John elliott cbs biography
About Us
John Elliott founded his namesake label in 2012. A California native hailing from San Francisco, the Los Angeles based designer had always planned to start his own line.
From an early age, John was three parts obsessed with skate culture, basketball, and clothing. The latter came from his Italian immigrant grandmother, a seamstress that taught her three daughters to sew. Combining personal inspiration with the rise of skate culture’s independent labels in his hometown, John was inspired at a young age to create designs that can resonate on a global scale.
With an impressive background in the industry, and having a love of all things design, his garments feature tailored fits, an exceptional attention to detail, and quality in construction. Elliott puts himself on the ground floor of production daily, completely immersed in the design process from start to finish, including traveling the world to source and develop fabrics. The goal is to produce the highest quality clothing, with materials that are engineered to stand the test of time.
John is the winner of GQ’s Best New Designer of the Year award and premiered his debut runway collection for the Fall/ Winter 2015 season in New York. Since then, he has shown eight times at NYFW. Elliott has been named one of WWD’s Ten of Tomorrow and has also been nominated for Menswear Designer of the Year at the CFDA Fashion Awards. He has collaborated with the likes of Nike, the Gap, and the City of Los Angeles.
John describes himself as taking a non-traditional approach to design. That creative freedom has served him, and as a result the business has scaled over the course of ten years, becoming a meaningful presence in the luxury fashion space while keeping his eyes set on a global platform
John Elliott
John Elliott joined CBS New York in January 2007 as a meteorologist on CBS2 News This Morning and CBS2 News At Noon.
Prior to joining WCBS, Elliott worked two years at KCBS-TV in Los Angeles. Before that, he spent two years with NBC News and MSNBC, appearing weekday mornings on NBC as a weathercaster on "Early Today." He also handled a wide variety of assignments as an anchor and correspondent on MSNBC. Elliott served as a 2004 MSNBC presidential campaign correspondent in the battleground state of Iowa. He also reported from numerous bases and posts throughout the nation as troops were deployed for the war in Iraq, and spent time onboard the USS Abraham Lincoln.
Prior to joining NBC, Elliott worked for XETV-TV in San Diego, where he served as an anchor on the Fox station's morning newscasts. He was also a morning news anchor for KGET-TV, the NBC affiliate in Bakersfield, California. Elliott began working as a weathercaster, first at WRBL-TV, the CBS affiliate in Columbus, Georgia, then at KGET before making the transition to his role as a news anchor in Bakersfield.
Elliott is a recipient of the California Associated Press award for Best Weathercaster, and has received numerous honors for his news features and general assignment reporting.
Elliott received his B.A. in radio, television and film from Wayne State University in Detroit and his master's in communications from Central Missouri State University. He also studied meteorology under Mississippi State University. Before embarking on his career in broadcasting, Elliott was an advertising copywriter and producer and also taught media courses at Mott Community College in Flint, Michigan and Central Missouri State.
Doctors examine John Elliott's pancreatic cyst
NEW JERSEY - Some critical health research is going on in our area, and John Elliott is participating in a study.
He's participating in a pancreatic cyst surveillance research initiative at Cooperman Barnabas Medical Center. Doctors told him to get an endoscopy with ultrasound, so he did.
"You never want to ignore something that could later on cause more damage to you," said Dr. David Rahni, an interventional gastroenterologist at Cooperman Barnabas Medical Center. "What we're trying to do here is find out as much information as we can about a cyst that has the potential - a very small potential - of doing you harm in the future."
The five year survivability rate for patients with pancreatic cancer has gone up the past two years, and that's great news. But it's still just at 12%. That's why surveillance programs like the one Elliott is participating in are so important.
"Unfortunately, we've made no progress in the last 30 years when it comes to management and prognosis," Rahni said. "The best policy or best management is to try to prevent it in the first place, and that's what we're trying to do here."
"Most of these pancreatic cysts never turn into anything," Rahni added. "Some of them turn into cancer, and what we're trying to do here is understand why and which ones do turn into cancer, so that we can prevent it in the future."
Rahni explained the procedure.
"Your pancreas sits behind your stomach, so with the endoscope and ultrasound, we're going to examine the pancreas, see if there are any lesions, see if there are any cysts. And then we have the ability with the needle to go right through your stomach and sample any lesion of your pancreas," he said. "We're understanding more and more how these pancreatic cysts act over many years, depending on their size, their characteristics, their genetic analysis. For you, we're trying to establish what type of cyst it i
Josh Elliott
American television journalist
For the member of the Connecticut House of Representatives, see Josh Elliott (politician).
Josh Elliott is an American television journalist who most recently worked for CBS News. He has previously worked as the news anchor for ABC's Good Morning America, a sports anchor for NBC Sports and Today, and was a co-anchor for the live telecast of ESPN's morning edition of SportsCenter.
Early life and education
Elliott was born to Susan, who gave Elliott up for adoption. He was adopted by Charles Elliott and Toni Jordan and grew up in Los Angeles, California. When he was 13, his father came out as gay at the time of his parents' divorce. His father died when Elliott was 15.
After graduating from Loyola High School of Los Angeles, Elliott attended the University of California, Santa Barbara. He originally enrolled at UC Santa Barbara in hopes of joining the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's water polo team, but instead ended up working at the university paper, The Daily Nexus. He graduated from UCSB in 1993 with a B.A. degree in English literature.
Elliot worked as a stringer for the Santa Barbara News-Press. He then moved on to graduate school at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, where he earned a Master of Science degree in 1999. He worked in television as a producer for Galaxy Productions before moving onto 20th Century Fox. He began there in development and later worked in production. After graduating from Columbia, Elliott worked for Sports Illustrated for six years, covering events in most major sports.
Career
ESPN
Elliott first joined ESPN in 2004 as a panelist for Around the Horn and Jim Rome Is Burning, as well as serving as guest co-host for Cold Pizza on ESPN2. On ESPN Classic, Elliott hosted the short-li