-gracie|title=Fusion’s Mariana Atencio Recognized with Gracie Award|publisher=Fusion|date=28 February 2014}}</ref>


Atencio has a Bachelor's degree in Communications from the [[Andrés Bello Catholic University|Universidad Católica Andrés Bello]]<ref>[https://www.univision.com/noticias/univision-investiga/mariana-atencio Mariana Atencio. La periodista Mariana Atencio es miembro del equipo de Univision Investiga del departamento de Noticias de la Cadena Univision]</ref>. As a junior in college, she participated in the 2007 wave of pro-democracy student protests after former Venezuelan president [[Hugo Chávez]] [[2007 Venezuelan RCTV protests|shut down RCTV]], the country’s oldest television network. As a student activist, Atencio would organize during classes. She and her fellow students were tear-gassed and water cannons were opened on them. Atencio credits the protests as an influence to become a journalist<ref>[https://peopleenespanol.com/chica/mariana-atencio-talks-new-book/ Journalist Mariana Atencio Details Personal Tragedy and Career Struggles in Inspirational New Memoir]</ref>.
Atencio anchored 'The Morning Show' on [[Fusion TV]] channel until its cancellation in 2014.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.mediamoves.com/2014/12/fusion-live-cancelled-javier-guzman-leaves-network.html|title="Fusion Live" cancelled, Javier Guzmán leaves network|date=2014-12-12|newspaper=Media Moves|language=en-US|access-date=2016-12-27}}</ref> She was the reporter for Fusion's National Headliner Award-winning segment, "Unearthing the Tomb."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://wearefusion.tumblr.com/post/142460895194/fusion-recognized-with-national-headliner-award|title=FUSION Recognized with National Headliner Award}}</ref> Her report entitled, “Mexico Massacres,” received recognition from The National Association of Hispanic Journalists.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://wearefusion.tumblr.com/post/129569362744/fusion-recognized-with-3-nahj-journalism-awards/embed|title=FUSION Recognized with 3 NAHJ Journalism Awards}}</ref>


In 2008, she emigrated to the [[United States]] after being awarded the Castagno full-merit scholarship from [[Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism]].
Atencio covered Latino voters for [[MSNBC]] during the 2016 presidential campaign and interviewed Vice-Presidential candidate Tim Kaine.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://ru-clip.com/video/goU08X1O1dM/puerto-rican-families-in-florida-could-swing-the-election-msnbc.html|title=Puerto Rican Families In Florida Could Swing The Election}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlW1S10slFo|title=Tim Kaine: Latinos Will Be A Powerful Voice In This Election}}</ref> In 2017, Atencio worked for NBC on reporting for [[Hurricane Maria]] in Puerto Rico.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/video/outside-san-juan-puerto-ricans-plea-for-supplies-1065214019728|title=Outside San Juan, Puerto Ricans plea for supplies (video)|date=7 October 2017}}</ref> In 2019 Atencio, was part of a 77-member team recognized with [[The Hillman Prize]] from the Sidney Hillman Foundation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Torn Apart |url=http://hillmanfoundation.org/hillman-prizes/2019-hillman-prize-broadcast-journalism |website=Hillman Foundation |language=en |date=16 April 2019}}</ref>


==Personal life==
== Career ==
In 2009, Atencio started her journalism career as a reporter at Impremedia's [[El Diario La Prensa]] in New York City, the oldest Hispanic newspaper in the US<ref>[https://www.univision.com/noticias/univision-investiga/mariana-atencio Mariana Atencio. La periodista Mariana Atencio es miembro del equipo de Univision Investiga del departamento de Noticias de la Cadena Univision]</ref>. From 2010-2011, she reported and anchored for VME-TV, the only Hispanic public service television station in the [[United States]]<ref>[https://diversitymbamagazine.com/diversity-inclusion/hispanic-latino/award-winning-journalist-mariana-atencio/ Award Winning Journalist Mariana Atencio]</ref>.
Atencio married real estate entrepreneur, Jose Antonio Torbay, in 2015.<ref name="People mag"/>


Atencio began working as a guest anchor and correspondent for Univision News in 2011. She covered the 2012 presidential election for the network’s morning program [[Despierta América]] and its flagship evening newscast [[Noticiero Univision]]<ref>[http://huelladigital.univisionnoticias.com/impacto-latino/mariana-atencio/index9ed2.html?lang=en Mariana Atencio]</ref>.
==Bibliography==
*{{cite book |last1=Atencio |first1=Mariana |title=Perfectly You: Embracing the Power of Being Real |date=2019 |publisher=W Publishing Group |isbn=9780785228387 |oclc=1080997518 |language=English}}


