Nadia Bilchik

Nadia Bilchik is the president of Greater Impact Communications, a professional speaker, and Editorial Producer at CNN.

Nadia Bilchik
Born
South Africa
EducationUniversity of Cape Town
Alma materTrinity College London
OccupationJournalist

Biography

Bilchik was born to a Jewish family[1][2] in Johannesburg, South Africa.[3] She received a licentiate in Speech and Drama from Trinity College London and a degree in Drama and English from University of Cape Town.[4] In 1997, she moved to Atlanta.[3] She previously anchored and hosted feature programs for CNN International, CNN Airport Network, and MNet Television in South Africa. In early 2011, she interviewed Nelson Mandela's daughter and granddaughters about his life for CNN.[5] She currently hosts Weekend Morning Passport with T.J. Holmes.

As a speaker, she hosted the launch event for the Georgia Restaurant Association with speaker Ted Turner. She also hosted the opening of SOS Children's Villages in South Africa with Nelson Mandela.

Books

  • "The Little Book of Big Networking Ideas: A Guide to Expert Networking"
  • "Life After College (Hundreds of Heads Survival Guides"
  • "Small Changes: Big Impact"

Filmography

Notes

  1. "Celebrating Passover - Nadia Bilchik explains the meaning of the upcoming Jewish Passover holiday, and the significance of the Seder Dinner". CNN. August 15, 2017.
  2. "Jewish Atlanta Favorites 2017: Media Personality". Atlanta Jewish Times. June 21, 2017.
  3. Schneider, Moira (September 28, 2017). "CNN's Nadia Bilchik back to inspire". South African Jewish Report.
  4. "About Nadia Bilchik". Nadia Speaks. Retrieved April 25, 2011.
  5. "http://topics.cnn.com/topics/nelson_mandela". CNN. External link in |title= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  6. "https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0082158/". IMDB. External link in |title= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
gollark: That is not what I'm talking about and I'm not aware of that happening.
gollark: That's currently all I have to say about Android opensourceness. I might come up with more later.
gollark: Banking apps use this for """security""", mostly, as well as a bunch of other ones because they can.
gollark: Google has a thing called "SafetyNet" which allows apps to refuse to run on unlocked devices. You might think "well, surely you could just patch apps to not check, or make a fake SafetyNet always say yes". And this does work in some cases, but SafetyNet also uploads lots of data about your device to Google servers and has *them* run some proprietary ineffable checks on it and give a cryptographically signed attestation saying "yes, this is an Approved™ device" or "no, it is not", which the app's backend can check regardless of what your device does.
gollark: The situation is also slightly worse than *that*. Now, there is an open source Play Services reimplementation called microG. You can install this if you're running a custom system image, and it pretends to be (via signature spoofing, a feature which the LineageOS team refuse to add because of entirely false "security" concerns, but which is widely available in some custom ROMs anyway) Google Play Services. Cool and good™, yes? But no, not really. Because if your bootloader is unlocked, a bunch of apps won't work for *other* stupid reasons!
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