Katya Adler
Katya Adler was born in London on May 3rd, 1972 and is the Journalist. At the age of 52, Katya Adler biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Michal Katya Adler (born 3 May 1972) is a British journalist.
Since 2014, she has been the BBC's Europe editor.
Early life
Adler was born in Hampstead, London, to German parents on May 3rd. She attended South Hampstead High School, which was free and fee-paying. At the University of Bristol, she studied German and Italian. She undertook a variety of work placements, including at Blue Danube Radio, Reuters, NBC, Turkey, and The Times' Rome offices during her studies, including at the University of Lima. Adler, a student, was president of the political party and founded its journal. She graduated in 1995. Denazification was one of her dissertation research's most popular topics.
Personal life
Adler is married and has three children. She speaks German, Spanish, Italian, French, French, and basic Arabic and Hebrew as well as English.
Career
Adler began working for The Times before heading to Vienna in August 1995 to work for the Mondial Congress, the organisator of International Congresses. She started working as a reporter for Austrian national public radio ORF in late 1995, reporting locally and then globally from Kosovo, Eastern Europe, and all over Southwest Asia and North Africa.
In 1998, Adler joined the BBC in Vienna, covering Austrian and Central European affairs. From 2000 to Berlin, she worked as a BBC World Service reporter reporting on European current affairs and commuting weekly to Berlin to serve as a news anchor for Deutsche Welle Television.
She covered stories including Pope John Paul II's death and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat in a Paris hospital from August 2003. Adler also wrote about the Madrid train bombings. In a 2019 interview, she confessed that she had lied about being able to speak Spanish in order to obtain the Madrid correspondent post. Adler learned the word by listening to Spanish political radio and Mexican soap operas.
From December 2006 to Libya, Adler, the BBC's Middle East reporter, based in Jerusalem, but reporting around the region from Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Libya. She appeared on HARDtalk as an occasional host or interviewer.
For BBC2, Adler has also performed a number of one-hour documentaries, including Mexico's Drug Wars. Stolen Babies, a film from Spain, was runner-up for an RTS award in 2012.
Gavin Hewitt was appointed as the BBC's Europe editor at the end of April 2014, replacing Gavin Hewitt. Her appointment was contested because her LinkedIn profile revealed that she had regularly facilitated conferences for a number of clients, one for the European Union. Andrew Bridgen and Philip Davies, among Conservative Party MPs, expressed skepticism, as shown by this article. "This close association between the BBC and the European Commission seriously undermines your journalist credibility and your ability to cover events in a more objective manner," Davies said. Adler had been working freelance for the BBC and a number of other broadcast companies at the time, and not the European Commission, not the UK presidency, and not the European Commission.
The BBC broadcast After Brexit: The War for Europe, in which Adler explored the growing challenges facing the European Union in the coming years, the BBC introduced a documentary called After Brexit: the Battle for Europe in early February 2017. Adler was one of the four presenters of Brexitcast, a BBC show on Brexit. As of December 2020, Brexit Newscast became a regular television broadcast fixture on BBC One in September 2019.
Adler was paid between £205,000-£209,999, putting her on the list of the highest-paid BBC news and current affairs workers as of 2019.