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Rachel
is a New York based political columnist, political and media
strategist, radio/TV personality, CEO of
Grand Central Political
online political/PR/media talent scouting, and
Editor-in-Chief of
Grand Central Political
magazine -- serving the USA, Canada, UK, and France. She is
considered an expert in both US and international
politics.
Born
in suburban Vancouver, British Columbia, Rachel grew up
listening to
Jack Webster,
who pioneered combative political talk-radio long before
it ever spread to the USA.
Fully bilingual in both French and English,
Rachel survived growing up in Canada
during the socialist regime of
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau,
best known for his close friendship with Fidel Castro,
decimation of the Canadian military, a wife who partied
at Studio 54 with the Rolling Stones, and doing
pirouettes behind the Queen of England's back.
Always a capitalist at heart, Rachel spent her childhood
on her parents' farm selling eggs from the family
driveway. To ensure the operation looked legit and
to score an advantage over the competition (the
neighborhood Safeway), she would hold her pet chicken,
Brenda (named after her Sunday school teacher), on her
lap as proof that the eggs were truly "farm fresh".
She was also influenced early in life by the bravery and
determination of a young man in her hometown named
Terry Fox, who remains
a personal hero.
Rachel attended Vancouver Canucks hockey games, where
she waved at
Wayne Gretzky from the front row
while his face was smashed into the glass, whenever the
Edmonton Oilers came to town.
After ripping like a tornado through one of Canada's
most liberal universities (sciences, then criminology), she moved on
to a broadcast journalism degree, then formal
political journalism training in Washington, DC.
Working in Canada, she spent her media
career debating and liberals in both of her native
languages (French and English), and perplexingly, has no
hint of an accent in either language.
Rachel 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 later became a daily
panelist on FNC's late-night show and has also since
appeared on CNN, FOX Business Network, and other news networks.
Most recently a political columnist for the
Toronto Sun and other Sun Media newspapers, she has
contributed to United Press
International/Washington Times, and the National Post
(one of Canada's two national newspapers).
Her writing has appeared in other print and
online publications around the world, including the New
York Post and Newsmax magazine.
In addition to working in network news production in New
York City and nationally-syndicated radio in Washington,
DC, Rachel has served as a DC-based Director of a
political think-tank, worked as a political campaign
strategist and run political campaigns in both Canada and the USA, and as CEO of a
public relations, lobbying, and strategic communications
business.
Prior to beginning a 2-year stint in Toronto in 2005,
Rachel hosted a weekly open line, political talk-radio
radio program out of Vancouver, BC, which was broadcast
worldwide. She used to tell listeners that she did
all her own technical controls for the show, so any
calls would go straight onto the air without screening. Rachel would like to
thank all the the folks who took advantage of this for
helping her hone her comedic improvisational skills.
A former national level competitive swimmer who still
holds records in her home province, Rachel lives for challenges and
thrives on competition. She likens
political debate to a boxing match -- and she's never
happier than when she's in the ring.
In her spare time, Rachel enjoys volunteering for
various organizations, and dating guys who usually turn
out to be jerks.
She hates it when people "big
themselves up" in their bios.
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