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Julia Boorstin was born on 12/04/1978 in Los Angeles, California, from Sharon and Paul Boorstin. Her mother was from Seattle, and she was an English teacher before Julia was born, while her Dad was from Chicago and he was a producer for the TV documentaries, with her mother being their author.
Julia attended Harvard Westlake School and she completed her schooling in 1996. She then studied at Princeton University, and she graduated with the honors, achieving a B.A. in history. While she attended the university, she’s also been an editor for the “Daily Princetonian”, the newspaper about the campus and the community of Princeton. She is fluent in Italian and French languages too.
Julia Boorstin is a reporter and she’a actually woring for CNBC. She went to the channel in May 2006, being given the role of General Assignment reporter. Afterwards, she started to work as the Senior Media & Entertainment Correspondent, while she also started working for the Los Angeles Bureau.
Julia is in charge of the “Media & Entertainment” section of CNBC since 2015, and she has a special focus for the intersection of the technology and the media. Besides, she has also reported a documentary about the future of V for a network called Stay Tunes, the Future of TV.
According to her biography, before joining the CNBC, Julia was working for Fortune magazine where she had been a business writer and a reporter since 2000. She covered many stores from the media companies including the business trends in the retail market. In that time with Fortune Magazine, she was the contributor of “Street Life”, that was a live market wrap-up segment on CNN headlines News.
In the years 2003, 2004 and 2006, she’s been named among the “TJFR 30 under 30” list of most promising business journalists who were under the age of 30. The list was made up by Journalist and Financial Reporting Newsletter. She used to work for the delegation of State Department and for Economic Co-operation and Development and for the domestic policy office of Vice President Gore.
Julia is an example of how the hard work and the dedication can lead to great results, and what she achieved in her career has been an inspiration for a huge number of people. Julia started practically from scratch, and she has projected her skill and devotion completely to improve in her profession, that brought her into a very successful and established career. During her career Julia interviewed many important personalities, like CEO of huge enterprises (for example DISNEY’s Chairman & CEO Bob Iger, Pinterest CEO Ben Silbermann, GoPro CEO Nick Woodman, Electronic Arts CEO Andrew Wilson), important managers of the entertainment and media universe (for example the Chief Executive Officer of Discovery Communications David Zaslav, the executive Tom Freston), political figures (for example the Secretary of Defense Ash Carter), and many other celebrities.
Julia says about her work that “Whether I'm conducting a live on-air interview with a CEO, or sussing out answers from sources on background, I'm constantly asking questions. And I love it. As long as I can remember, I've always been inquisitive, which has won me friends, who've been flattered by my interest, and annoyed others, who found it invasive. Over the course of my career at CNBC, at Fortune Magazine before that, and even back to the high school newspaper, I've been working to figure out how to ask better questions. Questions for which I’ll get interesting, surprising answers. Answers which teach me something, break news, advance a story, reveal someone's interests, or simply help me get to know someone better.
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I try to learn every day how to ask better questions by watching my colleagues, the best in the biz, and talking through interviews with my patient and experienced bosses. If I ask big, sweeping questions, I often get long, rambling answers, where even the person I'm interviewing can lose track of what he or she was talking about. The alternative to asking "What's the future of social?" is breaking that 30,000 foot question into something more manageable.”
Julia Boorstin is married, and her husband is William Couper Samuelson. He is a mover and shaker of Hollywood. They met at the Sundance Film Festival in PG-13 weekend in 2004. Their romance was reported on the pages of the New York Times. He remembers their first encounter like it was yesterday. In an interview he said: “A phalanx of boring people in parkas parted, and there was this dramatic-looking woman wearing this dark leathery shearling coat. She was extremely attractive so I decided to play it cool. But to protect myself, I feigned, ‘Oh, yes, I sort of remember we met.’” And for Julia's part, she had no reluctance about admitting she had met Couper “He’s 6-6 and cute. How could you miss him?” The wedding took place in the December 2007, when they exchanged vows in front of 113 guests in Beverly Hills, California. From that time, they live a blissfully life without any rumor of divorce. The couple has been blessed by the birth of a child, Henry, that was born on July 13th 2011.
Julia is also known thanks of her beautiful red hair, and for having a no-nonsense and serious business reporting style. She is tall, and she has an attractive and perfect eye catching figure. She is very reserved, and she had maintained the majority of the details regarding her personal life as a secret, and many of the personal information cannot be found on the internet.
Even if her exact net worth is not reported, she is known to be among the 40 richest people under forty with a net worth of over 100 million. For CNBC Bureau based in Los Angeles, she covered the media while focusing on intersection of Media and the technology. She worked like a contributor of Street Life, which is a life market wrap-up segment of CNN headlines news.
Surprisingly, she doesn’t have a Wikipedia page dedicated to her yet, but it’s possible to find some personal info on her social media accounts, being her very active on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
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