Kirstin Cole
Kirstin Cole has been a reporter and anchor for PIX 11 news since 2011,[1] where she is also a discussion panelist.[2] She worked there from 2000-2001 before spending 10 years as the consumer reporter for CBS 2.[3] She has received awards in crime reporting working at both companies. Her work for CBS included covering restaurants who discriminated against children.[4]
In 2014 she engaged in social experiments, one of which focused on examining rudeness.[5]
In 2015 she hosted the Regional Economic Development Council Awards[6] as the mistress of ceremonies.[7]
Awards
She won four New York Emmy Awards:
References
- "Kristin Cole". pix11.com.
- Bloomgarden-Smoke, Kara (27 April 2016). "Camera Ready? A Skittish Print Reporter Goes to TV Talent School". New York Observer.
The ability to speak in sound bites. “Nuggetize it,” advised panelist Kirstin Cole, a WPIX correspondent, citing as example Johnnie Cochran’s famous “if the glove don’t fit, you must acquit” line, which played on a loop on TV news.
- "Kirstin Cole". CBSLocal.com.
Kirstin Cole is CBS 2's consumer reporter. She joined WCBS-TV in 2001
- Dwyer, James G. (21 October 2010). Moral Status and Human Life: The Case for Children's Superiority. Cambridge University Press. p. 22. ISBN 9781139493185.
For examples of restaurants that exclude children, see Kirstin Cole, "CBS 2 Exclusive: Restaurant Doesn't Serve Kids," CBS2 (Feb. 27, 2007)
- Howerton, Jason (29 April 2014). "Reporter Fakes Pregnancy to Find Out Just How Rude New Yorkers Really Are". The Blaze.
As part of a new series of “social experiments,” WPIX-TV reporter Kirstin Cole set out to discover if New Yorkers really are as rude as some news headlines suggest.
- McKinley, Jesse (11 December 2015). "Development Money, in Cuomo Era, Is Disbursed With Dazzle". New York Times.
Kirstin Cole, a reporter and occasional anchor for WPIX in Manhattan who acted as the event’s host
- "'A great day': Tier lands $500M 'Hunger Games' prize". Press & Sun-Bulletin. 10 December 2015.
The mistress of ceremony who actually announced the awards was Kirstin Cole, anchorwoman for WPIX-TV of New York City.
- "THE 48th ANNUAL NEW YORK EMMY AWARDS – 2005 WINNERS" (PDF). p. 5.
- "THE NEW YORK CHAPTER OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF TELEVISION ARTS AND SCIENCES ANNOUNCES RESULTS OF THE 56th ANNUAL NEW YORK EMMY® AWARDS" (PDF). p. 8.
- "57th NY Emmy Awards Winners Press Release" (PDF). 3 June 2016. pp. 3, 10.
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