- Marcia Young
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Marcia Young Born Toronto, Ontario Nationality Canadian Occupation journalist, broadcast news anchor Marcia Young (née Williams) is a Canadian broadcast journalist and host of The World This Hour, a national current events program on CBC Radio.
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Early life
Young was born in Toronto, but spent her early childhood in Jamaica where she was raised by her grandparents. She returned to Toronto at the age of 6 to attend school. She is a graduate of Ryerson University's journalism school.
Journalism career
Young began her broadcasting career in sports radio at The Fan 590 in Toronto. She then worked behind the microphone as a researcher and production coordinator for Life Network, on one of the first magazine lifestyle shows in Canada.
In 1998, Young moved to CBC Television as a researcher for The National, CBC Television's flagship nightly newscast. She subsequently landed gigs as a local television news reporter in Toronto, Saskatoon and Regina.
Young returned to Toronto as a television anchor and reporter at Citytv, where she reported on the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, the SARS crisis, and the Iraq War. In 2004, she became the anchor of Canada at Five on CBC Radio. Marcia has hosted Main Street (PEI), CBC's flagship radio newscast, World Report, and has co-hosted As It Happens.
She is the first host of The World This Hour.
Charitable activities
Young is a supporter of child literacy in Canada and abroad.
She has also been a frequent host for community and charity-based organizations in the Greater Toronto Area including Design Hope Toronto's charity auction for Dixon Hall,[1] the Osu Children's Library Fund,[2] the Jamaican Canadian Association Scholarship Awards, the Applause Institute's Black Cotillion Ball, Jamaica College Old Boys' Association of Canada, CareerEdge Organization and the African Canadian Achievement Awards.
She is a former board member of Give Girls A Chance, a fundraising initiative created to provide educational opportunities for girls and young women in Canada and around the world.
References
- ^ "Design Hope Toronto's charity auction". http://www.designhopetoronto.ca/. Retrieved 2008-11-06.
- ^ "Osu Children's Library Fund". http://www.osuchildrenslibraryfund.ca/. Retrieved 2008-11-06.
External links
Categories:- Living people
- Canadian radio news anchors
- Black Canadian broadcasters
- Canadian television reporters and correspondents
- People from Toronto
- Canadian women journalists
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