She also served as a reporter for the network’s Investigative Unit. In 2013 she was part of a five-person reporting team that won Univision's first Peabody Award for "Fast and Furious: Arming the Enemy," an hour-long investigation on the gun-walking scandal known as [[ATF gunwalking scandal|Operation Fast and Furious]]<ref>[https://abcnews.go.com/ABC_Univision/Politics/peabody-award-winning-univision-investigation-fast-furious/story?id=18840809 Inside the Award-Winning "Fast and Furious" Investigation]</ref>.
==References==

{{Reflist|30em}}
Atencio was awarded a [[Gracie Award]] for her lead reporting on “PRESSionados,” a one-hour special on the state of press freedom in Latin America that aired in December 2013 on Univision and its digital platforms<ref>[https://elpais.com/sociedad/2013/12/14/actualidad/1387034602_968736.html En algunos países de América Latina no hay libertad de prensa]</ref>.

In 2013, Atencio joined FUSION TV, an English-language cable news network created by [[ABC News]] and [[Univision]] for U.S millennials<ref>[https://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/fusion-unveils-morning-program-morning-show-124185 Fusion Unveils Morning Program, 'The Morning Show']</ref>.

Atencio was a member of the anchor team for the network’s [[The Morning Show (American TV series)|The Morning Show]], a two-hour program featuring a mix of hard news, feature stories and live interviews<ref>[https://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/fusion-unveils-morning-program-morning-show-124185 Fusion Unveils Morning Program, 'The Morning Show']</ref>.

She also served as a field correspondent. Atencio led the network’s on-the-ground coverage of the 2014 protests in [[Venezuela]] amid growing violence and scarcity, where she also contributed to [[ABC News]]<ref>[https://abcnews.go.com/International/video/venezuelan-opposition-leader-leopoldo-lopezs-arrest-intensifies-protests-22589920 Venezuelan Opposition Leader's Arrest Intensifies Protests]</ref><ref>[https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fusion-venezuela-abc-news-ukraine_n_4848861 Fusion CEO Says Network’s Partnerships Shone During International Coverage]</ref>. She covered other notable stories such as the [[shooting of Michael Brown]] in Ferguson, [[2014 Hong Kong protests|the Umbrella Revolution]] in Hong Kong and the [[2014 Iguala mass kidnapping]], where 43 students went missing in Mexico<ref>[https://wearefusion.tumblr.com/post/129569362744/fusion-recognized-with-3-nahj-journalism-awards/embed FUSION Recognized with 3 NAHJ Journalism Awards]</ref>.

In 2015, she was a reporter in [[McAllen, Texas]] for ABC News’ virtual town hall with [[Pope Francis]] ahead of his first visit to the United States<ref>[https://todayscatholic.org/pope-holds-virtual-town-hall-with-abc-and-catholics-in-3-cities/ Pope holds 'virtual town hall' with ABC and Catholics in 3 cities]</ref>. She interacted with Pope Francis and translated on live television for recent immigrants who wanted to ask the pope questions<ref>[https://www.emmys.com/news/mix/passion-and-purpose Passion and Purpose]</ref>.

In March 2016, she was part of the anchor-team for Univision and The Washington Post’s debate between Democratic candidates [[Hillary Clinton]] and [[Bernie Sanders]]<ref>[https://www.univision.com/noticias/destino-2016/univision-noticias-un-menu-digital-para-seguir-el-debate-democrata-de-miami Univision Noticias: un menú digital para seguir el debate demócrata de Miami]</ref>.

Atencio made the crossover from Spanish to English-language network news in September 2016 when she became a correspondent for [[MSNBC]] and [[NBC]] based in [[Miami]]. She is currently the only Latina correspondent on the cable network<ref>[https://www.forbes.com/sites/viviannunez/2019/05/31/mariana-atencios-next-career-step-is-a-book-that-challenges-latinas-to-live-their-full-potential/#362df8691982 Mariana Atencio's Next Career Step Is A Book That Challenges Latinas To Live Their Full Potential]</ref>.

