词条 | Egill Helgason |
释义 |
| name = Egill Helgason | image = | imagesize = | caption = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1959|11|9}} | birth_place = Iceland | years_active = 1981 to present | television = | nationality = Icelandic | ethnicity = | partner = |religion = |children= |signature= | occupation = Television presenter, journalist | networth = | residence = }}Egill Helgason is an Icelandic journalist and television presenter.[1][2][3] BiographyEgill Helgason began his career in journalism in print media, in newspapers such as Tíminn and Helgarpósturinn. He studied journalism in Paris in 1986-1987, at the international Journalistes en Europe. In 1988 Egill Helgason started moving into television, first with a series on different aspects of Icelandic nationality called Mannlegi þátturinn. Later he became a reporter at RÚV, the Icelandic National Broadcasting Service, and later at the independent Stöð 2. In 1999 Egill Helgason started a political talk show called Silfur Egils at a newly founded television station called Skjár einn.[4] The show quickly became very popular and influential, with Helgason interviewing guests both in Icelandic and English, and occasionally in other languages. In 2007 the show moved to Stöð 2 due to differences with the owners of Skjár einn.[5] In 2007 Silfur Egils moved again, now to RÚV.[6] During the Icelandic economic crash it became a center of the heated debates going on in the country, with Egill also inviting foreign guests such as the French prosecutor Eva Joly to his show, Nobel prize winning economists such as Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz and social critics Noam Chomsky and Slavoj Zizek, as well as Julian Assange, Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Carl Bildt. At RÚV Egill Helgason also started a television show on books, named Kiljan. It is a weekly program on books, blending literary criticism and interviews with authors. Among noted authors who have appeared on the show are Michel Houellebecq, Dave Eggers, David Mitchell, Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Nawal El Saadawi, Alice Walker and Dan Brown. Kiljan has been running since 2007. Egill Helgason has made documentary series on historical subjects. Vesturfarar (Westward Bound, 2014) was a ten part series on the Icelandic emigration to Canada and the US from 1873 to 1914.[7] Steinsteypuöldin (The Age of Concrete, 2016) is in five parts, recounting how Reykjavík was built after a terrible fire in 1915 which devastated the center of town, than mainly built from timber.[8] Kaupmannahöfn, höfuðborg Íslands (Copenhagen, capital of Iceland, 2017) is the story of the long relationship between Iceland and Copenhagen, for a long time the de facto capital of the country.[9] Egill Helgason is presently working on a series called Siglufjörður, saga bæjar (Siglufjörður, the story of a town). It recounts how an isolated village in the north of Iceland became a great hub of activity, creating great riches, due to herring fishing which took off in 1903, and than the subsequent crash when the herring finally disappeared in 1967. Egill Helgason has won numerous Eddas, annual awards given by The Icelandic Film and Television Academy.[10] Helgason has been active on the internet since February 2000 when he started a blog on a now defunct website called Strikið. Helgason has since kept on blogging, later on Vísir, Eyjan and now on a webside called DV/Eyjan. He writes about different topics, politics, international affairs, literature, history, travel and music – which is another passion of Egill. He has also written a lot about Greece, being a noted philellene who spends time in Greece every year.[11] References1. ^{{ cite web |url= http://fightland.vice.com/blog/outlaws-and-ancient-gods-fighting-the-law-with-the-champions-of-mjolnir|work= Vice |title= Outlaws and Ancient Gods: Fighting the Law With the Champions of Mjölnir |language= |accessdate=2014-12-09 }} {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Helgason, Egill}}2. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.visir.is/article/20050522/SKODANIR02/505220315&SearchID=73272040434458|publisher= Visir |title= Egill á nú Silfur Egils|language=Icelandic |accessdate=10 December 2014}} 3. ^{{ cite web |url= http://theinterviewpoint.com/ITP/Interviews/64572617-1EC4-44D1-9EB6-D5D237AAA82C.html|publisher= Interview point |title= Egill Helgason Interview|language= |accessdate=2014-12-09 }} 4. ^{{ cite web |url= http://timarit.is/view_page_init.jsp?issId=382669&pageId=6364137&lang=is&q=Egill%20Helgason|work= Dagblaðið Vísir |title= Gullöldin endurvakin |language=is |accessdate=2018-07-23}} 5. ^{{ cite web |date=2 October 2003|url= http://timarit.is/view_page_init.jsp?pageId=3707459|work= Fréttablaðið |title= Egill á Stöð 2 |language=is |accessdate=2018-07-23}} 6. ^{{ cite web |date=7 June 2007|url= http://www.visir.is/g/200770601076/egill-segist-a-leid-a-ruv|work= Vísir |title= Egill segist á leið á RÚV |language=is |accessdate=2018-07-23}} 7. ^{{ cite web |date=October 29, 2014|url= http://wdvalgardsonkaffihus.com/blog/2014/10/29/vesturfarar-review/|work= wdvalgardsonkaffihus.com Blog |title= Vesturfarar Review |language=en|accessdate=2018-07-23}} 8. ^{{ cite web |date=November 7, 2016|url= http://icelandreview.com/news/2016/11/07/did-nixon-save-historical-reykjavik-houses?language=en|work= Iceland Review |title= Did Nixon Save Historical Reykjavík Houses? |language=en|accessdate=2018-07-23}} 9. ^{{ cite web |url= http://www.ruv.is/thaettir/kaupmannahofn-hofudborg-islands-0|work= RÚV |title= Kaupmannahöfn, höfuðborg Íslands |language=is |accessdate=2018-07-23}} 10. ^{{ cite web |url= http://timarit.is/view_page_init.jsp?pageId=6499743|work= Dagblaðið Vísir |date=12 November 2007|title= Egill fékk eddur |language=is |accessdate=2018-07-23}} 11. ^{{ cite web |url= https://turisti.is/2012/06/grikkland-ad-haetti-egils/|work= turisti.is |title= Grikkland að hætti Egils |language=is |accessdate=2018-07-23}} 6 : Living people|Icelandic journalists|Icelandic television personalities|Icelandic comedians|Television talk show hosts|1959 births |
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