Sue Castorino
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Sue Castorino is founder and president of The Speaking Specialists, a communications company specializing in public speaking and media training services, located in Chicago. She was an American broadcast journalist, news anchor and reporter in Cleveland and Chicago.
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[edit] Biography
Sue Castorino is as native of Columbus, Ohio and attended Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois where she graduated in 1975 with a Bachelor of Science in Speech. As part of the Northwestern program, she completed an internship at WBBM-TV in Chicago. After a brief stint at WHTH-AM in Newark, Ohio she was named news anchor and reporter at WERE-AM in Cleveland, the city’s all-news station at that time.The station WERE had just begun an all-news radio format and was the local affiliate for the NBC network. In 1977 Castorino went on to be the morning news anchor and reporter at WWWE-AM, also known as `3WE' (now WTAM) in Cleveland. In addition, she became the first woman at that station to host Cleveland Cavaliers basketball programs and covered the Indians, Browns, and other sporting events as well as news.
From 1981 to 1986 Castorino was the afternoon news anchor at WBBM-AM, the all-news station in Chicago owned and operated by CBS. During that time she also served as news reporter and hosted various sports programs including a weekly White Sox show. In 1983 Castorino married Randy Minkoff, who was then the United Press International Midwest sports editor.
In 1986, Castorino founded The Speaking Specialists, a woman-owned communications company specializing in public speaking and media training services, based in Chicago.
In 2000 The Speaking Specialists was awarded the contract by the United States Olympic Committee to provide media training to all of the American athletes and coaches who competed in the Summer Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.[1] Castorino and Minkoff subsequently provided similar services in 2002 (Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, Utah), and 2004 (Summer Olympic Games in Athens, Greece).
[edit] References
[edit] Additional References and other sources
- Johns Hopkins Magazine, November 1998. When Academics Meet the Press [1]
- Haugh, David Jun 25, 2006; Advice from the pros: Experts in human relations say it's wrong for Ozzie Guillen to blame his outbursts on cultural differences. Chicago Tribune pg. 8;
- Bell, Taylor, Oct 6, 2006; Tongue-tied? Speaking Specialists can help. Chicago Sun-Times.
- Mawicke, Megan, Dec 4, 2007; Speaking Specialists Give Athletes Media Skills, CBS2 Chicago [2]
- New York Times, February 25, 2008; “NBC Trying Its Best to Be Cool” [3]
- 2007 USA Track & Field Elite Athlete Handbook [4]