Saturday, July 21, 2007

Will the Internet kill the TV star?


Will Mirthala Salinas affair with Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's spell trouble for her job?

Excerpts of the text of the Los Angeles Times story are below:

Mirthala Salinas was a rising star at one of Los Angeles' premier Spanish-language television stations before she came to be known as the other woman in Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's life.

A respected and aggressive journalist, she anchored a newscast that won two local Emmy Awards at KVEA-TV Channel 52 during her 10 years at the Telemundo station. She earned a Golden Mike broadcasting award as well.

"She was very smart and always had her finger on the pulse of the community," said one former Telemundo executive, who recalled the 35-year-old newscaster as poised and articulate.

Now, Salinas' career hangs in the balance as Telemundo executives decide as early as Monday whether to fire her for having a romantic relationship with Villaraigosa while she was covering him as a political reporter.

Salinas' relationship with Villaraigosa had long been an open secret in Telemundo's Burbank newsroom, although it is unclear whether her colleagues were also aware she had previously dated Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez (D-Los Angeles) and former City Council President Alex Padilla, now a state senator.

The executives who are reviewing her case want to know whether Salinas, who is on paid leave, fully disclosed the nature of her relationship with Villaraigosa. They are also examining how station managers handled the situation.

In addition, they are investigating the decision that Salinas would deliver the June 8 news of Villaraigosa's separation from his wife, Corina, when station managers were aware that she had been part of the story, according to a person familiar with the probe. They also want to know whether Salinas presented viewers any other news about the mayor after she was taken off the political beat about 11 months ago.

Salinas, a native of Mexico who broke into journalism 17 years ago as a radio reporter in Phoenix, did not return phone calls seeking comment. But in a statement issued when Telemundo placed her on leave July 5, she voiced confidence that the internal review would exonerate her.

Revelations about her relationship with Villaraigosa — and the conflict of interest it raised for her — have damaged what many viewed as a stellar television career that began in 1993 at KTVW-TV Channel 33, a Univision affiliate in Phoenix.

That's where Salinas came to the attention of Carlos Jurado, then the station's newly appointed news director.

Though Salinas was working as a part-time reporter while attending college, Jurado said he saw immense potential in her presence and delivery. She was slender, beautiful, bilingual and, above all, hardworking and hard-charging.

"She just projected really well in front of the camera," Jurado recalled. "She was young, but she didn't look like a rookie."

Jurado said he decided to take a chance on the newcomer and give Salinas a shot as co-anchor of the evening news. Response from viewers was immediate.

"People liked her," he said.

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