Anderson Cooper
Anderson Cooper was born in New York City, New York, United States on June 3rd, 1967 and is the TV Show Host. At the age of 57, Anderson Cooper biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 57 years old, Anderson Cooper has this physical status:
Anderson Hays Cooper (born June 3, 1967) is an American journalist, television personality, and author.
Anderson Cooper 360°, CNN's most prominent anchor.
Cooper is normally broadcast live from a New York City studio; however, Cooper also broadcasts live from CNN's Washington, D.C., or on location for breaking news.
In addition, he's a 60-minute correspondent. Anderson Live, his own eponymous syndicated daytime talk show, from September 2011 to May 2013, was also host of his own eponymous syndicated daytime talk show Anderson Live.
Early life and education
Cooper was born in Manhattan, New York City, the younger brother of writer Wyatt Emory Cooper and artist Gloria Vanderbilt. Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt of the Vanderbilt family and socialite Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, and Reginald Vanderbilt's patrilineal grandmother, Cornelius Vanderbilt, who forged the prominent Vanderbilt shipping and railroad empire, was his maternal grandparents. Hugh Judson Kilpatrick, the grandson of Civil War brevet Major General Hugh Judson Kilpatrick, marched through Georgia and told Major General William Tecumseh Sherman on his march through Georgia, as well as Luisa Fernandez de Valdivieso, the Major General's Chilean wife. He is James Vanderbilt's second cousin, who was also removed from the family tree.
Cooper's media career began early. He was photographed by Diane Arbus for Harper's Bazaar as a baby. Cooper appeared on The Tonight Show on September 17, 1970, with his mother at the age of three. He appeared on To Tell the Truth as an impostor at the age of nine. Cooper modeled with Ford Models for Ralph Lauren, Calvin Klein, and Macy's from age 10 to 13.
Wyatt died after experiencing open-heart surgery on January 5, 1978, at the age of 50, and Cooper considers his father's book Families to be "a narrative of... how he would have wanted me to live my life and the choices he would have liked. "I'm really attached to him," says the author.
Carter Vanderbilt Cooper, Cooper's younger brother, died on July 22, 1988, age 23, after jumping from the 14th-floor terrace of Vanderbilt's New York City penthouse apartment. Gloria Vanderbilt wrote about her son's death in the book A Mother's Tale, in which she argued that the depression was triggered by a psychotic episode triggered by an allergy to the anti-asthma prescription drug salbutamol. Anderson's interest in journalism emerged as a result of Carter's suicide: a long line in journalism.
Cooper attended the Dalton School, a private co-educational day school on Manhattan's Upper East Side. Cooper traveled around Africa for several months after graduating from Dalton a semester early. He contracted malaria on the trip and was hospitalized in Kenya. Cooper wrote about the experience, "Africa was a place to forget and be forgotten in." Cooper attended Yale University, where he remained in Trumbull College. In 1989, he was accepted into the Manuscript Society, majoring in political science and graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree.
Personal life
Leopold Stanislaus "Stan" Stokowski, Cooper's two older half-brothers, are both older (b. (B.) and Christopher Stokowski, 1950 (b. 1952 (from Gloria Vanderbilt's ten-year marriage to conductor Leopold Stokowski) – from Gloria Vanderbilt's ten-year marriage to conductor Leopold Stokowski. Cooper appeared in Henry Louis Gates' Finding Your Roots in 2014, where he discovered an ancestor, Burwell Boykin, who was a slave owner from the southern United States, in a little over a decade.
Cooper was not affiliated to any political party as of 2016.
Cooper told Oprah Winfrey that he had dyslexia as a child while writing his book. He announced his "mild dyslexia" on The Tonight Show to Jay Leno, who also has dyslexia in August 2007.
Cooper is openly gay; as of 2012, he was (accord to The New York Times) "the most well-known openly gay journalist on American television." Cooper avoided discussing his personal life in interviews for years. Andrew Sullivan, on the other hand, gave Andrew Sullivan permission to release an email that contained the following lines: in part:
Tim Cook, Apple's CEO, before deciding to officially come out as gay, sought Cooper's assistance in 2014.
Cooper and his long-term partner at the time, Benjamin Maisani, bought Rye House, a historic Connecticut home in 2014. Cooper and Maisani announced in March 2018 that they had split up. The two children's siblings have remained close friends, but they have since gone on to co-parent Cooper's children.
Cooper has confessed to having a "very strange relationship with food," describing himself as a "picky eater." For months at a time, he will eat the same foods—such as scrambled egg whites or veggie burgers—for months at a time, often for both three meals.
