Sunday, May 29, 2016

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George Stephanopoulos5/29/2016 Channel 7 KGO San Francisco/3:00 - 4:00 PM/This Week with George Stephanopoulos without George Stephanopoulos on desk to Live Interview with Dianne Feinstein!!  In edition there is no mention to the corker host at the fashion of press to the anchor of that seat. Picture photograph for reference sheet on face shall recognition to the Tums!!!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
George Stephanopoulos
George Stephanopoulos April 2009.jpg
White House Director of Communications
In office
January 20, 1993 – June 7, 1993
PresidentBill Clinton
Preceded byMargaret Tutwiler
Succeeded byMark Gearan
Personal details
BornGeorge Robert Stephanopoulos
February 10, 1961 (age 55)
Fall RiverMassachusettsU.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Alexandra Wentworth (2001–present)
ChildrenElliott Anastasia
Harper Andrea
Alma materColumbia University
Balliol College, Oxford
ReligionGreek Orthodoxy
WebsiteOfficial website
George Robert Stephanopoulos (born February 10, 1961) is an American journalist, a former U.S. Democratic Party political advisor, and chief anchor of ABC News.
Stephanopoulos rose to early prominence as a communications director for the 1992 U.S. presidential campaign of Bill Clinton,[1]subsequently becoming White House Communications Director, then Senior Advisor for Policy and Strategy before departing in December 1996. Today he is chief anchor[2] and chief political correspondent for ABC News, co-anchor of ABC News' Good Morning America, and host of ABC's Sunday morning This Week.[3] He is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.[4]Stephanopoulos is also a common fill-in anchor for ABC World News Tonight with David Muir.

Early life and education[edit]

Stephanopoulos was born in Fall River, Massachusetts, the son of Nickolitsa "Nikki" Gloria (née Chafos) and Robert George Stephanopoulos. His parents are both of Greekdescent.[5] His father is a Greek Orthodox priest and Dean Emeritus of the Archdiocesan Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in New York City,[6] and his mother was for many years director of the national news service of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.[6] In his youth, George also became a follower of his parents' faith and long considered entering the priesthood himself.
Following some time in Purchase, New York, Stephanopoulos moved to the eastern suburbs of ClevelandOhio where he attended Orange High School in Pepper Pike. While at Orange, Stephanopoulos wrestled competitively.
In 1982, he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from Columbia University in New York. Stephanopoulos was the salutatorian of his class and was also awarded a Harry S. Truman Scholarship.[7] At Columbia, he was a sports broadcaster for WKCR-FM, the university's radio station.

Stephanopoulos speaking atVirginia Tech in March 2006
Stephanopoulos' father always wanted his son to become a lawyer, if not a priest. Promising him he would attend law school eventually, George took a job as an aide to Cleveland member of Congress Ed Feighan in Washington, D.C..
Stephanopoulos then attended Balliol College, Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, earning a M.A. in Theology in 1984. He maintains he spent much of his time trying to root his political leanings in the deeper philosophies that he studied there.

Early career[edit]

In 1988, Stephanopoulos worked on the Michael Dukakis 1988 U.S. presidential campaign. He has noted that one of his attractions to this campaign was that Dukakis was a Greek-American liberal from Massachusetts.[8] After this campaign, Stephanopoulos became the "floor man" for Dick GephardtU.S. House of Representatives Majority Leader; he held this position until he joined the Clinton campaign.

Clinton Administration[edit]

