Heather De Lisle

Heather Anne De Lisle, mostly short Heather De Lisle ( born August 17, 1976 in Landstuhl, frequent misspellings: de Lisle and DeLisle ) is an American free television presenter. It occurs among them regularly on the English-language TV channel Deutsche Welle (DW- TV) and in political talk shows.

Life

De Lisle is the daughter of radio presenter Rik De Lisle and grew up mostly in Berlin. At 15, she hosted a radio program for the first time in the American Forces Network Berlin, at age 18, she was for the first time on television.

De Lisle studied at the University of Maryland and attended the SRT - School for Broadcast Technology (now ARD - ZDF Media Academy ) in Nuremberg.

Once during the turn of the American military radio stopped his service, she moved to the private sector. Since 1995 she works as a freelancer for Deutsche Welle; first as a weather girl, then as a sports presenter and since 2001 as a news presenter. Since the age of seven she also works as a voice actor for film, television and computer games. Since 2000, she reports as a foreign correspondent for ABC News Radio in New York from the German capital.

De Lisle, who describes herself as an American Republican, has been a regular studio guest at the Press Club, the International brunch as well as in news channel N24. In the context of the U.S. presidential election in November 2008, it was through her ​​work as a journalist sought-after guest in various talk shows.

In September 2010, Heather De Lisle's first book was published with the title " Amiland - A pamphlet for the U.S. superpower " in which she criticizes the fuss about Obama in Germany and taking a stand for the " American Way of Life".

De Lisle lives in Berlin, is married to a German and is the mother of a son.

Shipments

  • DW-TV Journal, half-hour news format in English
  • DW-TV Tomorrow Today, Science magazine in English
  • DW-TV Made in Germany, business magazine in English

Writings

  • Amiland: A polemic for the world power USA. Tredition, Hamburg, 2010. ISBN 978-3-86850-780-5
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