Jasmine Lowson

Jasmine Lowson (born 1972) is a British actress, journalist and presenter of Singaporean descent.

Jasmine Lowson
Born
Jasmine Lowson

1972 (age 4748)[1]
Chatham, Kent, South East England, England, United Kingdom
NationalityEnglish
CitizenshipBritish
OccupationActress, Journalist and Presenter.
Years active1999-present
AgentMichael Joyce Management
Notable work
The Big Breakfast, Liquid News
Height1.7 m (5 ft 7 in)
Websitewww.jasminelowson.net

Early life

Lowson was born in Chatham, Kent, South East England to an English father and a Singaporean mother (née Yam Kheng Chan). She moved to Oxfordshire when she was a year old. When she was 16, her mother remarried and she moved to Bristol and currently resides in London. Her mother and step-father moved to Singapore, when her step-father got a professorship there.[2]

Career

Journalism career

Lowson has reported on Channel 4's The Big Breakfast prior to joining the BBC's Liquid News in September 2003. She became a presenter and reporter for ITN in June 2004; appearing on London Tonight on ITV London, the ITV News Channel and FYI Daily updates on ITV2. She continued to report for London Tonight until September 2012.

gollark: > About the latter half of the question, the inverse square root law would imply that the rules that generally put down magnetism are removed.What? No. It wouldn't imply that, because galactic orbits run on gravity and have nothing to do with electromagnetism.
gollark: Galaxy rotation just runs on regular gravity-driven orbits like, well, the solar system and whatnot, no? I don't know if your claim about the "inverse square root law" thing is accurate, but it doesn't seem to mean very much.
gollark: What do you mean "galaxies rotations are described using a inverse square root law" exactly?
gollark: Hmm, yes, I suppose stars count, so just "not important in large-scale interactions directly".
gollark: The strong nuclear force is much stronger than electromagnetism, but also not important in cosmology because it's short range.

References


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