- Donald Rumsfeld
Donald Henry Rumsfeld (born July 9 1932) is a U.S. politician and businessman, who was the 13th Secretary of Defense under President Gerald Ford from 1975 to 1977, and the 21st Secretary of Defense under President George W. Bush from 2001 to 2006. He is both the youngest (43 years old) and the oldest (74 years old) person to have held the position, as well as the only person to have held the position for two non-consecutive terms, and the second longest serving, …
- Kyra Phillips
Kyra Phillips (b. 1968) is an American news anchor for CNN, where she has been reporting since October 1999. Phillips co-anchors the afternoon edition of "CNN Newsroom" with Don Lemon.
- Ted Turner
Robert Edward Turner III (born in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American media mogul and philanthropist. As a businessman, he is best known as the founder of the cable television network CNN, the first dedicated 24-hour cable news channel. In addition to CNN, he founded WTBS, which pioneered the superstation concept in cable television. As a philanthropist, he is well known for his $1 billion pledge to the United Nations donated through his United Nations Foundation.
- Benazir Bhutto
She was elected co-chairwoman of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) along with her mother, and when free elections were finally held in 1988, she herself became Prime Minister. At 35, she was one of the youngest chief executives in the world, and the first woman to serve as prime minister in an Islamic country.
- Daryn Kagan
Daryn A. Kagan (born January 26, 1963) is the creator and host of DarynKagan.com. Before launching her web site, Kagan was the host of the CNN news show "CNN Live Today" shown from 10am-12pm Eastern Time. Based in Atlanta, Georgia, she was a news anchor and reporter with CNN from 1994 to 2006. Kagan had been described by the Los Angeles Times as a "CNN mainstay."
- Richard Quest
Richard Austin Quest is a British news anchor based in London on the Cable News Network edition CNN International. Quest studied Law at the University of Leeds, taking his degree in 1985, and was called to the Bar. He had already gained broadcast experience when he spent the 1983–84 academic year at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. As news director for campus radio station WRVU, …
- Bernard Shaw
Bernard Shaw (born May 22, 1940 in Chicago, Illinois) was a leading news anchor for CNN from 1980 to his retirement in 2001. He attended the University of Illinois at Chicago from 1963 to 1968. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps. Shaw is widely remembered for the question he posed to Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Michael Dukakis at his second Presidential debate with George H. W. Bush during the 1988 election, which Shaw was moderating.
- Lou Waters
Lou Waters was one of the original anchors of Cable News Network when it first aired in the summer of 1980. He remained one of the network's primary anchors until September 2001, adding to a journalism career spanning nearly 40 years. For much of his tenure with the network, Waters anchored CNN Today, with Natalie Allen. Additionally, he co-anchored Early Prime and hosted special editions, including "Coming of Age", a series on aging in American society.
- Ehud Olmert
Ehud Olmert ; born September 30, 1945) is the 12th and current Prime Minister of Israel. Olmert became Prime Minister on April 14, 2006 but had been exercising the powers of the office since they were transferred to him on January 4, 2006 after Ariel Sharon suffered a severe hemorrhagic stroke. Olmert's title for that period was Acting Prime Minister. Olmert has previously been the Vice Prime Minister of Israel, Finance minister, Minister of Industry, Trade and Labor, …
- Tom Johnson
Wyatt Thomas ("Tom") Johnson is an American journalist and media executive, best known for serving as president of Cable News Network (CNN) during the 1990s and, before that, as publisher of the "Los Angeles Times" newspaper. Johnson was born in Macon, Georgia and graduated from Lanier High School. While in high school, he began working at the "Macon Telegraph" newspaper.
- Deval Patrick
Deval Laurdine Patrick (born July 31, 1956) is an American politician and the current Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. On November 7, 2006, Patrick became the first African American elected governor of Massachusetts and the second in United States history. He took office on January 4, 2007. Prior to entering politics, Patrick worked as an attorney and businessman.
- Stuart Rothenberg
Stuart Rothenberg is the editor and publisher of The Rothenberg Political Report, a Washington-based, biweekly, non-partisan newsletter that reports on and analyzes the United States Presidential, House, Senatorial, and Gubernatorial elections and current political developments. Rothenberg holds a B.A. from Colby College in Waterville, Maine, and a Ph.D. from the University of Connecticut. He has taught political science at Bucknell University Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, …
- Reese Schonfeld
Reese Schonfeld is a television journalist and co-founder of CNN and the Food Network. He began his career with United Press Movietone News in 1956, advancing to managing editor before becoming Vice President of United Press International Television News. In 1975, Schonfeld founded the Independent Television News Association, the first satellite-delivered television news service.
