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Tom Clark (journalist)

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Name
  
Tom Clark

Role
  
Journalist


Spouse
  
Janey Reid

Education
  
Upper Canada College

Tom Clark (journalist) httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages5575371516135

Nominations
  
Gemini Award for Best Reportage

TV shows
  
CTV National, Power Play, W5

Similar People
  
Anton Koschany, Peter Stursberg, Charles Lynch, Peter Jennings

Profiles

Tom clark bids farewell to cdn tv audience as he retires from journalism


Tom Clark is a Canadian television journalist. He has been a substitute anchor for CTV National News, and host of Power Play, a political program on CTV News Channel. He was the chief political correspondent for the Global News, and host of their political program The West Block.

Contents

Tom Clark (journalist) Clark married divorce salary net worth affair nationality

John hills and tom clark on the post recession era


Personal

Tom Clark (journalist) After 45 years veteran Hill journalist Tom Clark signs off The

Clark was born in the early 1950s (1952 or 1953) to Joseph Adair Porter Clark and Patrica Grant and raised in Toronto and graduated from Upper Canada College in 1971. He is fluently bilingual. Clark went to Carleton University to study journalism, but left for a news job in Montreal.

Tom Clark (journalist) Tom Clark brings his journalistic career to a close TV eh

Clark comes from a family of journalists:

  • great-grandfather Joseph Thomas Clark was managing editor of the Toronto Star and Saturday Night
  • grandfather Joseph William Greig Clark (1896-1956) RAF aviator and reporter for the Toronto Star
  • father Joseph Adair Porter Clark (1921-2013) was the founder, CEO and President of Canada NewsWire
  • great-uncle Gregory Clark (1892-1977) was an acclaimed writer and journalist with both the Toronto Star and the Toronto Telegram
  • uncle James Murray Clark (son of Greg) was also a reporter with the Star (d. 1944)
  • Besides journalism, Clark is a licensed pilot and flies a floatplane.

    Career

    Clark served as CTV's China Bureau Chief in 1983-85. He was among the first to cover the Ethiopian famine in 1984, was in Berlin in 1989 to witness the fall of the wall, and was the only Canadian reporter in Yugoslavia when NATO launched aerial war against Serbia in 1999. In all Clark has covered six theatres of war. He was the first Canadian Journalist to ever interview U.S. President George W. Bush one on one on television. He also hosted, and served as senior correspondent on CTV's W-FIVE for eight years. He has covered every federal election since 1974.

    On September 7, 2010, CTV announced that Clark was leaving the network to pursue other opportunities. He had been considered one of the frontrunners to succeed Lloyd Robertson as CTV National News anchor; with his departure coming shortly after Lisa LaFlamme was named Robertson's successor, it was widely speculated that Clark's departure was tied to having been passed over. However, Clark later said that he was "neither angry nor bitter" about the choice of LaFlamme, and that CTV decided to buy out his contract.

    On September 1, 2011, Clark was appointed chief political correspondent for Global Television Network.

    Global News announced Clark would retire as of January 1, 2017, ending his 40-plus year career in journalism.

    On January 9, 2017 Clark joined Global Public Affairs, Canada's largest privately owned public affairs firm, as Chair, Public Affairs and Communications.

    References

    Tom Clark (journalist) Wikipedia