Directory:Rachel Marsden

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Rachel Marsden
Marsden headshot.jpg
Rachel Marsden
Born {{{birth_date}}}
Known for Political analysis and consulting
Occupation Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services
Contact [http://www.rachelmarsden.com RachelMarsden.com] [mailto:rachelmarsden@yahoo.com Email]
Reference Latitude: 40°46′0″N
Longitude: 73°58′42″W


Rachel Marsden is dangerous. And scary. In her spare time, she's an entrepreneur, political analyst, author and conservative political operative, who has appeared on Fox News, CNN, CNBC, CBC, Global Television, and CTV, as well as a guest (and sometimes even a guest-host) of various radio and TV programs around the world. She writes a weekly syndicated political column for Human Events, which also appears at Townhall.com. Marsden is the CEO and Editor-in-Chief of GrandCentralPolitical News Syndicate, distributing high profile columnists, including her own weekly column, to over 3,000 newspapers across America.

Previously a weekly columnist with Sun Media, she has contributed to publications such as the New York Post, Washington Times/United Press International, Newsmax Media and the Vancouver Sun. Marsden has also written a twice-weekly political column for the National Post – one of Canada’s two national newspapers - with one weekly column about national/international politics, and the other about Toronto/Ontario affairs. Everywhere she goes, she makes editors very nervous. She still pays some of them regular visits in their padded cells.

Early Life

Born in 1974 in Vancouver, Canada, Marsden was raised in the birthplace of political talk-radio, where she grew up listening to Jack Webster and watching the Liberal Canadian Prime Minister flip people off. She still holds several major records in competitive swimming from her days as an international level competitor.

The fully bilingual former print and runway model was schooled almost exclusively in French until high school. She graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree from Simon Fraser University on a full academic scholarship before pursuing graduate studies in law and criminology, a journalism degree at the British Columbia Institute of Technology, then political journalism at the National Journalism Center in Washington, DC. For her academic achievements, she was awarded the Canadian Governor General’s medal for academic excellence. The closest she ever wants to get to academia again is the local Starbucks.

During her college years, Marsden worked as a mall Santa photographer, a lifeguard, an aerobics instructor, a swimming coach, and a temp at various businesses ranging from an investment bank rife with cokeheads to a parking ticket company and a corrugated box manufacturer. She has done more volunteer and charity work than one would ever expect of a person portrayed as having sprung from the Devil's loins.

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Career

After working as a producer, anchor, camerawoman, and reporter for a cable news outlet in her hometown, and as a videographer for Rugby Canada and BC Rugby, her first major media position was with ABC News20/20 in New York City, where she apprenticed under Connie Chung and learned that you can't live in New York City on $5/day. After an apprenticeship in talk-radio at the Radio America Network in Washington, DC, Marsden was hired as Director of a DC-based conservative think-tank that was a key component of President George W. Bush’s beltway coalition during the lead-up to the Iraq War. She participated in meetings with various shadowy right-wing groups.

 
White House letter to Rachel Marsden

She returned to her native Canada to work as an operative on two simultaneous federal campaigns for current Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservative Party in the province of British Columbia, specializing in communications strategy and opposition intelligence. The Prime Minister picked a fight with her in a hissy-fit that ended up all over the news, but Marsden is pretty sure they're cool now. She will know for sure when she gets invited to his place for the annual garden party next year. At the same time, she began contributing to United Press International (UPI), and hosting a call-in talk-radio show in Vancouver, BC, where she interviewed and debated guests ranging from Canada’s then Deputy Prime Minister, Sheila Copps, and current International Trade Minister, Stockwell Day, to Ann Coulter and Watergate figure G. Gordon Liddy of the Richard Nixon administration. Staying on-air at this ultra-liberal radio station was like trying not to get bucked off a bronco on a daily basis.


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It was this hour-long interview with Liddy – in which he talked in-depth about his role in Watergate and the scandal’s aftermath – that caught the attention of David Asper, the Executive Vice-President of the CanWest Global media empire, who offered her a Toronto-based political columnist position at the National Post, in conjunction with then publisher, Lester Pyette.

Having quickly established a unique, controversial, populist conservative voice in the Canadian media, she switched to a regular column in the Sun Media chain, and started her own public relations and communications company on Toronto’s Bay Street.

While based in Toronto, Marsden started out with the Fox News Channel in 2004 as the Canadian Correspondent for The O'Reilly Factor -- the top-rated cable news show in the world -- after she was spotted as a regular panelist on Dennis Miller's CNBC show in Los Angeles. She was recruited by Rupert Murdoch’s chief lieutenant and former Ronald Reagan communications strategist, Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, who personally selected her to be the only conservative (and only woman) on a daily talk show with three other co-hosts.

After several months, Marsden left the show, stating, “The show has drastically changed direction since its inception and no longer has a place for a political expert.” She has since appeared on Fox Business, and still digs Roger Ailes...and Bill O'Reilly.

Marsden has since returned to her entrepreneurial roots, picking and choosing interviews, appearances and projects, and working with various television and radio networks as a free-agent. She continues to work as a political operative, opposition intelligence ("oppo") researcher and media consultant, both in the USA and overseas.

Marsden's work has been widely cited by other media. Her defense of new French President Nicolas Sarkozy, for example, was referenced by the nation’s top radio talk-radio host, Rush Limbaugh. Frankly, Marsden was surprised that he even knew her name.

 
Rachel Marsden on CNN

She is currently authoring her first book about politics, set for publication in 2009, and speaks on Capitol Hill and elsewhere on topics such as national and international politics; the impact of current political events on business; political strategies applied to business; crisis management; the war on terrorism; national security; leveraging media and public relations in business; media and technology; politics and technology; election analysis; the cultural and economic impact of immigration; and various other public policy issues.

Marsden has been named top “Newsmaker” of the day by NBC’s Keith Olbermann, a leader of the liberal media - and not as a compliment. Her private life is apparently the object of much gossip and media speculation, alongside A-list celebrities – a fact that Marsden has called “a puzzling, and frankly extremely stupid phenomenon.” This is all because they think she is mean to boys, but she really isn't. She loves boys! To a fault!

In February 2008, Marsden launched an online political talent project and magazine, GrandCentralPolitical.com to cultivate new and emerging media and political talent. This venture is separate from but linked with her GrandCentralPolitical News Syndicate, launched in November 2008, which syndicates columns by high-profile contributors to over 3,000 newspapers across America.


External links

RachelMarsden.com - Marsden's official website

GrandCentralPolitical.com - Marsden's political talent project

rachelmarsden.wordpress.com - Marsden's official weblog

Rachel Marsden's Twitter Microblog

References

Geolocation

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