Ayrton Fagundes
Ayrton Fagundes | |
---|---|
Born |
Passo Fundo, Brazil | February 11, 1937
Died | March 14, 1994 57) | (aged
Nationality | Brazilian |
Occupation | Journalist |
Ayrton Fagundes (February 11, 1937 - March 14, 1994) was a Brazilian broadcast journalist.
Best known as an anchorman for prime time television newscasts such as Camera 10, at TV Difusora (now Band TV), Globo TV Southern subsidiary RBS, and TV Record. Ayrton Fagundes belongs to the first generation of Brazilian journalists that have introduced the nightly news programming and weekly magazines as a new genre.
A presenter, editor, and executive producer, he spent the last years of his career in the capital of Brazil, Brasilia, where he was appointed bureau-chief of the Brazilian financial news daily Jornal do Comercio, of Porto Alegre, writing a daily column in politics.
Later he was appointed chief-spokesperson for the Secretaria Especial de Informatica (SEI), at the Brazilian Ministery of Science and Technology, during the early years of the information technology industry in Brazil, where he worked with the new regulatory framework surrounding the nascent computer industry. He was interviewed by Alan Riding, of the New York Times, on several occasions, regarding Brazil's "prickly computer policies".