As a correspondent, Atencio specializes in covering immigration and doing live on-air translations from Spanish<ref>[https://www.naludamagazine.com/mariana-atencio-interview/ Interview with Award Winning TV Personality on Diversity & Activism Mariana Atencio]</ref>. She has reported on notable stories such as [[Central American migrant caravans]], the child separation crisis at the border and the ICE raids across several Mississippi chicken plants that led to the arrest of 680 undocumented immigrants.

Atencio’s live interviews with migrant mothers in Reynosa, Mexico during the Trump administration’s family separation policy was nominated for a [[Emmy Award]]<ref>[http://cdn.emmyonline.org/news-doc-40th-emmys-nominations-v03.pdf NOMINEES FOR THE 40th ANNUAL
NEWS & DOCUMENTARY EMMY® AWARDS
ANNOUNCED]</ref>.

She has also focused on coverage of U.S. Latinos. During the 2020 presidential race, the 2018 midterms and the 2016 presidential campaign, she reported on Hispanic voters across the country<ref>[https://www.msnbc.com/hallie-jackson/watch/suburban-detroit-voters-speak-on-key-election-issues-1363180611664 Suburban Detroit voters speak on key election issues]</ref>. In 2019, she was part of a team of NBC and MSNBC reporters, known as “Road Warriors,” that were awarded the First Amendment Clarity Award for their coverage of the 2018 midterm elections<ref>[http://www.firstamendmentawards.org/first-amendment-clarity-award/ First Amendment Clarity Award]</ref>.

[[National Association of Hispanic Journalists]] recognized her with the 2019 Presidential Award<ref>[https://www.adweek.com/tvnewser/fox-news-trey-yingst-and-nbc-news-mariana-atencio-make-adweeks-young-influentials-list-for-2019/421451/ Fox News’ Trey Yingst, and NBC News’ Mariana Atencio Make Adweek’s Young Influentials List for 2019]</ref>. She was also awarded Columbia’s First Decade Award<ref>[https://journalism.columbia.edu/alumni-winners-2019 Columbia Journalism Names Winners of 2019 Alumni Awards]</ref>.

== Personal life ==
Atencio married Jose Torbay, a Venezuelan tech and real estate entrepreneur in 2015<ref>[https://peopleenespanol.com/article/periodista-mariana-atencio-comienza-nuevo-capitulo-boda-casa-miami-feliz-univision/ La periodista Mariana Atencio comienza un nuevo capítulo en su vida (FOTOS)]</ref>.

In 2014, Graciela was involved in a car accident in New York City. After multiple surgeries, she was able to regain her ability to walk. Mariana and her sister went on the air with the story to promote awareness for kids with disabilities<ref>[https://www.univision.com/especiales/teleton-usa/la-familia-de-mariana-atencio-vive-la-discapacidad-de-cerca-video La familia de Mariana Atencio vive la "discapacidad" de cerca]</ref>.

Atencio’s father passed away in February 2018 due to complications from pneumonia after contracting the flu. She chronicled his health crisis in the hospital in [[Caracas]] and the lack of basic medical supplies in [[Venezuela]] as a result of the humanitarian crisis<ref>[https://www.nbcnews.com/specials/venezuelas-health-crisis In the chaos of Venezuela, a daughter fights for her father’s life]</ref><ref>[https://people.com/chica/mariana-atencios-father-dies-in-venezuelan-hospital-during-heathcare-crisis/ MSNBC Journalist Mourns Father's Death and Sheds Light on Humanitarian Crisis in Venezuela]</ref>.

After her father’s death, Mariana returned to Venezuela in April 2018 and partnered with the NGO Comparte por Una Vida to donate 1,000 meal supplements for children at the JM de Los Rios Children’s Hospital in Caracas<ref>[https://thehedonistmagazine.com/2019/08/05/mariana-atencio-perfectly-you-embracing-the-power-of-being-real/ Mariana Atencio | Perfectly You: Embracing The Power Of Being Real]</ref>.

== Speaking ==
Atencio is a two-time speaker at Tedx University of Nevada<ref>[https://tedxuniversityofnevada.org/speakers/mariana-atencio/ Mariana Atencio]</ref>.

Her second Tedx talk “What Makes You Special” has been viewed more than 10.7 million times<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MY5SatbZMAo&t What makes you special? | Mariana Atencio | TEDxUniversityofNevada]</ref>.

== Book ==
*{{cite book |last1=Atencio |first1=Mariana |title=Perfectly You: Embracing the Power of Being Real |date=2019 |publisher=W Publishing Group |isbn=9780785228387 |oclc=1080997518 |language=English}} The book is self-help and part autobiography.

