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Joan Lunden (born Joan Elise Blunden, September 19, 1950) is an American journalist, an author, and a television host. Lunden was the co-host of ABC 's Good Morning America from 1980 to 1997, and has authored over ten books.
Ferdinand De Wilton Ward, Jr. (1851–1925), known first as the "Young Napoleon of Finance," [1] and subsequently as "the Best-Hated Man in the United States," was an American swindler. The collapse of his Ponzi scheme caused the financial ruin of many people, including famous persons such as Thomas Nast and the former U.S. President Ulysses S ...
Behind Closed Doors was a documentary series hosted by Joan Lunden that aired on the ABC and the A&E Network from 1996 to 2001. Lunden took cameras to places that normally were off limits to the general public. Some places featured included: Up in the air aboard a U2 spyplane; Betty Ford Center; Behind the scenes of the New York City Subway
On February 23, 1987, Gibson first became a co-anchor of Good Morning America, alongside Joan Lunden. From 1985 to 1995, Good Morning America was the most-watched morning show on American television. [5] Gibson hosted and narrated the Maryland Public Television documentary Lucky Number, a program about problem gambling, in 1990. [6]
McRee left the show in 1993 to serve as a host for Good Morning America Sunday, anchor and correspondent for Lifetime Magazine and a reporter on ABC’s Day One. She then moved to Los Angeles, California, in 1994 to work as an anchor and reporter for KABC-TV. In 1997, she was hired to replace Joan Lunden as co-anchor of Good Morning America.
Michael Arthur Krauss (born March 5, 1939, in Detroit, Michigan) now retired, is the former husband of TV host Joan Lunden. [1] He was a television segment producer and a radio interviewer. He was also a company president who headed numerous companies including Michael Krauss Productions and Group M Productions, the producer of "Mother's Minutes".
The format of the show was primarily driven by studio interviews in New York City led by Hartman, however, Hill successfully sought out her own interviews to conduct in the field. [2] In 1980, Hill was replaced in the studio by Joan Lunden, but briefly stayed on GMA as a feature reporter; [8] she went on to work for ABC Sports and Wide World of ...
Joan London may refer to: Joan London (Australian author) (born 1948), Australian fiction author Joan London (American writer) (1901–1971), California author and daughter of Jack London