Nieves Zuberbühler

Nieves Zuberbühler (born 1987) is an Argentine journalist, reporter, and producer.

Nieves Zuberbühler
Born1987
Buenos Aires, Argentina
EducationNorthlands School
Alma materAustral University
New York University
Occupationjournalist, reporter, producer
Spouse(s)Julio Mario Santo Domingo III (m.2015, sep. 2017)
Parent(s)Ignacio Zuberbühler
Marina Blaquier
RelativesConcepción Cochrane Blaquier (cousin)

Early life and education

Zuberbühler was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1987 to Ignacio Zuberbühler and Marina Blaquier.[1] Zuberbühler is a cousin of Concepción Cochrane Blaquier and Delfina Blaquier.[2][3] Her mother's family, the Blaquiers, are one of the wealthiest families in Argentina.[4] She was educated at Northlands School and attended undergraduate studies at Austral University.[1] She earned a master's degree in journalism and international relations at New York University.[2][5]

Career

Zuberbühler works as a journalist, news reporter, and producer. She was the recipient of a News & Documentary Emmy Award.[6][7] In March 2016, as an associate producer for 60 Minutes, she interviewed the last surviving prosecutor from the Nuremberg trials.[6] She began working for 60 Minutes in 2012 as an intern, when she proposed covering a story about young police informants in drug cases getting killed.[2] Prior to working at 60 Minutes she was an intern at CBS.[2]

Personal life

A member of the Santo Domingo family by marriage, she is the wife of Colombian-American billionaire Julio Mario Santo Domingo III.[8][9] Her husband is the brother of Tatiana Santo Domingo and son of Julio Mario Santo Domingo Jr.[10][11] They were married in a civil ceremony in 2015. They married in a Catholic ceremony at the Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Red Hook, Brooklyn in October 2016.[12][13] In 2017 she and her husband separated.[1][14]

gollark: It is also claimed that basically every weird subculture exists there to some extent.
gollark: Apparently there are also some bad incentive structures, because property owners can go "no, you cannot build denser things here", and they're incentivized to so they can sell their stuff for more.
gollark: So just make it denser and have better transport.
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: If there was more of it, it would presumably cost less.

References

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