film, producing, producer, mongolia, television, mgl, mongol, content, movie, director, talent
<p>I am a well-regarded broadcast journalist in Mongolia. I spent the last 7 years in the U.S.A., first learning English, and then working at several companies in America to grasp American work standards and then incorporate them into work projects; later in 2006, I went to the University of California, Berkeley, and in 2008, earned a masters degree in journalism.</p> <p>I received a BA Degree in Political Economy in 1993 from one of the few prestigious universities in Mongolia, the Academy of State and Social Studies. My political economy degree created a strong foundation for my reporting when, after graduation, I started to work as a journalist at Mongolian National Television. The knowledge of political science and of market economies enabled me to understand the rapidly changing policies during the transition period in Mongolia after the collapse of socialism. I traveled to 15 Mongolian provinces, often in the rain or cold, to do my reporting during my years at Mongolian National Television.</p> <p>Because some of the programs that I produced and hosted were popular, I have a good reputation among the people of Mongolia, from regular villagers to policy makers and executives.</p> <p>I worked with National Television’s management team as a Program Director for a year, with Eagle Television, a Mongolian-American Joint venture, for two years as a deputy General Manager, and also was the press assistant to a Mongolian Prime Minister in 1998. I believe that these unique blends of experience have made me a woman with an original point of view. They have given me a broad perspective, good judgment, and the drive to achieve.</p> <p>I have extensive experience in producing from news features to documentary films.<br /> Currently, I’m working in my home-country, Mongolia, as a director of Mongolian National Public Television. Working to help achieve establishing a brand new public television system in Mongolia is the kind of challenge on which I thrive. As Mongolia was in socialist regime for nearly 80 years, National television has been under the state’s strong control until 2005 when the parliament approved a law on public television system. Like I said above, it is a brand new system, and it is facing many difficulties including financial and human resource issues.</p>