Nick Spicer

Nick Spicer joins NPR's International Desk as Europe Editor. People February 15, 20249:32 AM ET In a note to newsroom staff, Didrik Schanche, Chief International Editor, made the following announcement: Nick Spicer, Berlin October 15, 2019. Adam Berry hide caption Adam Berry Nick Spicer, Berlin October 15, 2019. Adam Berry Nick Spicer is a veteran journalist who most recently worked as a presenter and reporter for Deutsche Welle and France 24. He has also been a media teacher at HMKW University in Berlin, training scores of TV journalists in storytelling in the field, live performance, and studio presenting, as well as teaching upcoming newsroom managers how to work across multiple platforms. A Canadian and French citizen, he served as CBC's bilingual TV bureau chief in Moscow, covering the post-Soviet era as well as the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in 2004. For the next two decades, Nick focused on that country's troubled path between East and West, reporting on the 2014 Dignity Revolution, the annexation of Crimea, as well as the 2022 invasion and its consequences. Nick also has reported in the US, working as a travelling Al Jazeera correspondent based in DC from 2007-2010, covering the unlikely candidacy of then-Sen. Barack Obama, race issues, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, gun violence in Chicago, as well as the debates around the drawing down of US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. He moved from there to Berlin, opening the Al Jazeera bureau in 2011, covering a zone corresponding somewhat to what was once the Hapsburg Empire, but also terror attacks in Norway and other places, and occasionally working in the Middle East. He also is no stranger to NPR. He reported from Paris for the network starting in 2001, covering European reaction to the 9/11 attacks as well as the war crimes trials for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague. He later went to Iraq to cover the conflict there and also to Libya. Nick grew up speaking English and French and also can work in German and Russian. He's written an as yet unpublished nuclear thriller set in Ukraine, Russia, and Germany. In his spare time, he says he is 'a mediocre runner and pianist.' Nick's official first day is Feb. 26. He will be at HQ the following week for orientation and training and ultimately will be based in DC. Please join me in welcoming him to NPR.' Cheers,

100%

The Daily's Verdict

This author is known for its high journalistic standards. The author strives to maintain neutrality and transparency in its reporting, and avoids conflicts of interest. The author has a reputation for accuracy and rarely gets contradicted on major discrepancies in its reporting.

Bias

100%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Conflicts of Interest

100%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Contradictions

100%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Deceptions

100%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Recent Articles

French Voters Prevent Far-Right National Rally from Gaining Power in Parliamentary Elections: New Popular Front Emerges as Shock Winner

French Voters Prevent Far-Right National Rally from Gaining Power in Parliamentary Elections: New Popular Front Emerges as Shock Winner

Broke On: Sunday, 07 July 2024 In the French parliamentary elections, voters turned out in large numbers to prevent the far-right National Rally from gaining power. The New Popular Front (NFP), a left-green alliance dominated by the radical left Unbowed France (LFI), emerged as the shock winner with an estimated 170 to 215 MPs, while the National Rally and its allies fell short of the required absolute majority. The outcome remains uncertain, with possibilities including a grand coalition between the left-wing grouping and Macron's centrists or a technocratic government.