Stephanopoulos was, along with David Wilhelm and James Carville, a leading member of Clinton's 1992 U.S. presidential campaign. His role on the campaign is portrayed in the documentary film The War Room (1993).
At the outset of Clinton's presidency, Stephanopoulos served as the de facto press secretary, briefing the press even though Dee Dee Myers was officially the White House Press Secretary.[citation needed] Later, he was moved to Senior Advisor on Policy and Strategy, when Myers began personally conducting the briefings (following several verbal missteps by Stephanopoulos), and Mark Gearan was brought in as the new White House Communications Director. The move was largely viewed as a rebuke to Stephanopoulos's handling of public relations during the first six months of the Clinton administration.[by whom?][citation needed]
On February 25, 1994, Stephanopoulos and Harold Ickes had a conference call with Roger Altman to discuss the Resolution Trust Corporation's choice of Republican lawyer Jay Stephens to head the Madison Guaranty investigation, that later turned into the Whitewater controversy.[9]
Stephanopoulos resigned from the Clinton administration shortly after Clinton was re-elected in 1996.[10]
His memoirAll Too Human: A Political Education (1999), was published after he left the White House during Clinton's second term. It quickly became a number-one bestseller onThe New York Times Best Seller list.[11] In the book, Stephanopoulos spoke of his depression and how his face broke out into hives due to the pressures of conveying the Clinton White House message. Clinton referred to the book in his autobiography, My Life, apologizing for what he felt in retrospect to be excessive demands placed on the young staffer.
Stephanopoulos's book covers his time with Clinton from the day he met him in September 1991, to the day Stephanopoulos left the White House in December 1996, through two presidential campaigns and four years in the White House. Stephanopoulos describes Clinton in the book as a "complicated man responding to the pressures and pleasures of public life in ways I found both awesome and appalling".[12]
Stephanopoulos canceled a seminar he had previously committed to teach at Columbia University to promote the book.[13]

Real estate loan controversy[edit]

In 1994, columnist Jack Anderson reported that Stephanopoulos sealed an $835,000 commercial real estate deal consisting of a two-story apartment, including an eyewear retailer, with a below-market loan rate from a bank owned by Hugh McColl, who had been called by President Clinton "the most enlightened banker in America". A NationsBank commercial loan officer said that this loan did "not fit our product matrix" as banks typically only offer such loans for customers with deep pockets and on a short-term adjustable rate basis. Stephanopoulos's real estate agent explained that "nobody making $125,000 could qualify for the property without the commercial property (lease)". One former senior bank regulator told Anderson that, "If his name were George Smith, and he didn't work in the White House, this loan wouldn't have gotten made."[14]
Regarding the controversy, NationsBank stated, "The loan described by Jack Anderson as a commercial loan to George Stephanopoulos was, in fact, a residential mortgage loan. At the time the loan commitment was made, Mr. Anderson (or his imaginary 'George Smith' who 'doesn't work in the White House') could have walked into any NationsBank Mortgage Company office in the D.C. area and received the same excellent rate and term for the same deal."[15]
However, Stephanopoulos's realtor states that he would not have qualified for the loan without the commercial property rent. One NationsBank source states that the issuance of a residential loan on mixed-use properties is such a rarity that it was not even addressed in the "NationsBank Mortgage Corporation's Program Summary" or its "Credit Policy Manual". A NationsBank underwriting memo revealed that one of the three restrictions for mixed-use properties is that "the borrower must be the owner of the business entity". The source claims that NationsBank told the listing agent that, "We're not (interested in mixed-use properties), but we do have an appetite for this particular loan." NationsBank's primary regulator at the time was Comptroller of the Currency Eugene Ludwig, a Rhodes scholar who attended Yale Law School with President Clinton, and who had been asked to investigate NationsBank by Democratic congressmen Henry B. Gonzalez and John Dingell.[16]

ABC News[edit]

After leaving the White House at the end of Clinton's first term, Stephanopoulos became a political analyst for ABC News, and served as a correspondent on This WeekABC'sSunday morning public affairs program; World News Tonight, the evening news broadcast; Good Morning America, the morning news program; along with other various special broadcasts.

2002–2009: ABC's This Week[edit]


Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton talk with George Stephanopoulos in December 2009 inWashington, D.C..
In September 2002, Stephanopoulos became host of This Week, and ABC News officially named him "Chief Washington Correspondent" in December 2005.[17] The program's title added the new host's name.
When named to the position, Stephanopoulos was a relative newcomer to the show, usurping longtime panelists and short-term co-hostsSam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts who, for a few years, briefly replaced the longtime original host, David Brinkley.
Opinion columnist and part-time ABC News commentator George Will was the only remaining member of the original This Week panel from the Brinkley days to participate consistently in the weekly show until 2013; Donaldson and Roberts still appear on the program on a very limited basis. Fareed Zakaria was a weekly panelist during the first two years of Stephanopoulos' tenure, broadening the show with his perspective on world and Middle Eastern issues.

