Emma Crosby

Emma Catherine Crosby (born 5 June 1977) is a British television newsreader and journalist.

Emma Crosby
Born
Emma Catherine Crosby

(1977-06-05) 5 June 1977
OccupationNewsreader, television presenter
Notable credit(s)
Sky News
GMTV
5 News

Between 2003 and 2009, Crosby worked at Sky News, regularly co-presenting their breakfast programme Sunrise, along with various other programmes on the channel. In 2009, she joined ITV to co-present GMTV, which she hosted until the show was replaced by Daybreak the following year. She co-hosted GMTV with Andrew Castle or Ben Shephard two or three days a week in rotation with Kate Garraway. She joined Channel 5 in 2011, where she worked as their chief anchor on 5 News until 2015. She returned to Sky News in June 2017.

Early life

The only child of an English father who worked for Sainsbury's and a Scottish mother who worked for Marks & Spencer, Crosby was raised in Newbury, Berkshire. She studied drama, theatre, film and television at Leeds University, which included an internship at ITN, and undertook a postgraduate diploma in journalism at Cardiff University.

Broadcasting career

After graduation Crosby joined the BBC, becoming a producer on its rolling news channel, BBC News 24. Moving on from there, she worked for News Direct 97.3 and LBC before joining the Money Channel in 1999.[1]

In 2001, she joined CNBC Europe and became a presenter on European Market Wrap.[1] She spent some time in the United States while with the network and reported for its early morning show Squawk Box, where her mentor was Maria Bartiromo.[2]

Crosby joined Sky News in 2003, presenting the early morning news programme Sunrise.[3] She also regularly co-presented the channel's weekday Sky News Today, and some weekend broadcasts. She won a BAFTA for coverage of the 2007 Glasgow Airport terrorist attack.[4] She subsequently was also the channel's business correspondent and, in October 2007, became a London correspondent on the Fox Business Network.

In January 2009, Crosby moved to the long-running breakfast programme GMTV, replacing presenter Fiona Phillips, who left the channel for family reasons after 16 years.[5] On 1 August 2010, it was announced that Crosby was leaving GMTV with the impending launch of Daybreak, which replaced GMTV.[6] During her time with the show, she had co-presented alongside Ben Shephard, John Stapleton, Kate Garraway and Andrew Castle. She and Castle presented the final edition of GMTV on Friday 3 September 2010.

In October 2010, Crosby confirmed that she would present on CNN, before returning to BBC News.[7] She began presenting on the BBC News Channel's weekend evening slot on 23 October 2010, before moving on to afternoons the following week.[8] On 5 November 2010, she presented the BBC News at One and the afternoon schedule on the BBC News Channel when the BBC News schedule was disrupted due to a 48-hour National Union of Journalists strike.[9]

In February 2011, she was appointed a presenter of 5 News as a replacement for Natasha Kaplinsky,[10] covering the 18:30 edition (previously 19:00) from 14 February. At the time, she also presented the earlier 17:00 edition, following the departure of Matt Barbet on 26 July 2012. In 2012, she presented a travel report from Jordan on C5's travel series called Holiday Heaven on Earth.[11]

On 28 April 2014, Crosby began co-hosting a new programme called 5 News Tonight alongside 5 News returnee Matt Barbet and, on 5 November 2015, she announced she was leaving Channel 5 News to have a baby; her final show was on 6 November 2015.

As of 12 August 2016, Crosby is a stand-in breakfast newsreader (including the half hour programme, The Morning News at 06:30) on radio station LBC, sitting in for Lisa Aziz. She also returned to Sky News on a freelance basis in June 2017.

Personal life

Crosby lives in South London.[1][12] She is married to London-based professional photographer Jeremy Peters and they have two children.[13][14][15] In February 2017, Crosby revealed that she feared she was losing her overdue baby (Mary) because it had not moved for four hours.[16] She also owns a two-bedroom flat in Cape Town, South Africa, which has views of Table Mountain.[1] Crosby is an ambassador for the charities SOS Villages, RSPCA and Kicks Count.[17]

gollark: Fewer than 3 known to me.
gollark: It has very robust (fewer than 3 known sandbox escape exploits!) sandboxing, a convenient "entirely wipe system" keyboard shortcut, and filters code on startup to detect known virii and also programs I don't like.
gollark: Then they'll stop working.
gollark: PotatOS has the best antivirus I know of for CC, as a joke.
gollark: ComputerCraft "antimalware" tends to be bad.

References

  1. Goss, Alexandra (17 January 2010). "Fame & Fortune: Emma Crosby". Times Online. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  2. Sophie Morris (14 August 2006). "My Mentor: Emma Crosby On Maria Bartiromo". The Independent. Archived from the original on 8 October 2006. Retrieved 17 January 2008.
  3. CNBC Europe's Emma Crosby joins Sky News Archived 16 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Sky Press Office, 8 May 2003
  4. "Emma Crosby". London Speaker Bureau.
  5. Fiona Phillips quits GMTV The Guardian, 29 August 2008
  6. New ITV Breakfast show to be called Daybreak BBC News, 9 July 2010
  7. Fulton, Rick (7 October 2010). "I don't blame Christine Bleakley for taking my job, says former GMTV host Emma Crosby". Daily Record. Trinity Mirror. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
  8. "Emma Crosby Joins BBC News Channel". News on News. 4 November 2010. Archived from the original on 8 November 2010. Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  9. "BBC News staff strike over pensions". BBC News. 5 November 2010. Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  10. "Emma Crosby to front Five news". BBC News. 1 February 2011. Retrieved 1 February 2011.
  11. "Holiday Heaven on Earth".
  12. "Early starts are hard, bring on the botox!". Closer!. 13 April 2010. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  13. "72 Hours in Cape Town with Kids".
  14. "twitter".
  15. "twitter".
  16. "TV presenter Emma Crosby reveals late pregnancy terror that made her fear for her baby's life".
  17. "PerformingArtistes". Retrieved 28 April 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.