Rie Oh
Rie Oh | |
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王理恵 | |
Born | Wáng Lĭhuì 7 March 1970 |
Alma mater | Aoyama Gakuin University |
Career | |
Show | Ō Rie no surō no kibun de |
Station(s) | RKB Radio |
Time slot | 17:35-17:45 (Saturdays) |
Style | Radio and Television presenter |
Rie Oh | |||
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Chinese name | |||
Chinese | 王理恵 | ||
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Japanese name | |||
Kanji | 王理恵 | ||
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Rie Oh (王 理恵, Ō Rie, born March 7, 1970, in Tokyo, Japan) is a TV sportscaster and presenter on the J-Wave radio station in Japan.[1]
Oh is the second daughter of former baseball player and Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks team manager Sadaharu Oh.[1] She graduated from Aoyama Gakuin University in Tokyo,[2] and is also qualified as a "Junior vegetable and fruit meister" or "Vegetable sommelier".[2][3] She worked for the Hakuhodo advertising agency before moving to TV in 1996.[3]
Rie Oh holds Taiwanese citizenship because her father did not want his daughters to become naturalized Japanese, although neither could speak Chinese.[4][full citation needed]
Personal life[]
Previously married twice, Oh was engaged to marry psychiatrist Masaki Honda in January 2008,[5] but subsequently broke off the engagement.[6] Honda was the personal doctor to sumo yokozuna Asashoryu.[5]
TV commercials[]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b J-Wave profile Retrieved 14 December 2009. (in Japanese)
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Profile on Sky Corporation website Retrieved 14 December 2009 (in Japanese)
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Third Time Lucky for Oh Rie" (10 December 2007). Retrieved 14 December 2009 (in English)
- ^ 《百年目の帰郷》written by 鈴木洋史(1998)
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Rie Oh engaged to Asashoryu's doctor" (8 December 2007). Retrieved 14 December 2009 (in English)
- ^ "Rie Oh reveals engagement has been broken off" (10 April 2008). Retrieved 14 December 2009 (in English)
- ^ Ensuiko Sugar Refining website Retrieved 14 December 2009 (in Japanese)
External links[]
- Official website (in Japanese)
- Official blog (in Japanese)
- Aoyama Gakuin University alumni
- 1970 births
- Living people
- Japanese sports announcers
- Taiwanese expatriates in Japan