This Week ratings[edit]

ABC News executives reportedly offered Ted Koppel, former Nightline anchor, the This Week host job in 2005 after the program's ratings had become a regular third-, fourth-, and sometimes fifth-place finish after competitors NBC, CBS, Fox, and syndicated programs.[18]However, This Week beat Meet the Press on January 11, 2009, when Stephanopoulos interviewed president-elect Barack Obama.[19]
In February 2009, the gap between NBC's Meet the Press and its competitors – CBS' Face the Nation and ABC's This Week – began closing. Meet the Press posted its lowest ratings since NBC's David Gregory became moderator in early February, with the show airing Sunday, February 1, averaging just 3.9 million viewers. Face the Nation averaged 3.33 million total viewers, while This Week came in just behind with 3.32 million total viewers.

2008 U.S. presidential debate[edit]

On April 16, 2008, Stephanopoulos co-moderated, with Charles Gibson, the twenty-first, and ultimately final, Democratic Party presidential debate between Illinois Senator Barack Obama and New York Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton for the 2008 election cycle. While the debate received record ratings, the co-moderators were heavily criticized for focusing most of the first hour of the debate on controversies that occurred during the campaign rather than issues such as the economy and the Iraq War. Stephanopoulos acknowledged the legitimacy of the concerns over the order of the questions,[20] but said they were issues in the campaign that had not been covered in previous debates.[21]

2009–present: Good Morning America and return to This Week[edit]


Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen is interviewed byGood Morning America's Stephanopoulos.
In December 2009, ABC News president David Westin offered Stephanopoulos Diane Sawyer's job on Good Morning America after Sawyer was named anchor of World News. Stephanopoulos accepted the new position and began co-anchoring GMA on December 14, 2009. Stephanopoulos announced on January 10, 2010, that that would be his last broadcast as the permanent host of This Week. However, after his successor, Christiane Amanpour, left the show amid sagging ratings, it was announced that Stephanopoulos would return as host of This Week in December 2011.
Stephanopoulos was one of the substitute anchors for Sawyer on nights when she is away on assignment or unavailable.

2012 Republican debate moderator[edit]

On January 7, 2012, Stephanopoulos was the co-moderator of a debate among Mitt RomneyRon Paul and Rick Santorum. During the debate, Stephanopoulos repeatedly asked Romney whether the former Massachusetts governor believes the U.S. Supreme Court should overturn a 1965 ruling that a constitutional right to privacy bars states from banning contraception. During the debate, Romney said it was a preposterous question.[22] During the fall presidential campaign, the Obama campaign used the question and answer to intimate there was a political War on Women.

2014–present: ABC News Chief Anchor[edit]

Following Diane Sawyer's departure from World News at the end of August 2014, Stephanopoulos became the Chief Anchor at ABC News while retaining his current roles onGMA and This Week. Stephanopoulos is now the lead anchor for coverage of breaking news and major special events.[2] Stephanopoulos is the only chief anchor of a U.S. network news division not to anchor or serve as managing editor of the evening newscast (those duties were taken over by David Muir).

Online[edit]

During the 2008 presidential election campaign, Stephanopoulos launched a blog George's Bottom Line on the website of ABC News.[23] Stephanopoulos blogs about political news and analysis from Washington.[24]
In October 2008, Stephanopoulos began posting updates to Twitter, a social-networking website. He also launched a public profile page on Facebook.[25]

Clinton Foundation charity donations and conflict of interest as a journalist[edit]

