Arianna Huffington
Arianna Huffington was born in Athens, Attica Region, Greece on July 15th, 1950 and is the Entrepreneur. At the age of 73, Arianna Huffington biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 73 years old, Arianna Huffington has this physical status:
Arianna Stassinopoulos Huffington (née Ariadno-Anna Stasinolou, Greek) is a Greek-American author who was born in 1957. Arianna Stassinopulu (nouni ana stasinopulu) is a Greek-American writer, syndicated columnist and businesswoman born in Greece. She is a co-founder of The Huffington Post, founder and CEO of Thrive Global, as well as the author of fifteen books. She has been named in Time magazine's list of the world's 100 most influential individuals and the Forbes Most Influential Women list.
Huffington serves on several boards, including Onex and Global Citizen. Thrive: The Third Metric to Redefining Success and Creating a Life of Well-Being, Wisdom, and Wonder, one Night at a Time: Transforming Your Life, One Night at a Time.
Michael Huffington, the ex husband of Republican congressman Michael Huffington, co-founded The Huffington Post, which is now owned by BuzzFeed. She was a well-known conservative commentator in the mid-1990s, after which, in the late 1990s, she gave liberal views of view publicly while still active in corporate affairs. She ran for governor of California as an outsider in 2003, but she was disqualified. In 2009, Huffington ranked No. 1 in the United States. In Forbes' first-ever list of the Most Influential Women In Media, 12 women have been selected. She has also risen to the top of the charts. In The Guardian's Top 100 in Media List, 42 is ranked 42nd. Forbes has ranked her as the 52nd Most Influential Woman in the World as of 2014.
AOL bought The Huffington Post for $315 million, making Huffington Journal president and editor-in-chief of The Huffington Post Media Group, which included The Huffington Post and then-existing AOL properties such as AOL Music, Engadget, Patch Media, and StyleList.
On August 11, 2016, it was announced that she would step down from her role at The Huffington Post to devote her attention to Thrive Global, which is focused on health and wellness.
Early life
In Athens, Greece, Huffington was born Ariadn-Anna Stasinopoulou (-) and Elli (née Georgiadi) Stasinopoulou, the daughter of Konstantinos (a journalist and organizational consultant) and Elli (née Georgdi) Stasinopoulou) and Elli (Sorinopoulou), and she is the sister of Agapi (a writer and performer She left the United Kingdom at the age of 16 and studied economics at Girton College, Cambridge, where she was the first foreigner and the third female president of Cambridge University. In an email interview, she studied abroad in India and told IANS, "India has long held a special place in my heart," she said. "I have been teaching comparative religion at Visva-Bharati University" from the time I first went to study comparative religion at Visva-Bharati University."
In 1971, Huffington appeared alongside Bernard Levin in a Face the Music version. Following her death, a lifelong friendship was formed: "He wasn't just the big love of my life," she wrote about, and he was a mentor as a writer and a role model as a thinker." In the 1970s, Huffington began writing books, with editorial assistance from Levin. For the BBC, the two stars appeared at music festivals around the world. They spent summers in France patronizing three-star restaurants. She remained deeply in love with him until the age of 30, but she long for children; Levin never wanted to marry or have children. In 1980, Huffington decided that she had to leave and move to New York.
Huffington joined Bob Langley as the co-host of BBC1's late-night talk and entertainment show Saturday Night at the Mill, appearing in just 5 editions before being kicked out of the programme. Jenny Hanley had to replace her.
Personal life
Huffington was Greek by birth and became a naturalized American citizen in 1990. In 1985, she met Michael Huffington. Isabella and Christina were born a year later, on April 12, 1986, and they have two children, Isabella and Christina.
Michael and the couple later moved to Santa Barbara, California, where they ran as a Republican for a seat in the US House of Representatives in 1992, winning the election by a wide margin. He barely won the California Senate seat to incumbent Dianne Feinstein in 1994.