- Catherine Callaway
Catherine Callaway is a news anchor for the Cable News Network (CNN). In late 2005, she was listed as a student news anchor, but also covers other news. She is a "fill-in" news anchor for Headline News and CNN news (U.S). As of January 31, 2006, her bio does not appear on CNN.com, but she was still reporting news during the same month. As of March 2006, she's been occasionally substituting on both weekdays and weekends.
- Jim Gilchrist
Jim Gilchrist, founder of the anti-immigrant Minuteman Project, told CNSNews.com that there is a “silent war” consisting of “U.S. residents” that “have been killed in action” by “illegal aliens”: While the mainstream media is focused on the Iraq war, this ongoing silent war is "taking its toll in lives and domestic tranquility," said Jim Gilchrist, founder of the Minuteman Project.
- Evan Thomas
Evan Thomas is an American journalist and author. A graduate of Phillips Andover, Harvard University and the University of Virginia School of Law, since 1991 he has been the Assistant Managing Editor at "Newsweek". From 1986-1996, he was Newsweek's Washington bureau chief. He has won numerous journalism awards, including a National Magazine Award in 1998 for NEWSWEEK’s coverage of the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
- Daniel Schorr
Daniel Schorr, NPR Biography Senior News Analyst
- Rowland Evans
Rowland Evans, Jr. (April 28, 1921 - March 23,2001) was an American journalist. He was known best for his decades-long syndicated column and television partnership with Robert Novak, a partnership that endured, if only by way of a joint subscription newsletter, until Evans's death. Born in Whitemarsh Township, Pennsylvania, Evans attended Yale University briefly, but left to join the United States Marines and saw action in the Solomon Islands during World War II.
- David Alger
David Alger born as David Dewey Alger (December 15, 1943-September 11 2001) was a financial services executive who died in the September 11th World Trade Center attacks. He rose from being the director of research in 1971, to become CEO and chief investment officer of Fred Alger Management, one of the largest US money management firms. He graduated from Harvard, and earned his MBA from the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business in 1966.
- Mark Strauss
Mark Strauss is a U.S. journalist. He has recently become editor of the "Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists". He was senior editor of the bimonthly magazine "Foreign Policy", which he had worked for since 1997. He has contributed articles to "Slate", the "Chronicle of Higher Education", "The Washington Post", "The New Republic", "The Spectator", the "Brown Journal of World Affairs", and "Washington Monthly".
- Kim Komando
Currently America's most popular computer/digital lifestyle expert, her weekly talk radio show is heard (via her own network) on over 450 stations. In addition, she does a daily "tip of the day" radio feature heard five days a week; has written seven successful books about life in the digital age; and still authors a widely syndicated newspaper column. Some 4.6 million people receive her tips by e-mail weekly.
- Cécilia Sarkozy
Cécilia Sarkozy (born as Cecilia María Sara Isabel Ciganer, later Ciganer-Albéniz, born November 12, 1957 in Boulogne-Billancourt) is the wife of French president Nicolas Sarkozy.
- Maurizio Cocciolone
Maurizio Cocciolone (born 22 September 1960 in L'Aquila, Abruzzo, Italy) is an Italian Air Force officer, who served with UN Coalition forces and was a prisoner of war during the Gulf War. He was born in L'Aquila, Abruzzo. On the eve of the Operation Desert Storm the Italian government deployed eight Tornado Fighter-bombers on the Gulf Theatre of Operations. On January 16, 1991, coalition forces began concentrated air strikes on Iraqi military targets in Iraq and Kuwait.
- Jim Bohannon
A 35 year broadcasting veteran, Bohannon began his career in 1960 at his hometown station, KLWT-AM, Lebanon, MO. After college at Southwest Missouri State University in Springfield and service in the U.S. Army, he moved to Washington where he worked at Easy Listening WGAY-FM and News-Talkers WTOP-AM and WWRC-AM. He later moved to Chicago in 1980 where he worked as a morning anchor at WCFL-FM Radio and as a freelance reporter for Cable News Network.
- Lily McBeth
Lily B. McBeth (born 1934) is an American transgender teacher from Tuckerton, New Jersey. She was born William B. McBeth and as part of her transition underwent sex reassignment surgery in 2005. She has three grown children from a previous marriage of 33 years. She is a retired medical sales & marketing executive She was an active surfer, sailor, skier and duck hunter. As former soldier she served in the U.S. Army as a Senior Medical Corpsman with a tour duty in Alasks.
