Ralph Delly: Diferans ant vèsyon yo

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A familiar face and name to Haitian television viewers, listeners, and readers Ralph Delly is one of the most preeminent Haitians in entertainment journalism. A CIBL , Espace FM, Metropole correspondent, Dellys' award-wining reporting has appeared on New York Newsday, Caribbean Globe, and Visions Caraïbes. In addition to national and international events, Ralph Delly has reported extensively on the Haitian Music Industry and on the Haitian-American community.
== Byografi ==
 
*Dat enpòtan yo
The son of Alain Delly, conductor and maestro of National Orchestra of Haiti, Ralph Delly spent one year at INAGHEI and considered applying to Law School, but instead decided to move to Paris where he studied Communications at Université Paris X in Nanterre, and later moved to New York to pursue his studies in Corporate Cable Communications at BMCC (Borough of Manhattan Community College) and CFV (Communications Film & Video) at City College of New York. Ralph Delly also graduated from Carlos Albizu University of Miami and received his degree in Child Psychology. He began his working life in the media at Le Nouvelliste by contributing to a column called “Generation 2004”, in magazine and cultural group, Cercle des Jeunes Haïtien (CJH) where he was in charge of the entertainment division, which rapidly became the group's biggest operation through successful art exhibitions, conferences, and music concerts throughout Haiti.
 
Ralph gives much of the credit for his success to his parents, who supported their 9 children and provided a strong example of what it means to be determined and to work hard. By his middle-school years, his dreams were sharply divided between career in music, Law, or Journalism. With his high-school diploma in hand, he made his choice and set out to snag a job at different radio stations. Until opportunity came knocking, he supported himself with jobs as a DJ. While employed by Radio Metropole in Port-au-Prince, he took part in a number of cultural events. One year before graduating from high school, he earned his first paycheck from working nightshift at Radio Metropole and hosting “Metropole by Night”.
 
After spending several years as a reporter and DJ with Radio Port-au-Prince and Radio Metropole and as correspondent in Haiti for many foreign networks, he became a reporter and a DJ for Echo de La Metropole, an independent radio show on 107.5 FM WNWK in New York City. For six years from 1991 to 1997, he was the Program Director and Talk Show host at Radio Soleil d’Haïti and New York editor for The Caribbean Globe. He also wrote for the Little Haiti Times. Ralph Delly co-produced and hosted “Boulevard des Artistes”, a popular TV show in New York, where he was often referred to by the musicians as "the artists’ show”.
 
Later, Ralph was chosen to co-host “Vide Yo ak Video” and challenging every single show on Haitian television. He has contributed to the advancement of Haitian music whether through his articles in Boyo Magazine, Le Floridien, Caraïbes Express, Showbiz Magazine, Pyramide Magazine, Spotlight Magazine, and the Haitian Times or on his radio shows.
 
Ralph Delly made his name and career by reporting on the Haitian Music Industry. He won several Prizes for multiple stories and became one of the most famous entertainment journalists in the Haitian Community. He reported for The Haitian Times, creating more controversy with reports and gossips on his popular column “The Delly Dish”. Ralph has helped and worked with almost every band and artist of the so-called “new generation”. He served as Press Attaché and PR for Zin for about ten years, work with Lakol, Phantoms, Zenglen, Sokute, Jam, See Well, 509, just to name a few.
 
Ralph Delly is truly an international entertainment journalist and has reported from more than 20 countries, mainly in the fields of show business, for numerous radio stations and publications, and has headed up various magazine and newspaper launches in the Diapora. He has also served as the spokesperson for Compas Festival and Haitian Independence Festival.
 
He became media editor and travelled widely on new developments in the media and the music industry, taking a special interest in Haitian music. He was one of the first Haitian journalists to research and present a conference about Haitian music in Paris in 1996.
 
== Zèv li yo ==