Valerie Pringle

Valerie Pringle

ON, CANADA
Veteran Broadcaster and Advocate

As the co-anchor of CTV's Canada AM morning show for almost a decade, Valerie Pringle is one of Canada's most acclaimed and best-known broadcasters. In addition to her accomplishments in the broadcasting industry, she is also well-known for her involvement with non-profit organizations and documentary work.

The Banff Television Foundation chose Pringle as one of the Famous 50 Faces of 50 Years of Canadian Television in 2002. This honour recognized an amazing career that started with her first job as a reporter with CFRB Radio in Toronto after she graduated from Ryerson University. After eight years of hosting CBC-TV's Midday and other shows, she moved to CTV to co-host Canada AM. During her time at CTV, Pringle also co-hosted coverage of the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics and also W-FIVE.

After leaving CTV in 2001, Pringle focused on documentaries. She co-produced, co-wrote and hosted the Discovery Channel documentary, After the Fall, which detailed the clean-up at the World Trade Center in New York.

Pringle also climbed to the base camp at Mount Everest to do a series of reports for Discovery Channel. And she did 33 episodes of her travel series, Valerie Pringle Has Left the Building, for CTV.

She is passionate about helping others and the majority of her time is devoted to volunteer work. Pringle is the chair of the Board of The Trans Canada Trail, and a member of the foundation boards for The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and the Board of Niagara Project. As the mother of a daughter who suffers from anxiety and panic attacks, Pringle has a personal stake in bringing awareness to mental health issues.

Valerie Pringle is recognized for her contributions to the communications field and as an advocate. She is an accomplished master of ceremonies and delivers presentations that focus on bringing people together to find solutions, whether it's about mental health, empowering women, or workplace awareness.

Highlights

  • Former co-anchor of CTV's Canada AM
  • Appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2006
  • Honourary fellow of the Royal Canadian Geographic Society
  • Seven-time Gemini Award nominee
  • Co-hosted 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics

As the co-anchor of CTV's Canada AM morning show for almost a decade, Valerie Pringle is one of Canada's most acclaimed and best-known broadcasters. In addition to her accomplishments in the broadcasting industry, she is also well-known for her involvement with non-profit organizations and documentary work.

The Banff Television Foundation chose Pringle as one of the Famous 50 Faces of 50 Years of Canadian Television in 2002. This honour recognized an amazing career that started with her first job as a reporter with CFRB Radio in Toronto after she graduated from Ryerson University. After eight years of hosting CBC-TV's Midday and other shows, she moved to CTV to co-host Canada AM. During her time at CTV, Pringle also co-hosted coverage of the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics and also W-FIVE.

After leaving CTV in 2001, Pringle focused on documentaries. She co-produced, co-wrote and hosted the Discovery Channel documentary, After the Fall, which detailed the clean-up at the World Trade Center in New York.

Pringle also climbed to the base camp at Mount Everest to do a series of reports for Discovery Channel. And she did 33 episodes of her travel series, Valerie Pringle Has Left the Building, for CTV.

She is passionate about helping others and the majority of her time is devoted to volunteer work. Pringle is the chair of the Board of The Trans Canada Trail, and a member of the foundation boards for The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and the Board of Niagara Project. As the mother of a daughter who suffers from anxiety and panic attacks, Pringle has a personal stake in bringing awareness to mental health issues.

Valerie Pringle is recognized for her contributions to the communications field and as an advocate. She is an accomplished master of ceremonies and delivers presentations that focus on bringing people together to find solutions, whether it's about mental health, empowering women, or workplace awareness.

Highlights

  • Former co-anchor of CTV's Canada AM
  • Appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2006
  • Honourary fellow of the Royal Canadian Geographic Society
  • Seven-time Gemini Award nominee
  • Co-hosted 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics

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