Daniela Sanzone

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Daniela Sanzone

Daniela Sanzone
Born April 20
Rome, Italy
Occupation Researcher, TA, Author, Journalist, Diversity Consultant

Daniela Sanzone is an Italian and Canadian journalist. She lives in Toronto where she is a Teaching Assistant and a PhD candidate at York University in Communication and Culture Graduate joint program at York and Ryerson University. Her research interests are related to the development and changes in the Italian community in Ontario in the last thirty years and how to improve Ethnic Media in Toronto and make them attractive on the market. For many years she was a news anchor and a reporter for the Italian News at Omni Television, a Canadian multicultural channel owned by Rogers Media, and the on-air host of the daily program Pomeriggio Italiano.

Biography

Sanzone was born and raised in Rome, Italy. She has a bachelor degree in Literature and Fine Arts from La Sapienza University in Rome, with a dissertation in Film History and Critique, and Masters in Communication Sciences and Cultural Anthropology of Complex Societies. She has been living in Toronto since December 2000. She is married and has one child.

Career

Sanzone is a teaching assistant and a PhD candidate at York University in Communication and Culture. She is also a diversity consultant for the company Focus Communication, and is the Program Director at Espresso Manifesto Arts Collective, an initiative founded by Canadian-Italian musician Daniela Nardi and herself. EMAC is both a social movement and a celebration of the arts. Its goal is to nurture dialogue between communities and generations. Together, Daniela S. and Daniela N. organized ORA: Culture-Canada-Italy-Now, which included a Speakers Circle about immigration identity, culture in Toronto, how the Italian community is changing in the digital era, and therefore how to find new ways to interest and connect the new immigrants and the future generations. Her career in Canada started at Corriere Canadese, the Italian newspaper based in Toronto, where she worked for two years. Then, she joined the team at Omni Television, as a News Anchor and a reporter for the Italian News; in her long experience at Omni, ahe was also the On-Air Host and Producer of the daily program Pomeriggio Italiano. For many years, Daniela was also the Canada News coordinator for the Italian Press Agency Ansa.

After she moved to Canada, she has been free-lancing for the daily Italian newspaper Il Manifesto, and several magazines, like Marie Claire, Amica,La rivista del cinematografo, and Grazia.

In Rome, Italy, where she is a professional journalist and a film critic, she worked as a writer for Sereno Variabile, a program about travelling broadcast by RAI Television (Italian National Television). Among other publications, she worked as an entertainment editor for the daily newspaper Ultime Notizie (Last News), and as an assistant producer of the online Daily News, published by RaiNet and Italia Cinema (today Cinecittà News), all based in Rome.

She has published a few books, including two about the Italian director Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia, and one about Marsala, a wine produced in the region surrounding the Italian city of Marsala in Sicily.

In 1998 she was awarded the "European Personality" and received this recognition in Campidoglio, Rome City Hall, Capitoline Hill.

In Washington, on March 2013, she presented her research at the PCA CA Conference "From mass immigration to professional workers - A portrait of the present Italian “comunità” in Ontario (Canada).

In Toronto, in 2006 she presented the lecture, Multiculturalism in the World of Mass Media During the Digital Era, for the Iacobucci Center of Italian Studies at the University of Toronto, and published on the book The Virtual Piazza.

She also held the lecture Italy and Italians on the North American Silver Screen, at 79th Congress of the American Association of Teachers of Italian, in November 2002 at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. In 2001 she organized a focus on the Italo-Canadian cinema, bringing three films done by Paul Tana, Tony Nardi and Bruno Ramirez and the three people mentioned at the Sulmona International Film Festival, in Italy.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.