- published: 27 Sep 2015
- views: 1008
Kasia Madera is a British journalist and television news presenter, currently fronting the overnight bulletins on the BBC News and BBC World News, presenting the Newsday strand Thursday-Sunday from London with Rico Hizon in Singapore.
Born in London of Polish-immigrant parents, she graduated from Queen Mary & Westfield, University of London, with a 2:1 in French & Politics. She then completed a Broadcast Journalism Postgraduate Diploma from City University, London.
After joining the BBC graduate programme in 2002, she initially presented BBC Three's youth orientated news bulletin 60 Seconds. She then presented the roundup of the day's entertainment and celebrity news in E24.
Formally joining the BBC News channel as a news presenter, she presented as a regular stand in. She presently shares the overnight presenting slot on the BBC News Channel with Babita Sharma, simulcast on BBC World.
Madera is bilingual in Polish language, and resultantly reported for the BBC News Channel on the Polish parliamentary election, 2007; and the 2010 Polish Air Force Tu-154 crash in Russia, which killed 96 people including Polish President Lech Kaczyński.
Finbarr Patrick McGuigan MBE (born 28 February 1961), known as Barry McGuigan and nicknamed The Clones Cyclone, is a former Irish and British professional boxer who became a world featherweight champion.
McGuigan was born in Clones, Ireland, son of singer Pat McGuigan (died 1987). He represented Northern Ireland in the Commonwealth Games at Edmonton 1978 and represented Ireland at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. Pat McGuigan sang "Danny Boy" before several of his son's fights. This fact inspired the Hacienda Brothers' song "If Daddy Don't Sing Danny Boy", written by boxer and musician Chris Gaffney.
During his career, McGuigan fought at a number of venues in Ireland and Britain. He attracted an enormous following in the mid-1980s, particularly to the King's Hall in Belfast which he normally filled to capacity. McGuigan is a Roman Catholic, and at a time when Roman Catholics and Protestants were clashing during The Troubles in Northern Ireland, McGuigan married a Protestant woman, Sandra, and they have been married for 28 years. McGuigan has commented on the support he got from both Protestant and Catholic in Ireland that it was because:
Peter Morici is an American macroeconomist and Professor of International Business at the R.H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland, College Park. He is a graduate of SUNY Albany in New York State where he received his Ph.D in Economics in 1974.
From 1974 to 1976, Morici taught at Augsburg College in Minneapolis. In 1976, he joined the Federal Energy Administration. In 1978 he moved to the National Planning Association in Washington where he was elected a Vice President in 1983. He joined the University of Maine as a Professor of Economics in 1988 and was Director of its Canadian-American Center from 1990 to 1993. He also served as chief economist at the U.S. International Trade Commission.
Morici is the author of 18 books.
Morici signed to serve as a pitchman for Kyocera.
Morici is noted for wearing bow ties.
KASIA MADERA:--: BBC - NEWSDAY - 23 Sept 2015 -
A report about Kasia Madera on TVP Polonia
Kasia Madera Show Reel 2014
Kasia Madera Show Reel 2014 - 2015
Kasia Madera Show Reel 2015 - 2016
The BBC's Kasia Madera talks exclusively to the Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk
Kasia Madera presenting BBC World on 21st January 2010
Kasia Madera zaprasza do PON-u!
KASIA MADERA Talks with Barry McGuigan. BBC NEWS (Milf Alert). 11.AUG. 2012
BBC Newsday with Rico Hizon and Kasia Madera close
London Underdogs speak to Kasia Madera about their website
Kasia Madera on the Middleton family leaving the Goring Hotel after the royal wedding
Kasia Madera BBC News
Kasia Madera Headlines 23rd Jan 2016
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Now I believe in lookin'
Like my time on earth is cookin'
Whether polka-dotted, striped or even checked
With some glamour guaranteein'
Every fiber of my bein'
Is displayed to quite remarkable effect
From your cradle via trousseau
To your death bed you're on view so
Never compromise, accept no substitute
I would rather wear a barrel
Than conservative apparel
Because a dress has always been my strongest suit
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Stayin' in or hitting townwards
From the top and working downwards
I ensure that every stitch is stitched in time
Whether wig or hat or turban
Whether clog, boudoir or urban
Not to strut your stuff outrageously's a crime
And the few who are invited
To my wardrobe are delighted
As they wander through my things to find a route
That in negligee or formal
I am anything but normal
Because a dress has always been my strongest suit
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Now you don't need a recital
Of the reasons why it's vital
That tonight my drapings will not be subdued
That from coronet to sandal
No one else is worth a candle
That I couldn't make more impact in the nude
So bring me all my finest
Most audacious, my divinest
Most revealing, most expensive and to boot
Most arresting, most heart-stopping
Most free-flowing, most eye-popping
Because a dress has always been my strongest suit
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
(My dress has always been, my dress has always been)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
(My dress has always been my strongest suit)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
(My strongest suit)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
(Strongest suit, strongest suit)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
(My Dress has always been my strongest suit)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere
(Dress has always been my strongest suit)
Overwear, underwear, anytime, anywhere (oh-oh)