Linzie Janis

Linzie Janis (born June 23, 1979) is an American television journalist.[1] Currently she is a correspondent at ABC News based in New York. She reports for all ABC News programs and platforms, including "Good Morning America," "World News Tonight with David Muir," "Nightline" and "20/20."

Television career

ABC News

Janis joined ABC News in 2013.[2] Since then, Janis has covered a number of breaking stories including: the 2016 bombings in New York and New Jersey; the attack on Orlando's Pulse Nightclub; the terror attack in Nice, France; the earthquake in Ecuador; the sinking of the El Faro cargo ship; and the manhunt for two escaped convicts from a maximum security prison in New York. Janis was the first television journalist to sit down with Hulk Hogan after his legal victory over Gawker Media. In 2013, she broke news about the New York AG's lawsuit against Trump University, interviewing alleged victims of fraud and Donald Trump.[3]

Janis has also reported on a number of social issues, from allegations of sexual assault on college campuses and controversial reproductive sciences to distracted driving. In 2012 and 2013, Janis contributed to the "Real Money" series finding creative solutions for saving American families money.

Bloomberg

Before joining ABC News, Janis anchored a daily business news broadcast on Bloomberg Television live from London.[4] Janis began covering financial markets and the global economy for Bloomberg in 2008 within weeks of the collapse of Lehman Brothers. She anchored the channel's breaking news coverage of the Japanese tsunami in 2011 and the deaths of Steve Jobs and Osama bin Laden.

CNN

Janis began her career at CNN International in London,[4] where she was a producer and reporter.

Education

Janis graduated with a degree in journalism from The University of the Arts London in London, England.

Personal life

Janis is a native of Schaumburg, Illinois. She is married to Good Morning America senior broadcast producer John Ferracane. They currently live in New York.

gollark: The main difference between real electricity and RF is just RF can be much more conveniently stored. Everything has nice buffers in it.
gollark: You can conveniently accumulate it in machine buffers, there are no voltages or AC vs DC or direction or resistance/impedance to worry about, no weird electromagnetic things going on, machines will just run at lower speed if you're lacking power (I experienced this while running my entire machine setup off a cheap 5RF/t solar panel on kukipack).
gollark: It's meant to be energy, but it *works* as if it's basically just a fluid.
gollark: Also RF-powered furnaces, because RF is just so weird itself.
gollark: They clearly look like cuboids.

References

  1. "Linzie Janis". people.com. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
  2. "ABC News Shifts Correspondents". www.adweek.com. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  3. News, ABC. "Linzie Janis News Stories and Articles". ABC News. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  4. "Linzie Janis". ABC News. 2015-09-01. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
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