Stephanopoulos donated $25,000 in 2012, 2013, and 2014, a total of $75,000, to the Clinton Foundation, but did not disclose the donations to ABC News, his employer, or to his viewers.[26] Stephanopoulos failed to reveal the donations even on April 26, 2015, while interviewing Peter Schweizer, the author of Clinton Cash, a book which alleges that donations to the Foundation influenced some of Hillary Clinton's actions as Secretary of State.[26] After exposure of the donations by Politico on May 14, 2015, Stephanopoulos apologized and admitted he should have disclosed the donations to ABC News and its viewers.[26][27] The story was broken by The Washington Free Beacon, which had aggressively questioned ABC News regarding the matter.[28] The donations had been reported by the Clinton Foundation, which Stephanopoulos had considered sufficient, a reliance ABC News characterized as "an honest mistake."[27]
Based on Stephanopoulos' donations to The Clinton Foundation charity and his behavior during prior interviews and presidential debates, Republican party leaders and candidates expressed their distrust, and called for him to be banned from moderating 2016 Presidential debates, due to bias and conflict of interest.[28][29] He agreed to drop out as a moderator of the scheduled February 2016 Republican Presidential primary debate.[30]
In the month previous to his revelation, Stephanopoulos told Jon Stewart on The Daily Show that when money is given to the Clinton Foundation "everybody" knows there's "a hope that that's going to lead to something, and that's what you have to be careful of."[30]

In popular culture[edit]

Stephanopoulos was the inspiration for the character of Henry Burton in Joe Klein's novel Primary Colors (1996). Burton was subsequently portrayed by Adrian Lester in the 1998 film adaptation.
Michael J. Fox's character, Lewis Rothschild, in the film The American President (1995), written by Aaron Sorkin was modeled after Stephanopoulos. He was also used by Sorkin as the model for Rob Lowe's character, Sam Seaborn, on the television drama series The West Wing.[citation needed] According to Stephanopoulos, his role in the Clinton administration was more like Bradley Whitford's character Josh Lyman than Seaborn or Rothschild.[31]
Stephanopoulos also appeared as himself in the first season of Spin City starring Michael J. Fox in an episode entitled "An Affair to Remember". Fox's Deputy-Mayor character was partially inspired by Stephanopoulos, but this is turned around for comedic effect with Fox commenting at the end of the episode "I don't know what the big deal with that guy is anyway... all he does is copy from me".
In an episode of the first season of the TV series Friends titled The One With George Stephanopoulos, the characters of Monica GellerRachel Green, and Phoebe Buffay realize that Stephanopoulos is staying in an apartment across the street from theirs and, being attracted to him, they proceed to spy on him throughout most of the night.
In an episode of the animated TV series American Dad! titled "Iced, Iced Babies", Francine breaks into a sperm bank in pursuit of injecting herself with the first sample she finds. The first vial she grabbed was Stephanopoulos' and threatened Stan she would impregnate herself using a turkey baster. Stan countered her saying he had "only the third-best rated talk show".
Stephanopoulos appeared in the Pawn Stars episode "Buy the Book", where he bought a first edition of Ernest Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls for $675 after haggling with owner Rick Harrison.
Stephanopoulos returned to his alma mater, Columbia University, in 2003, serving as the keynote speaker at Columbia College's Class Day.[32]
In May 2007, he received an Honorary Doctor of Laws from St. John's University in New York City.
In 2013, Stephanopoulos played himself in House of Cards[33] and in 2014 he played himself in an episode of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..[34]

Personal life[edit]

He married Alexandra Wentworth,[35] an actress, comedian, and writer, in 2001 at the Archdiocesan Cathedral of the Holy Trinity on New York's Upper East Side.[36] The couple have two daughters: Elliott Anastasia Stephanopoulos[6] and Harper Andrea Stephanopoulos.[6] The family lives in Manhattan.
In 1995, after a collision with a parked vehicle as he was pulling out of a parking space in front of a restaurant in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C.,[37]Stephanopoulos was arrested and charged with leaving the scene of an accident and driving with an expired license and license plates. The charge of leaving the scene of an accident was subsequently dropped.[citation needed]
Along with a number of other notable Greek Americans, he is a founding member of The Next Generation Initiative, a leadership program aimed at getting students involved in public affairs.
Stephanopoulos was introduced to Transcendental Meditation by Jerry Seinfeld. Conducting an interview on Good Morning America, he said, “We’re all here because we all have something in common—we all practice Transcendental Meditation. … I think that people don’t really understand exactly what it is and what a difference it has made in people’s lives.”[38]

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