Cooper has been a friend of Andy Cohen for more than a decade. They often work and support one another, particularly when it comes to raising their children.
Cooper was friends with Anthony Bourdain, a celebrity chef and host of CNN's Parts Unknown. In a CNN special program honoring Anthony Bourdain, Bourdain died by suicide on June 8, 2018. On the Thanksgiving 2020 episode of Anderson Cooper Full Circle, Cooper paid tribute to Bourdain, saying he was "very proud to call Anthony Bourdain a friend" and adding: "He is so, so missing by so many."
Cooper and co-author Katherine Howe published Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty, a biography of the Vanderbilt family dating back to his Vanderbilt ancestors who came to New Amsterdam in the 17th century.
Cooper announced the birth of his son Wyatt Morgan Cooper by a surrogate on April 30, 2020. "I became a father on Monday." I've never said it out loud, and it astonishes me. "I have a son," he said at the end of a CNN Town Hall on his show Anderson Cooper 360°. "Wyatt Morgan Cooper was born on Monday weighing 7 pounds 2 ounces," he posted on Instagram, announcing that he made the announcement on Instagram.
Although Cooper and Benjamin Maisani are no longer romantically involved, the two co-parent the child and Maisani was present in the delivery room for Wyatt's birth. Wyatt Cooper, Cooper's late father, is named after his middle name, which is deriving from Vanderbilt, his maternal grandmother Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt's maiden name.
Cooper revealed on February 10, 2022, he had just become a father to a son named Sebastian Luke Maisani-Cooper for the second time. Maisani is on the verge of adopting Cooper's son Wyatt, after which Wyatt's surname will be Maisani-Cooper.
Career
Cooper spent two summers as an intern at the Central Intelligence Agency while studying political science. He pursued journalism without having an academic degree. Since [he] was in utero, he is a self-proclaimed "news junkie." He took a break from reporting and lived in Vietnam for a year, during which time he studied the Vietnamese language at Vietnam National University, Hanoi, where he first correspondance work in the early 1990s.
After Cooper graduated from Yale, he attempted to work with ABC answering telephones, but was unsuccessful. Cooper, who finds it impossible to get his foot in on-air broadcasting, decided to enlist the help of a friend in order to obtain a fake press pass. Cooper was employed as a fact checker for the small news company Channel One, which produces a youth-oriented news service that is broadcast to numerous junior high and high schools in the United States. Cooper then entered Myanmar on his own with his forged press ticket and met with students protesting Burmese's government. He was then able to sell his home-made news segments to Channel One.
Cooper lived in Vietnam for a year to learn the Vietnamese language at the University of Hanoi, after reporting from Myanmar. Cooper soon began filming and gathering reports of Vietnamese life and culture, which aired on Channel One. He returned to filming stories from a number of war-torn countries around the world, including Somalia, Bosnia, and Rwanda in 1992.
Cooper realized in 1994 that he had gradually become deafused to the brutality around him; in 1994, he thought, "I'm a dozen, it's not so bad." However, one particular occurrence brought him right out of it: a recent one:
Cooper began working as a reporter for ABC News in 1995 and later rose to the position of co-anchor on ABC News' overnight World News Now program on September 21, 1999. In 2000, he changed careers, taking up a job as the host of ABC's reality show The Mole: A Life and Times.
In 2007, Cooper served as a fill-in co-host for Regis Philbin's Live with Regis and Kelly, when Philbin underwent triple-bypass heart surgery. When one of the two hosts is unable to travel in to work, he also serves as a guest co-host on Live.
Cooper left The Mole after its second season to return to broadcast news. "Two seasons was enough," he said on CNN in 2001, when 9/11 happened, "I felt I should be getting back to news." On American Morning, Howard Reagan's first job at CNN was to anchor alongside Paula Zahn. He became CNN's weekend prime time anchor in 2002. He has been hosting CNN's New Year's Eve special from Times Square since 2002.
Cooper became Anderson Cooper 360°'s anchor on CNN on September 8, 2003. He has referred to his philosophy as an anchor: "He has criticized his philosophy as a guide," he has said.
Cooper covered a variety of topics in 2005, including the tsunami destruction in Sri Lanka; the Cedar Revolution in Beirut, Lebanon; Pope John Paul II's death; and Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles' royal wedding. He covered the Maradi famine in August 2005.