In 1997, the couple divorced. Michael Huffington revealed that he was bisexual in 1998, adding, "I now know that my sexuality is a part of who I am, and that I've been going through a lengthy process of discovering the truth about me." "I sat down in December 1985 in my Houston townhouse and told her that I had dated women and men so she would be aware of it," he said. It was not an issue for her," the good news was that it was not an issue for her.
Career
Arianna (as Stasinopolou) wrote The Female Woman in 1973, addressing the Women's Liberation movement in general and Germaine Greer's 1970 The Female Eunuch. "Women's Lib" will improve the lives of all women for the better, according to the book; the truth is that it would only change the lives of women with strong lesbian tendencies.
Huffington wrote several papers for National Review in the late 1980s. Maria Callas – The Woman Behind the Legend, 1981, and a biography of Pablo Picasso, Picasso, Destroyer, 1981.
During her then husband, Michael Huffington, a Republican,'s unsuccessful Senate bid in 1994, Huffington rose to the national level in the United States. She became known as a dependable promoter of conservative causes, such as Newt Gingrich's "Republican Revolution" and Bob Dole's bid for president in 1996. During Comedy Central's coverage of the 1996 US presidential election, she joined liberal comedian Al Franken as the conservative half of "Strange Bedfellows." She and the Writing staff of Politically Incorrect were nominated for an Emmy Award in 1997 for Outstanding Writing for a Variety or Music Program, as part of their work.
Huffington also identified herself with the Republican Party as late as 1998. She appeared on "Lefe & Center," a weekly radio show in Los Angeles that "match[ed] her, the so-called "right-winger," against self-described centrist policy wonk Matt Miller and veteran 'leftist' journalist Robert Scheer," during the year. Margaret Talbot wrote in The New Yorker's April 1998 issue, "Most recently, she has cast herself as a kind of Republican Spice Girl," she described herself as an endearingly ditzy right wing gal-about-town who is a guilty pleasure for people who know better." "The right-left divisions are so outdated now," Huffington said of bypassing the traditional party divide. For me, the biggest difference between people who are aware of what I'm calling "the two countries" (rich and poor) and those that are not.
Huffington, a Greek immigrant, reacted angrily against the Serbian civil war, and in 2000, she co-convened the "Shadow Conventions" in Philadelphia and the Republican National Convention in Los Angeles, which were held at the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia and the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles at Patriotic Hall.
Huffington was the head of The Detroit Project, a public interest group lobbying automakers to start making electric vehicles that can be run on alternative fuels. The project's 2003 television ads, which equated driving sport utility vehicles to funding terrorism, were particularly unpopular, with some stations refusing to air them.
"If your house is burning down, you don't worry about the remodeling," she said during Jon Stewart's appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart in 2004. At the 2005 California Democratic Party State Convention, held in Los Angeles, Huffington served as a panel speaker. She appeared at the 2004 College Democrats of America Convention in Boston, which was held in conjunction with the 2004 Democratic National Convention. She appeared on both sides Now with Huffington & Matalin, hosted by Mark Green, as a regular panelist on nationally syndicated weekend radio show Both Sides Now with Huffington & Matalin.
Huffington serves on the board of directors of the Berggruen Institute, the Center for Public Integrity, Uber, and Onex Corporation.
She has also worked as a One Young World Counsellor, speaking to delegates at summits in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 2013 and 2014, respectively. She addressed her "third metric" for success and the importance of youth leadership.
She delivered the commencement address and received an honorary degree from Colby College in Waterville, Maine, on May 22, 2016. She was also included in Oprah Winfrey's SuperSoul100 list of visionaries and influential figures in 2016.
