Holly Williams (journalist)
Holly Williams | |
---|---|
Born | 1978 (age 45–46) Australia |
Nationality | Australia |
Occupation | journalist |
Holly Williams (born 1978) is an Australian journalist.[1] Williams work as a journalist has won her sufficient respect from her colleagues that she herself has been the subject of other journalists' work.[2][3][4]
Education
Williams grew up in Tasmania and Victoria states in Australia and attended Hamilton College, a secondary school in Hamilton, Victoria.[1][5] She has a bachelor's degree in Asian studies from the Australian National University and master's degree in international relations from Deakin University. From 2007 to 2008, Williams was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University.[6]
Career
Williams was hired by CBS in October 2012.[4] She had previously worked for BBC News, CNN, and Sky News. She spent 12 years as a correspondent in China, and learned the Chinese language. She also studied the Turkish language, when she was a correspondent in Turkey.
Williams and colleague Andrew Portch received a 2012 Polk Award for coverage of Chen Guangcheng, a Chinese human rights activist.[7]
On 21 August 2015, the New York Times included Williams in an article about leading female war correspondents.[8] Elle magazine profiled Williams and several other women in a March 2016 article on female correspondents at CBS.[9]
On 12 March 2017, 60 Minutes broadcast two segments Williams produced centered around a series of interviews she conducted with Mohamedou Slahi.[10][11] Slahi was one of the few individuals held in Guantanamo that American officials explicitly acknowledge torturing. CBS News described the interviews as Slahi's first television interviews since his repatriation. Williams traveled to Mauritania for those interviews.[citation needed]
References
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Cydney Adams (16 March 2016). "Getting to know CBS News' Holly Williams". CBS News. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
I grew up in Australia. When I was little I lived in Tasmania, and then I went to high school in Victoria on the Australian mainland.
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Abigail Pesta (8 October 2012). "A Foot in Two Worlds: Holly Williams on Reporting—and Parenting—in War Zones". Daily Beast. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
Williams has spent her career in TV news, working as a producer and reporter for outlets including CNN and the BBC, mostly while based in China.
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Kellie Freeze (16 November 2016). "CBS News Foreign Correspondent Holly Williams Reveals Her Dream Interview Subject". ChannelGuideMag.com. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
Holly Williams travels throughout the Middle East covering the region for CBS News. And after she recently reported – between volleys of gunfire – on the Mosul offensive while embedded with Kurdish forces, we knew we needed to learn more about this stoic journalist.
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Alex Weprin (8 October 2012). "CBS News Adds Holly Williams To Correspondent Ranks". Ad Week. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
CBS News has brought on Holly Williams as a correspondent. Williams, who had been based in China and now lives in Turkey, is a veteran foreign correspondent, most recently for SKY News. She has been reporting freelance for CBS for a few months now.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Holly Williams". LinkedIn. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ "Holly Williams". CBS News. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
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Marc Santora (18 February 2013). "2 Reports on Chinese Rulers' Wealth Are Among 2012 Polk Award Winners". The New York Times. p. A13. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
The correspondent Holly Williams and the cameraman Andrew Portch were recognized for their coverage of the human rights activist Chen Guangcheng, who fled China after years of being under house arrest for his work exposing how some Chinese women were forced to have abortions to comply with the country's one-child policy.
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Luisita Lopez Torregrosa (21 August 2015). "The rise of the female TV war correspondent as global celebrity". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
Williams, a 38-year-old Australian correspondent who has covered China and East Asia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Gaza, Syria and Libya, says she has not noticed any sexism in the workplace but has been sexually harassed in the field. "There are parts of the world – I don't want to name them– where you're more likely to be sexually harassed and that's true whether you're a tourist or a local or a journalist."
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Mattie Khan (16 March 2016). "For the women war correspondents at CBS News, the office is a battlefield: There are no glass ceilings in a bunker". Elle. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
Returning to the field just weeks after giving birth in 2012, Williams ventured deep into the jungles of Burma to do a story on tribal soldiers. She pumped every few hours to make sure that she'd still be able to breastfeed when she returned home.
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"Ex-Gitmo detainee on torture: "They broke me"". 60 Minutes. 9 March 2017. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
Now, in his first television interview since being released last October, he tells his remarkable story on 60 Minutes.
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Olivia Beavers (12 March 2017). "Former Gitmo prisoner details U.S. interrogation tactics to '60 Minutes'". The Hill. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
'That shows the greatness of American people. Not- – my greatness because American people believe in justice. And they decided to give me a forum, to give me a voice,' Slahi told Holly Williams.
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- 21st-century Australian journalists
- Australian television journalists
- Australian women journalists
- Australian war correspondents
- Women war correspondents
- Australian expatriate journalists in the United States
- CBS News people
- Australian National University alumni
- Deakin University alumni
- People from Hamilton, Victoria
- 1978 births
- Living people