The Associated Press, With Long Ties to Print, Ramps Up Live-Streamed Video Shows
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Giovanna Dell’Orto was doing some of the hardest work a reporter can, talking to people who had just seen a shooting. And then, in the middle of her difficult labor came a voice that offered just a little hope. “Say, don’t I know you?” a woman asked. “I saw you with the Pope.” Dell’Orto typically […]
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Mar 16, 2026 8:25am PT The Associated Press, With Long Ties to Print, Ramps Up Live-Streamed Video Shows By Brian Steinberg Plus Icon Brian Steinberg Senior TV Editor bristei Latest Nielsen Will Delay March ‘Gauge’ Report After Streamers Fret Over Audience Declines 3 days ago Disney Wraps Oscars Ad Sales; Event Will Feature Burger King Shout-Outs and Mazda-Backed Movie Makers 4 days ago Coinbase Oscars Commercial Urges Viewers to Break From Life’s Game 4 days ago See All Giovanna Dell’Orto was doing some of the hardest work a reporter can, talking to people who had just seen a shooting. And then, in the middle of her difficult labor came a voice that offered just a little hope. “Say, don’t I know you?” a woman asked. “I saw you with the Pope.” Dell’Orto typically works out of Minnesota and has never stood alongside any Pope current or past. Months earlier, however, she was leading a new digital program put on by her employer — the Associated Press . Dell’Orto was the on-screen anchor of a live show from Italy — looking out on St. Peter’s Square, no less — chronicling the recent papal conclave that elected Pope Leo to succeed Pope Francis following the latter’s death. Related Stories Razzie Awards 2026 Winners: Ice Cube Named Worst Actor as 'War of the Worlds' Dominates With Five Dishonors
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