Background
Zabludovsky was born in 1928 in Mexico City to Polish Jewish immigrants.
journalist writer news presenter
Zabludovsky was born in 1928 in Mexico City to Polish Jewish immigrants.
National Autonomous University of Mexico.
He was the first anchorman in Mexican television and his television news program, 24 Horas (24 Hours) was for decades the most important in the country. He was the brother of Abraham Zabludovsky (1924-2003), a famous architect. Zabludovsky was a well known anchor man hosting 24 Horas, the main news program on the popular Televisa network between 1970 and 1998.
Owing to the nonconfrontational approach of the network, the programme was perceived as partisan and supportive of the government.
In 1998, citing a desire to cut down his workload and ill-health, he retired from presenting 24 Horas, which also came to an end with his departure, marking the end of an era in Mexican journalism. After leaving 24 Horas, Zabludovsky worked on special newscasts and documentaries.
During his career at Televisa, Zabludovsky covered several important episodes. He was one of few Mexican reporters in Cuba the day Fidel Castro entered Havana in 1959 during the overthrow of the Batista dictatorship and reported from his car phone (at that time these car phones were the only mobile phones in Mexico and were a luxury item), and reported on the 1985 earthquake that destroyed several parts of Mexico City.
However, there was criticism of his coverage of presidential elections in 1988 and 1994, when he favored the candidate of the government party to the exclusion of opposition contenders.
He interviewed many notable people, including President Ernesto Zedillo, Salvador Dalí and María Félix. Eighteen months after leaving television, he began a radio newscast on a new station, Louisiana 69 at Grupo Radio Centro, with the pledge of being more critical "..in agreement with the new Mexico in which we are living.". Beginning on March 3, 2004, the newscast was also broadcast on Radio Red Department of Administration and Management and Radio Red FM. Zabludovsky hosted the newscast until June 22, 2015, being hospitalized shortly after.
From 2007 until 2015, he also wrote "Bucareli", a weekly column for Mexican nationwide newspaper El Universal.
He is the subject of Molotov"s song Quebec Number Te Haga Bobo Jacobo (Don"t let Jacobo make a fool out of you), where he is accused of receiving bribes from Carlos Salinas and negotiating the news with the government. In a 2013 interview, Zabludovsky said about the song: "I have never heard it, I don"t know if it"s offensive, but if it was, they have the right to express what they think.".
Zabludovsky died of a stroke caused by dehydration at the age of 87 in Mexico City on the morning of July 2, 2015. He was buried at Mexico City"s Israelite (Jewish) Cemetery that afternoon.