Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Carol Anne Riddell

The announcement of the marriage former WNBC journalist-presenter Carol Anne Riddell is causing a stir online with commentators and columnists marriage Riddell critical examination of the origins of the media section.
Riddell, who as a reporter and Sunday morning training was before the station WNBC anchor in early 2009, married to John Partille, an advertising executive in November and has just celebrated the union with a small ceremony at the Mandarin Oriental in New York. The New York Times covered the wedding in its Sunday "Wishes" section. What makes New York Times article on the unique combination of Riddell tells the story of how they and their respective marriages fell apart Partille be.
As one commentator noted the website of the New York Times, has "The concepts of" Voices "has forced a depth delicious irony here that have been made to say, but they feel less that match."
According to the article, and Riddell Partille met in a classroom in a school on the Upper West Side, where they both had children enrolled. "Party" Brady Bunch "and part" The Scarlet Letter, "the story has been fodder for the gossip of the neighborhood," writes Sipho Devan Times.
"Why am I being punished?" Riddell remembers questions about her extramarital affair to Partille. "Why should we in my way if I do not have?"
Forbes media columnist Jeff Bercovici wonders why the story was ever published, and the time Whythe open commentators online ...
Why ex-spouses of newlyweds are not mentioned by name in history? "The reporters sought comment that basic journalistic practices are maintained, why the opening times of the Council noted that the majority of the stories from the field and more importantly, what were the two in thinking about their story in a room in the rule for stories of good feeling, a good meeting, subject to blur?
Riddell reached Bercovici and said he was surprised by the reaction. "We have it because we wanted an honest account of how it happened for us and for the sake of our children," said Bercovici. "There was nothing in the history of infamy."

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