Sen. Mary Landrieu, Senator Trent Lott, and Reverend Jesse Jackson about their government response in 2005, during CNN coverage of Hurricane Katrina. "I would not like to be emotional and I would not want to get upset," Cooper said later in a New York magazine interview, "but it's impossible not to" when you're surrounded by brave people who are hurt and in need." "Moemo-journalism, skyrocketing CNN's Anderson Cooper to superstardom as CNN's golden boy and a darling of the media circles," a contributor to Broadcasting & Cable magazine said.
CNN's NewsNight's original plan was changed from 60 to 120 minutes in September 2005 to cover the unusually robust hurricane season. Cooper was temporarily attached as co-anchor to Aaron Brown to help spread some of the increased workload. The arrangement was supposed to have been permanent by Jonathan Klein, CNN's US operations president, who has dubbed Cooper "the anchorperson of the future." Following Cooper's debut, NewsNight's ratings increased sharply; Klein said, "[Cooper's] name has been on the tip of everybody's tongue." Cooper's 360° program will be extended to two hours and shifted to the 10:00 p.m. ET slot, which was previously only accessible by NewsNight, with the third hour of Wolf Blitzer's The Situation Room filling in Cooper's former 7:00 p.m. ET slot. Aaron Brown left CNN, ostensibly having "mutually agreed" with Jonathan Klein on the issue, leaving "no options" open for him to host shows.
Cooper signed a multi-year contract with CNN that would include continuing as a contributor to 60 Minutes, as well as doubling his compensation from $2 million a year to a reported $4 million annually.
In 2007, he started hosting CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute, a tribute to ordinary people who have been honored and acknowledged extraordinary deeds.
Cooper launched Planet in Peril in October 2007, with Sanjay Gupta and Jeff Corwin on CNN. Cooper, Gupta, and Lisa Ling from National Geographic Explorer teamed up in 2008 for Planet in Peril: Battle Lines, which premiered in December 2008.
Cooper and Telepictures, Warner Bros. and Telepictures (both corporate sibling of CNN), announced in September that they had signed an agreement to produce a nationally syndicated talk show. Brian Stelter, a journalist who worked at The New York Times and now CNN, announced on Twitter that the upcoming Warner Bros. daytime talk show named Anderson (now named Anderson Live). Cooper signed a new multi-year deal with CNN on September 12, 2011, as part of talks over the talk show agreement, and he will continue as the host of Anderson Cooper 360°. Anderson Live would have ended at the end of its second season on October 29, 2012. The show, which was barely renamed after season one and redesigned with a variety of co-hosts, was unable to reach the audience Warner Brothers aspired for. On May 30, 2013, Anderson Live's final Anderson Live broadcast concluded.
Cooper moderated the second presidential election debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, alongside Martha Raddatz. He became the first openly LGBT person to moderate a presidential debate in the general election.
Andy Cohen, Cooper's close friend, joined Cooper in replacing Kathy Griffin as co-host of CNN's New Year's Eve coverage. They co-hosted CNN's New Year's Eve in 2018, 2020 and 2021.
Since 2007, Cooper has been a reporter for CBS News' 60 Minutes, as well as serving as a CNN anchor and reporter.
Andy Cohen and Cooper revealed that they will begin appearing on a national tour in March 2015 to present their conversational stage show AC2 in every country. The tour began in Boston, and Miami Beach, Chicago, and Atlanta followed it. At an event at the 92nd Street Y in New York City, Cooper spoke to Cohen about his then-latest book, The Andy Cohen Diaries, shortly after. Since then, the two-man exhibition has expanded to tour, visiting more than fifty cities as of October 2018.
Cooper was the narrator of the 2011 Broadway revival of How to Succeed Without Really Trying, directed by Rob Ashford and starring Daniel Radcliffe.
Cooper, a freelance writer, has written a number of papers that have appeared in several other publications, including details magazine.
Cooper's memoir, Dispatches from the Edge, detailing his life and work in Sri Lanka, Africa, Iraq, and Louisiana over the past year, was published in May 2006. Some of the book's proceeds are donated to charity by a charity. On June 18, 2006, the book debuted on The New York Times Best Seller list.
In 2017, Cooper and his mother, Gloria Vanderbilt, co-authored The Rainbow Comes and Goes: A Mother and Son on Life, Love, and Loss. The memoir, compiled from a series of emails, chronicles their shared past and Vanderbilt's turbulent childhood. Cooper said that his aim in writing the book and correspondence was to leave "nothing unspoken" between the two characters. The year of its inception, it appeared on several best-seller lists.
Cooper appeared on Jeopardy from April 19 to October 2021. Following Alex Trebek's death, he had been buried.