Juliette Powell
Juliette Powell (born in Manhattan, New York, United States) is a Canadian television host, producer and author. She was the Miss Canada titleholder in 1989, that contest's first Black Canadian winner.[1][2]
Powell, a fluently bilingual Montrealer, was born in Manhattan, New York and moved to Montreal with her French-Canadian mother at the age of eight, following her parents' divorce.[citation needed]
After her reign as Miss Canada, including representing the country at Miss Universe 1989, Powell joined MusiquePlus in 1992 as a VJ, while also studying finance and business at McGill University. She was host of MusiquePlus' weekly dance music show, Bouge de là! until 1996.[1][3]
That year, she moved to Toronto, transferring to MuchMusic and becoming host of Electric Circus and French Kiss, while also studying economics at the University of Toronto.
In 1999, Powell began working for CablePulse 24 as a business reporter and founded media and consulting company Powell International Entertainment Inc. (PIE Inc.) which produced features with personalities such as Nelson Mandela, Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter, Sir Richard Branson, Tim Burton, and Steven Spielberg, Tom Cruise, Janet Jackson, Tina Turner, Rosie O'Donnell and Prince Charles.
In 2001, she co-authored the media section for the UN Plan of Action of the World Conference against Racism.
She is author of the 2008 book 33 Million People in the Room: How to Create, Influence and Run a Successful Business using Social Networking (Financial Times Press, ISBN 978-0-13-715435-7).[4]
References
External links
Preceded by
Melinda Gillies
|
Miss Canada 1989 |
Succeeded by Robin Lee Ouzunoff |
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2009
- Miss Universe 1989 contestants
- Canadian television reporters and correspondents
- Canadian television news anchors
- People from New York City
- People from Montreal
- Black Canadian broadcasters
- University of Toronto alumni
- McGill University alumni
- American people of Canadian descent
- MuchMusic personalities
- Miss Canada winners
- Living people
- Canadian women journalists
- American emigrants to Canada
- Women television journalists
- Year of birth missing (living people)
- Black Canadian women