George Stephanopoulos
The American media landscape of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries drew heavily on figures who moved between political life and public communication. George Robert Stephanopoulos, born on February 10, 1961, in Fall River, represents that particular convergence — a career that has spanned political advising, writing, journalism, and broadcast news presenting.
Educated at Columbia University and later at Balliol College, Stephanopoulos built a professional identity that crossed several disciplines. He has worked as a political adviser, a writer, a blogger, and a journalist, and his roles in American television have extended across both weekday and Sunday programming. He serves as a coanchor alongside Robin Roberts and Michael Strahan on Good Morning America and hosts This Week, ABC's Sunday morning current events program. His work as a political commentator draws on his earlier career as a Democratic adviser, lending his broadcast presence a grounding in the mechanics of American political life that distinguishes his approach to news presenting.
Among the honors Stephanopoulos has received are the Rhodes Scholarship and the John Jay Award. These recognitions mark a career that has moved across the boundaries of politics, writing, and broadcast journalism — from the role of political adviser to that of news presenter on two of ABC's prominent programs.
Quotes by George Stephanopoulos

Well, I did say we’ll put it out and we’ll put it out when we can. But I don’t know what we can put out or when we can put it out.

In politics, every year in the White House is like dog years, it takes off seven years of your life.

Well, I did say we'll put it out and we'll put it out when we can. But I don't know what we can put out or when we can put it out.

Democrats had a secret meeting in Reid's office on Halloween night at 6:15 and they hatched this plot, ... They said the only way they could get this investigation going was to do it in secret. They say they've been frustrated for a year and a half in getting this investigation into whether the administration twisted the intelligence and they're making no apologies whatsoever for it.

I do not believe that loyalty should demand defending behavior that I find abhorrent.

In return for the privilege of influencing issues you care about, in return for the rush of power and reflected glory, you defend the boss - fiercely, unapologetically, giving no ground.

I'm not saying that spending on wars and terrorism is a bad thing,'' Armstrong said in an interview on ABC's


