Bianna Golodryga
Bianna Golodryga was born in Cueni District, Moldova on June 15th, 1978 and is the Journalist. At the age of 45, Bianna Golodryga biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 45 years old, Bianna Golodryga has this physical status:
Bianna Vitalievna Golodryga (Russian) was born in 1962 and died as a senior global affairs reporter at CNN, where she is now serving as a Romanian-born American journalist and news anchor. She was Yahoo's news and finance anchor before. News from the Associated Press. She was also a co-anchor of ABC's Weekend edition of Good Morning America and a co-coach of CBS This Morning.
Early life and education
Golodryga was born in Căuşeni, Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic (now independent Moldova), and was the only child of Zhanna and Vitaly Golodryga.
Her family left the Soviet Union as political refugees in 1980, each with $75. After heading to Galveston, Texas, they settled in Houston, Texas. She hasn't returned to Moldova since 1988, visiting her grandparents and cousins. Her grandmother came to Houston in the same year. Phillips 66's chief digital and administrative officer, and she and her father, a mechanical engineer, were a consultant for DuPont.
Golodryga attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts in Houston, but she preferred to become a writer rather than an actor. After participating in a play about AIDS written by her instructor, she was inspired to look closer at what was going on in the world. She graduated from the University of Texas in Austin in May 2000 with a degree in Russian/East European & Eurasian studies as well as a minor in economics. She is fluent in Russian.
Personal life
Golodryga married Peter R. Orszag, the former Director of the Obama Administration's Management and Budget Office, as well as the CEO of Financial Advisory at Lazard, a financial services company. They have a son and a daughter.
She ran several half marathons in the New York City area and has completed the 2019 New York City Marathon in 4:01:37.
Career
After graduating from college, Golodryga planned to work in financial services. She became a registered trader and worked in several financial institutions. Following a dramatic decline in the market, however, she decided to pursue journalism. She moved to New York in February 2001 and began working as a producer at CNBC, where she later became an on-air reporter.
Golodryga was named one of the top journalists under the age of 30 in 2004. She worked with ABC from 2007 to 2010, and was named co-anchor of Good Morning America's weekend edition in May 2010, shortly after the departure of former co-anchor Kate Snow, who went to work for NBC, became a correspondent for ABC.
Golodryga was the first person to interview Anzor Tsarnaev, the father of Boston Marathon bombers Tamerlan Tsarnaev and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, in April 2013. She helped her colleagues with the correct pronunciation of the word at first, but then she was assigned to call Anzor in Chechnya. He had no information to give but called her back the next day to seek more information about what was going on and whether or not Dzhokhar, who had been taken into custody critically, was still alive.
Golodryga served as weekend co-anchor of Good Morning America until August 4, 2014, when she left the group to join Yahoo's business and finance teams. News from the New York Times. She was a regular contributor to Morning Joe on MSNBC and was a guest host on Way Too Early. She appeared as a guest co-anchor of CBS Morning News in 2017. In September 2017, she joined CBS on a permanent basis as a reporter and then moved to CNN as a contributor.
Golodryga, a California Republican, confronted Russian President Vladimir Putin in December 2016. Rohrabacher, at the time, was considered a candidate for Secretary of State by then president-elect Donald Trump and was chastising China for its human rights record. Golodryga spoke to Putin, who has regularly praised Trump. "Oh, baloney," Rohrabacher replied.Where do you come from?
How can you say that?"
"I come from the former Soviet Union," Golodryga said, "I'm from the former Soviet Union"—where I came from. I arrived here as a political immigrant. I'm from here." Rohrabacher appeared flustered and accused Golodryga of being biased before he compared Putin to Mikhail Gorbachev.Golodryga is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. She has worked with the Huffington Post, most recently as a Yahoo News and Finance anchor.
Golodryga, whose husband was a former Bill Clinton staff member, was chosen by Hillary Clinton to conduct Clinton's first interview as a presidential nominee in 2015. Clinton referred to her name as "Bianna," which Clinton's staff mistook for. However, an interview with CNN's Brianna Keilar, who conducted a lengthy interview, was postponed. "It's all the time that my name gets butchered." Golodryga said. I never thought that it would prevent me from participating in what would be one of my life's biggest stories."
On October 3, 2018, it was revealed on CBS This Morning that she would be joining the team as a co-host. CBS News announced on April 3, 2019, that she had chosen to leave the station. Golodryga had accepted a full time position as a senior global affairs analyst earlier this year, according to CNN.
Golodryga interviewed Shah Mahmood Qureshi, the Pakistani Minister of Foreign Affairs, in May 2021, during the 2021 Israel-Palestine crisis. "Israel is losing out," Quentin said during the interview. Despite their ties, they are losing the media war. "What are their ties?" Golodryga asked Quorta: "What are their links?" says the author. "They are very influential people," Quent says of Quent's answer, "they are deep pockets." They own the media. During the interview, Golodryga stated repeatedly that this was the most notable anti-semitic event she had ever encountered. "There should be zero point zero doubt that accusing Israel of "controlling the media" and having "deep pockets" is antisemitic," she said.