== References ==
{{reflist}}

== External links ==
* [http://www.golikemariana.com/ Oficial Website]
*{{Instagram|marianaatencio}}
*{{Twitter|marianaatencio}}
*{{Facebook|marianaatencio}}


{{authority control}}
{{authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Atencio, Mariana}}
[[Category:1984 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:MSNBC people]]
[[Category:MSNBC people]]

Revision as of 01:58, 23 November 2019

Mariana Atencio
File:Atencio Mariana.jpg
BornApril 2, 1984
NationalityVenezuelan-American
EducationColumbia University Graduate School of Journalism (MA)
Universidad Católica Andrés Bello, Caracas (BA)
OccupationAnchor/Correspondent
EmployerNBC News & MSNBC (2016-present)
SpouseJosé Antonio Torbay
AwardsPeabody Award, Investigative Reporters and Editors Award, Gracie Award

Mariana Atencio (born April 2, 1984) is a Peabody Award-winning bilingual journalist, author and public speaker. She is currently a national correspondent for MSNBC and NBC News. Previously, she was an anchor and correspondent for Univision News and the millennial start-up FUSION.

She was named one of AdWeeks’s Young Influentials 40 under 40 in November 2019[1].

Early life and education

Mariana del Carmen Atencio Cervoni was born in Caracas, Venezuela to Alvaro Atencio and Diana Cervoni. She is the oldest of three children.

Atencio has a Bachelor's degree in Communications from the Universidad Católica Andrés Bello[2]. As a junior in college, she participated in the 2007 wave of pro-democracy student protests after former Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez shut down RCTV, the country’s oldest television network. As a student activist, Atencio would organize during classes. She and her fellow students were tear-gassed and water cannons were opened on them. Atencio credits the protests as an influence to become a journalist[3].

In 2008, she emigrated to the United States after being awarded the Castagno full-merit scholarship from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

Career

In 2009, Atencio started her journalism career as a reporter at Impremedia's El Diario La Prensa in New York City, the oldest Hispanic newspaper in the US[4]. From 2010-2011, she reported and anchored for VME-TV, the only Hispanic public service television station in the United States[5].

Atencio began working as a guest anchor and correspondent for Univision News in 2011. She covered the 2012 presidential election for the network’s morning program Despierta América and its flagship evening newscast Noticiero Univision[6].

She also served as a reporter for the network’s Investigative Unit. In 2013 she was part of a five-person reporting team that won Univision's first Peabody Award for "Fast and Furious: Arming the Enemy," an hour-long investigation on the gun-walking scandal known as Operation Fast and Furious[7].

Atencio was awarded a Gracie Award for her lead reporting on “PRESSionados,” a one-hour special on the state of press freedom in Latin America that aired in December 2013 on Univision and its digital platforms[8].

In 2013, Atencio joined FUSION TV, an English-language cable news network created by ABC News and Univision for U.S millennials[9].

Atencio was a member of the anchor team for the network’s The Morning Show, a two-hour program featuring a mix of hard news, feature stories and live interviews[10].

She also served as a field correspondent. Atencio led the network’s on-the-ground coverage of the 2014 protests in Venezuela amid growing violence and scarcity, where she also contributed to ABC News[11][12]. She covered other notable stories such as the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, the Umbrella Revolution in Hong Kong and the 2014 Iguala mass kidnapping, where 43 students went missing in Mexico[13].

In 2015, she was a reporter in McAllen, Texas for ABC News’ virtual town hall with Pope Francis ahead of his first visit to the United States[14]. She interacted with Pope Francis and translated on live television for recent immigrants who wanted to ask the pope questions[15].

In March 2016, she was part of the anchor-team for Univision and The Washington Post’s debate between Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders[16].

Atencio made the crossover from Spanish to English-language network news in September 2016 when she became a correspondent for MSNBC and NBC based in Miami. She is currently the only Latina correspondent on the cable network[17].

As a correspondent, Atencio specializes in covering immigration and doing live on-air translations from Spanish[18]. She has reported on notable stories such as Central American migrant caravans, the child separation crisis at the border and the ICE raids across several Mississippi chicken plants that led to the arrest of 680 undocumented immigrants.

Atencio’s live interviews with migrant mothers in Reynosa, Mexico during the Trump administration’s family separation policy was nominated for a Emmy Award[19].