- Richard Robb
Richard "Richie" Robb is a politician in West Virginia who gained notoriety during the 2004 United States Presidential Election. Robb has been mayor of South Charleston, West Virginia since 1976, making him the state's longest serving mayor. He first ventured into statewide politics in the unpaid chairman of the state Republican Party for a brief period in the early 1990s.
- Gloria Anne Borger
Gloria Anne Borger (born 1952) [ 1 ] is a political pundit, American journalist , and columnist . Borger is presently a contributing editor and columnist for US News and World Report magazine and a Senior Political Analyst at CNN. She was formerly the National Political Correspondent for CBS News . Since joining CNN in 2007, she has frequently been seen covering the 2008 campaign trail.
- Ali Velshi
Ali Velshi is the chief business correspondent for CNN based in New York and can be seen weekly on the segment Your $$$$$. He is the host of the Ali Velshi Show, a weekly call-in radio program, and he's also a contributor and host for Issue #1, CNN's news coverage of issues important to viewers. In addition, Velshi regularly fields calls for the 'Help Line' on the Headline News, as well as hosting a CNN podcast entitled, "The Ali V Podcast."
- Mike Nifong
We will never know why former Durham District Attorney Mike Nifong was so aggressive in prosecuting the Duke Lacrosse rape case. Did he have a sincere belief that the three defendants were guilty or was he simply a political opportunist? Many will debate this question for a long time, but I believe it is something of a mute point. Whatever his secret motives may have been, his public actions speak for themselves and they were inexcusable.
- Judy Fortin
Judy Fortin is a weekend anchor for CNN Headline News, based in Atlanta, where she can be seen regularly on Saturdays and Sundays from noon until 6 p.m. She also is a weekday CNN news correspondent, in which she goes on assignment to report breaking news events. She joined the CNN News Group in 1990 as a national correspondent for CNN Newsource, and she received an Emmy for her coverage of the bombing of the federal building at Oklahoma City.
- Astrid
incomprehensible i enjoy my sexuality and i love sex and the city if were alone and im horney enogh you just might get lucky i once gave a blow job to a guiy named shaun for half a bag of pot as long as you supply me with the drugs i want, i will fuck and suck you like no other.
- Bruno Lopez
They tell me my story can become a novel, but considering what is out there it would be enough for a solid short story. I'm the son of a former Mexican bullfigher a Russian born in China. Worked as a journalist for more than 20 years covering everything from Panda deliveries in zoos to guerrilla movements in Mexico and Central America.
- Reverend Jackson
Reverend Jesse Jackson began his activism as a student in the summer of 1960 seeking to desegregate the local public library in Greenville, and then as a leader in the sit-in movement. In 1965 he became a full-time organizer for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). He was soon appointed by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to direct SCLCs Operation Breadbasket program.
- Michael Phelan
I like American Music.
- Paul Rieckhoff
I am a veteran's advocate, writer and social entrepreneur. As a younger man, I worked on Wall Street, coached high school football, and sold hot dogs in a roadside truck. Now, I am the Executive Director and Founder of.
- Callie
I enjoy smart-assery,german gummy bears, novelty toasters, learning new things, swimming late at night, nerds, surprising people, good conversations, silence, walking in the woods, sleeping outdoors, old books, C-bo. If I ever buy a horse his name will be Wildfire. I do things like break my fingers over and over in my ceiling fan. I naturally attract spills, accidents, faulty alarm clocks, homeless ferrel animals, and the emotionally crippled.
- Doug Herzog
Doug Herzog , kicked out a year ago as president of Fox, is returning to television as president of USA Network. Herzog joins a cadre of new personnel charged with reinventing the network following the departure of professional wrestling last fall. Widely acknowledged as a programming wizard, Herzog hopes to reinvigorate USA without taking away from what's made it a top cable network. "The idea is not to rip apart what has historically been a pretty good business at USA.
- Frank Warren
Frank Warren Founder of PostSecret.com
- Zach Irwin
After moving from Arizona in 2000 I began my career with CNN as a VJ, moving up to feeds and now as a Network Editor. Even Though I live up in Acworth, I spend more time in Atlanta for work and for time with my friends. I recently lost my dad due to cancer and other health issues. Even though he's no longer here, I still think about him. I like to travel. I'll make it a point to go to new places for me and mix in a trip to San Diego here and there.
- Justin Gamble
Born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland. I moved to Atlanta to go to undergrad in 1997 and have been here ever since. Atlanta is cool but I am looking into going somewhere new...looking for a new challenge. Just completed my MBA and looking into law school. Well, if you wanna know more about me...hit me up. Don't wanna post too much on here as there are some sicko's out there.