Biography of Geraldo Rivera | my experiences

Biography of Geraldo Rivera

Biography of Geraldo Rivera
Biography of Geraldo Rivera
• Name: Gerald Michael Rivera.
• Born: 4 July 1943, Nantes, France.
• Father: Cruz "Alan" Rivera.
• Mother: Lillian.
• Wife / Husband: Linda Koblentz, Edith Vonnegut, Sheryl Raymond, CC. Dyer, Erica Michelle Levy.

Early life of Geraldo Rivera:

        Rivera was born in New York City, New York, to Lillian (nee Friedman, October 16, 1919 - June 3, 2018) and Cruz "Alan" Rivera (October 1, 1915 - November 1987). A restaurant worker and cab driver respectively. Rivera's father was a Catholic Puerto Rican, and his mother Ashkenazi was of Russian Jewish descent. He was raised "mostly Jewish" and had a bar mitzvah ceremony. He grew up in Brooklyn and West Babylon, New York, where he attended West Babylon High School. Rivera's family was sometimes subjected to prejudice and racism, and his mother took his surname to spell him as "Rivera" so that they could be fanatically directed at him (and only his sister Sharon's His surname was not wrong.).

        From September 1961 to May 1963, he attended State University of New York, where he was a member of the rowing team. In 1965, Rivera graduated from the University of Arizona (where he continued his involvement in athletics as a goalkeeper on the lacrosse team) with a B.S. In business administration.

        Rivera's career took a different turn in the late 1980s. He started Geraldo, a daytime talk show in 1987, after being fired from the ABC over a disagreement about a report. The show was criticized for its controversial, sometimes useless topics and low interaction between guests. Rivera finds himself caught in a crossfire during a show and breaks his nose. The show ended in 1998.

        In 1986, Rivera produced a two-hour live syndicated special, The Mystery of Al Capone's Vault, in which he opened what turned out to be an empty vault at the former headquarters of Chicago gangster Al Capone. The show attracted millions of viewers. The following year he began hosting a daytime talk show, Geraldo (1987–98), and soon became known for his theatrics and controversial guests.

In an episode featuring a racist skinhead and white supremacist and a black activist, an on-air dispute ensued, and Rivera's nose was broken. Twice she had plastic surgery on the show. He revealed a prime-time special, Devil Worship: Devil's Underground (1988), on an authorized (but false) epidemic of satanic ritual abuse in the United States.

        In 2000 Robert F. Winner of the Kennedy Journalism Award (his third) for "NBC News Documentary" for "Women In Prison" and the Scripps Howard Foundation's National Journalism Award "Back to Bedlam", Rivera has received more than 170 prestigious George Foster Peabody Awards. , Including three national and seven local Emmys, two Columbia-DuPont and two additional Scrip Howard Journalism Awards Rkarita.

        In 2005, journalists became involved in a dispute with 'The New York Times' over their separation of a member of the rescue team to film an assistant in a wheelchair after Hurricane Katrina "filmed". Later, Rivera demanded the newspaper to back down and threatened to sue him if none was provided.

        In 2007, Geraldo Rivera was involved in a feud with his Fox colleague, Michelle Malkin. The conflict between the two occurred when Rivera made some derogatory statements on Malkin in a Boston Globe interview. She had commented that she was the most hateful commentator ever in her life. Rivera said that if he saw her he would spit on her. However, he later apologized for his derogatory comments.
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