She has also focused on coverage of U.S. Latinos. During the 2020 presidential race, the 2018 midterms and the 2016 presidential campaign, she reported on Hispanic voters across the country[20]. In 2019, she was part of a team of NBC and MSNBC reporters, known as “Road Warriors,” that were awarded the First Amendment Clarity Award for their coverage of the 2018 midterm elections[21].

National Association of Hispanic Journalists recognized her with the 2019 Presidential Award[22]. She was also awarded Columbia’s First Decade Award[23].

Personal life

Atencio married Jose Torbay, a Venezuelan tech and real estate entrepreneur in 2015[24].

In 2014, Graciela was involved in a car accident in New York City. After multiple surgeries, she was able to regain her ability to walk. Mariana and her sister went on the air with the story to promote awareness for kids with disabilities[25].

Atencio’s father passed away in February 2018 due to complications from pneumonia after contracting the flu. She chronicled his health crisis in the hospital in Caracas and the lack of basic medical supplies in Venezuela as a result of the humanitarian crisis[26][27].

After her father’s death, Mariana returned to Venezuela in April 2018 and partnered with the NGO Comparte por Una Vida to donate 1,000 meal supplements for children at the JM de Los Rios Children’s Hospital in Caracas[28].

Speaking

Atencio is a two-time speaker at Tedx University of Nevada[29].

Her second Tedx talk “What Makes You Special” has been viewed more than 10.7 million times[30].

Book

  • Atencio, Mariana (2019). Perfectly You: Embracing the Power of Being Real. W Publishing Group. ISBN 9780785228387. OCLC 1080997518. The book is self-help and part autobiography.

References

  1. ^ 29 Savvy Stars Changing the Way We Think About Branding
  2. ^ Mariana Atencio. La periodista Mariana Atencio es miembro del equipo de Univision Investiga del departamento de Noticias de la Cadena Univision
  3. ^ Journalist Mariana Atencio Details Personal Tragedy and Career Struggles in Inspirational New Memoir
  4. ^ Mariana Atencio. La periodista Mariana Atencio es miembro del equipo de Univision Investiga del departamento de Noticias de la Cadena Univision
  5. ^ Award Winning Journalist Mariana Atencio
  6. ^ Mariana Atencio
  7. ^ Inside the Award-Winning "Fast and Furious" Investigation
  8. ^ En algunos países de América Latina no hay libertad de prensa
  9. ^ Fusion Unveils Morning Program, 'The Morning Show'
  10. ^ Fusion Unveils Morning Program, 'The Morning Show'
  11. ^ Venezuelan Opposition Leader's Arrest Intensifies Protests
  12. ^ Fusion CEO Says Network’s Partnerships Shone During International Coverage
  13. ^ FUSION Recognized with 3 NAHJ Journalism Awards
  14. ^ Pope holds 'virtual town hall' with ABC and Catholics in 3 cities
  15. ^ Passion and Purpose
  16. ^ Univision Noticias: un menú digital para seguir el debate demócrata de Miami
  17. ^ Mariana Atencio's Next Career Step Is A Book That Challenges Latinas To Live Their Full Potential
  18. ^ Interview with Award Winning TV Personality on Diversity & Activism Mariana Atencio
  19. ^ [http://cdn.emmyonline.org/news-doc-40th-emmys-nominations-v03.pdf NOMINEES FOR THE 40th ANNUAL NEWS & DOCUMENTARY EMMY® AWARDS ANNOUNCED]
  20. ^ Suburban Detroit voters speak on key election issues
  21. ^ First Amendment Clarity Award
  22. ^ Fox News’ Trey Yingst, and NBC News’ Mariana Atencio Make Adweek’s Young Influentials List for 2019
  23. ^ Columbia Journalism Names Winners of 2019 Alumni Awards
  24. ^ La periodista Mariana Atencio comienza un nuevo capítulo en su vida (FOTOS)
  25. ^ La familia de Mariana Atencio vive la "discapacidad" de cerca
  26. ^ In the chaos of Venezuela, a daughter fights for her father’s life
  27. ^ MSNBC Journalist Mourns Father's Death and Sheds Light on Humanitarian Crisis in Venezuela
  28. ^ Mariana Atencio | Perfectly You: Embracing The Power Of Being Real
  29. ^ Mariana Atencio
  30. ^ What makes you special? | Mariana Atencio | TEDxUniversityofNevada