Kasia Madera

Katarzyna "Kasia" Madera (born 4 October 1974) is a British journalist and television news presenter. She fronts mainly evening and overnight bulletins on BBC One, the BBC News Channel and BBC World News, presenting the Newsday strand on Friday from London with Sharanjit Leyl in Singapore and World News Today on Friday.

In 2013 she became one of the main presenters of World News Today broadcast on BBC Four, BBC World News and the BBC News Channel, and then its deputy presenter following the departure of Zeinab Badawi. She is a relief presenter on the BBC News Channel, and the BBC News at One.

Early life and education
Madera was born in Paddington, London on 4 October 1974 to Polish parents, her father was born in Lviv (then part of Poland, now located in western Ukraine); he died when she was six months old. She is an only child. She graduated from Queen Mary & Westfield, University of London, with a 2:1 in French and politics.

Career
After joining the BBC graduate programme in 2002, she initially presented BBC Three's youth-oriented news bulletin 60 Seconds. She then presented the round-up of the day's entertainment and celebrity news in E24.

Formally joining the BBC News Channel as a news presenter, she presented as a regular stand-in, alongside her roles on Newsday and World News Today. She worked for BBC News and BBC World News as the news anchor of the evening and overnight bulletins.. Madera presented the most-watched BBC One, the BBC News Channel and BBC World News simulcast following the opening ceremony of London 2012 Olympics when the Channel achieved its highest ever viewing figures. Also the overnight coverage of The Death of Nelson Mandela.

Madera speaks Polish, and as a result reported for the BBC News Channel on the 2007 Polish parliamentary election and again in 2015, 2014 European Elections, and the 2010 Polish Air Force Tu-154 crash in Russia, which killed 96 people including Polish President Lech Kaczyński. She also took over from Huw Edwards after the death of Nelson Mandela presenting overnight coverage on BBC One, BBC World News, the BBC News Channel and PBS.

On 2 February 2023, it was confirmed that Madera – along with many other presenters of the domestic BBC News Channel – would lose their presenting roles as part of the BBC's relaunched news channel. In May 2024 Madera and three other presenters started legal action against the BBC on the grounds of sex and age discrimination and equal pay.

In 2024 she played a fictional version of herself as a state news presenter in HBO series The Regime. On 12th May 2024, Madera presented her first bulletins in over a year on the BBC News Channel. She also returned to present the successor to World News Today, 'The World Today with Maryam Moshiri' while Moshiri was temporarily reassigned during the 2024 UK General Election and fellow former World News Today presenter Nancy Kacungira was on maternity leave.

Personal life
Madera is married with two sons. She lives in Hammersmith, West London.