Her television career began in 1983 with brief stops at KRDO-TV in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and then KEYT-TV in Santa Barbara, California. In 1985 she joined KTLA in Los Angeles as a reporter and weekend anchor.[3] She was recommended to KTLA by actor Fess Parker, who lived in the Santa Barbara area and was a friend of KTLA's news managing director at the time.[7] Two years later Fernandez moved to CBS-ownedWBBM-TV in Chicago, and in 1989 to WCIX CBS's newly owned station in Miami. In 1988 she garnered some controversy in Chicago when she went boating with John Cappas, a drug dealer being sought by authorities, then accompanied him to his arrest by federal agents.[8][9]
She gained her first national news job in October 1991 for CBS News, when she moved to New York City and became a correspondent and back-up anchor for the morning, evening, and weekend news broadcasts.[3] She later moved to NBC, where she anchored Weekend Today and the Sunday edition of NBC Nightly News, and filled in for Brian Williams on the Saturday edition, and undertook various special reporting assignments in the U.S. and elsewhere.[10] During this period of national news coverage, Fernández reported on the crisis from Cuban immigration, unrest in Haiti, the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama, the trial of the conspirators from the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and a scud missile attack while covering the Persian Gulf War. She was invited to make a rare interview of Fidel Castro, then president of Cuba.[11]
From 1996 to 1999, Fernández was the co-host for Access Hollywood, an entertainment news program on NBC. She then co-hosted the This Week in History show on the History Channel.[12] In October 2001, she returned to Los Angeles and rejoined KTLA.[13] She left this position in August 2003 to pursue a variety of special projects, including making a movie and writing children's books. In 2004, her book titled Gigi and the Birthday Ring was published through the Laredo Publishing Company.[14]
She is president of Skinny Hippo Productions, her own production company, and is co-president of F Squared Productions, where she is a developer of film and television projects. Giselle now works for Charter Communications' Spectrum News 1 Southern California.[15][16]
Fernandez anchored Your Morning on Spectrum News 1 for six years since the launch of the channel in 2018. In August of 2024, Fernandez moved to the afternoon slot with a new three hour program called Rush Hour. [17] She continues to host the Emmy-award winning weekly series LA Stories.
Awards
Fernández has won five Emmy Awards for journalism.[10] The Los Angeles Press Club gave Fernandez The President's Award for Impact on Media in 2023.[18] She is a member of the Smithsonian National Board for Latino Initiatives and has worked on the board of trustees of the Children's Hospital Los Angeles.[19] In 2006, she was named the year's Outstanding Philanthropist by the Association of Fundraising Professionals.[20]
a "That core journalistic ethic is something the five-time Emmy Award winner says she mastered at Sac State under the tutelage of government and journalism professor Bill Dorman." — ¶ 2.
b "Soon after graduating, Fernandez-Farrand focused on covering international affairs including interviewing Fidel Castro about Cuba's economic crisis and its U.S. relations. — ¶ 3.
^"Giselle Fernandez". Sac State Magazine. California State University, Sacramento. Fall 2006. Archived from the original on 2008-05-10. Retrieved 2009-08-10.