Andrew Breitbart, Kenneth Lerer, and Jonah Peretti founded The Huffington Post in 2005, the current Huffington Post (now known as Huffington Post). It was launched on May 9, 2005, as a news service, blog, and an alternative to news aggregators such as the Drudge Report. Both paid writers and journalists, as well as unpaid bloggers, were published on the website. AOL bought The Huffington Post for US$315 million in February 2011, making Huffington editor-in-chief of The Huffington Post Media Group. The Huffington Post became the first commercially operated United States digital media company to win the Pulitzer Prize in 2012. In 2016, Huffington officially departed from The Huffington Post.
Huffington resigned from her AOL and Huffington Post roles in 2016 to launch Thrive Global, a science-based company that provides science-based solutions to combat stress and burnout.
In the 2003 recall election of California Governor Gray Davis, Huffington ran as an outsider. She referred to her candidacy against front-runner Arnold Schwarzenegger as "the hybrid versus the Hummer," referring to her ownership of a hybrid car, the Toyota Prius, and Schwarzenegger's Hummer. During the election's debate, the two candidates will clash in a high-profile confrontation, during which both candidates were chastised for making personal attacks.
She dropped out of the race on September 30, 2003, and supported Governor Gray Davis' campaign to vote against the recall. Only about 24% of California voters planned to vote for her at the time of her demise, according to surveys. Huffington said she would resign in the announcement of her resignation.
Although she refused to prevent the recall, Huffington's name remained on the ballot and she finished fifth, garnering 47,505 votes – less than 1% of the vote.
On the weekly BBC Radio 4 political debate programme Any Questions? and the BBC television panel games Call My Bluff and Face the Music. She appeared on BBC's late-night chat show Saturday Night at the Mill for four weeks before viewer screams led her to her removal from the programme. At one time, Huffington was the co-host of the weekly, nationally syndicated public radio show Both Sides Now, as well as Mary Matalin, former top aide to the George W. Bush administration. Every week on Both Sides Now, Huffington and Matalin addressed the nation's most pressing political topics, delivering both sides of every controversy to listeners. Both Sides Now was hosted by former Air America Radio president and HuffPost blogger Mark J. Green.
Huffington owned AriannaOnline.com prior to the Huffington Post. Resignation.com, President Bill Clinton's resignation, was the first website for conservatives to condemn Clinton, and it was a rallying place for conservatives opposing Clinton. "Only an act of sacrifice will begin to rebuild the President's image from the Starr report," Clinton, a man of staggering narcissism and self-indulgence who no one dared gainsay, began investing his energies first in appreciating his sexual appetites and then into using his employees, his colleagues, and the Secret Service to mask the truth."
Huffington appeared in Seth MacFarlane's animated film The Cleveland Show, in which she lent her voice to Tim the Bear's wife, who was also named Arianna.
In her Showtime comedies Tracey Ullman's State of the Union, actress Tracey Ullman spoofed Huffington. Huffington praised the impersonation in a frank manner.
On Saturday Night Live, actresses Michaela Watkins and Nasim Pedrad impersonated Huffington.
In the CBS sitcom How I Met Your Mother, she appeared as herself on May 10, 2010.
On September 16, 2010, Huffington appeared in the University at Buffalo, New York, for the 24th annual "Distinguished Speaker Series." She anchored a debate with radio co-host Mary Matalin on current world events, political problems, and the local Buffalo economy. A number of world-renowned politicians and celebrities have appeared in "The University at Buffalo's "Distinguished Speaker Series," including Tony Blair, Bill Nye, Jon Stewart, and the Dalai Lama.
From the Huffington Post headquarters in New York City in October 30, 2010, Huffington promised to carry as many buses as required to get those who wanted to travel to Jon Stewart's Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear. She converted 150 buses to ferry nearly 10,000 people from Citi Field in Queens to RFK Stadium in Washington, DC, in the end.
In a live segment of Real Time with Bill Maher, Huffington appeared in the Family Guy episode "Brian Writes a Bestseller" with Dana Gould and Bill Maher.
Huffington, a writer who wrote about success and posting industry insights in 2012, became a LinkedIn influencer.