John Stossel

John Stossel

Stossel during a special taping of his Fox Business show in Washington, D.C., 2015
Born John Frank Stossel
(1947-03-06) March 6, 1947
Chicago Heights, Illinois, U.S.
Education B.A. in Psychology, Princeton University (1969)
Occupation libertarian pundit, author, columnist, reporter, TV presenter
Years active 1969–present[1]
Notable credit(s) 20/20
Stossel
Political party Libertarian
Spouse(s) Ellen Abrams
Children 2
Website Official website

John Frank Stossel (born March 6, 1947) is an American consumer television personality, author, and libertarian pundit, known for his career on both ABC News and Fox Business Channel.

Stossel's style combines reporting and commentary. It reflects a libertarian political philosophy and views on economics which are largely supportive of the free market.[2] He began his journalism career as a researcher for KGW-TV, was a consumer reporter at WCBS-TV in New York City, and then joined ABC News as a consumer editor and reporter on Good Morning America. Stossel went on to be an ABC News correspondent, joining the weekly news magazine program 20/20, going on to become co-anchor.[3] In October 2009, Stossel left his long-time employment at ABC News to join the Fox Business Channel, as the host of a weekly news show on Fox Business, Stossel, which was broadcast from December 10, 2009, to December 16, 2016. Stossel also regularly provides analysis, appearing on various other Fox News Channel programs, including weekly appearances on The O'Reilly Factor. He also writes a Fox News blog, "John Stossel's Take".

As a reporter, Stossel has received numerous honors including 19 Emmy Awards, and he has been honored five times for excellence in consumer reporting by the National Press Club.[4] Stossel has written three books recounting how his experiences in journalism shaped his socioeconomic views, Give Me a Break in 2004, Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity in 2007, and No They Can't! Why Government Fails but Individuals Succeed in 2012. ABC said: "His reporting goes against the grain of the established media and offers the network something fresh and different...[but] makes him a target of the groups he offends."[5]

Stossel has also served as a spokesman for the Stuttering Foundation of America.[6]

Early life

John F. Stossel was born on March 6, 1947,[7] in Chicago Heights, Illinois, the younger of two sons,[8] to Jewish parents who left Germany before Hitler rose to power. They joined a Congregationalist church in the U.S., and Stossel was raised Protestant.[9][10] He grew up on Chicago's affluent North Shore and graduated from New Trier High School.[11] Stossel characterizes his older brother, Tom, as "the superstar of the family", commenting, "While I partied and played poker, he studied hard, got top grades, and went to Harvard Medical School." Stossel characterizes himself as having been "an indifferent student" while in college, commenting, "I daydreamed through half my classes at Princeton, and applied to grad school only because I was ambitious, and grad school seemed like the right path for a 21-year-old who wanted to get ahead." Although he had been accepted to the University of Chicago's School of Hospital Management, Stossel was "sick of school" and thought taking a job would inspire him to embrace graduate studies with renewed vigor.[8]

Career

Early career

Stossel intended to go work at Seattle Magazine, but it had gone out of business by the time he graduated. His contacts there, however, got him a job at KGW-TV in Portland, Oregon, where Stossel began as a newsroom gofer, working his way up to researcher and then writer. After a few years, the news director told Stossel to go on the air and read what he wrote. Stossel, who confesses to having been frightened of being on the air, has expressed embarrassment at watching videos of his early performances. Nonetheless, Stossel says his fear spurred him to improve, examining broadcasts of David Brinkley and Jack Perkins to imitate them. Stossel also struggled with a stuttering problem he had harbored since childhood. After a few years of on-air reporting, Stossel was hired by WCBS-TV in New York City, by Ed Joyce, the same news director who hired Arnold Diaz, Linda Ellerbee, Dave Marash, Joel Siegel and Lynn Sherr. Stossel was disappointed at CBS, feeling that the journalism was of a lower quality than in Portland, and disliking the lesser quantity of time devoted to research there. Stossel cites union work rules that discouraged the extra work that Stossel felt allowed employees to be creative, which he says represented his "first real introduction to the deals made by special interests". Stossel also "hated" Joyce, who he felt was "cold and critical", though Stossel credits Joyce with allowing him the freedom to pursue his own story ideas, and with recommending the Hollins Communications Research Institute in Roanoke, Virginia, that largely cured Stossel's stuttering problem.[12]

Stossel grew continuously more frustrated with having to follow the assignment editor's vision of what was news. Perhaps because of his stuttering, he had always avoided covering what others covered, feeling he could not succeed if he was forced to compete with other reporters by shouting out questions at news conferences. However, this led to the unexpected realization for Stossel that more important events were those that occurred slowly, such as the women's movement, the growth of computer technology, and advancements in contraception, rather than daily events like government pronouncements, elections, fires or crime. One day, Stossel bypassed the assignment editor to give Ed Joyce a list of story ideas the assignment editor had rejected. Joyce agreed that Stossel's ideas were better, and approved them.[12]

20/20

In 1981 Roone Arledge offered Stossel a job at ABC News, as a correspondent for 20/20 and consumer reporter for Good Morning America.[13] His "Give Me a Break" segments for the former featured a skeptical look at subjects from government regulations and pop culture to censorship and unfounded fear. The series was spun off into a series of one-hour specials with budgets of half a million dollars[14] that began in 1994. They include:

During the course of his work on 20/20, Stossel discovered Reason magazine, and found that the libertarian ideas of its writers made sense to him.[18] Stossel was named co-anchor of 20/20 in May 2003, while he was writing his first book, Gimme a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media, which was published in 2004.[19] In it, he details his start in journalism and consumer reporting, and how he evolved to harbor libertarian beliefs.[12][20]

Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network

In September 2009, it was announced that Stossel was leaving Disney's ABC News and joining News Corp.'s Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network. In addition to appearing on The O'Reilly Factor every Tuesday night, he also hosted a one-hour weekly program for Fox Business Network and a series of one-hour specials for Fox News Channel, as well as making regular guest appearances on Fox News programs.

The program, Stossel, debuted December 10, 2009, on Fox Business Network.[21] The program examined issues related to individual freedom, free market capitalism and small government, such as civil liberties, the business of health care, and free trade. The final episode premiered on December 16, 2016. At the end of that episode, a retrospective that spotlighted moments from seven years of the program, Stossel explained that due to his age, he wanted to help develop a younger generation of journalists with his views, and would continue to appear as a guest on Fox programs, and also help produce content for Reason TV.[22] His blog, "Stossel's Take", is published on both FoxBusiness.com and FoxNews.com.[23][24]

Publications

Stossel has written three books. Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media is a 2005 autobiography from Harper Perennial documenting his career and philosophical transition from liberalism to libertarianism. It describes his opposition to government regulation, his belief in free market and private enterprise, support for tort reform, and advocacy for shifting social services from the government to private charities. It was a New York Times bestseller for 11 weeks.[25] Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel – Why Everything You Know Is Wrong, which was published in 2007 by Hyperion, questions the validity of various conventional wisdoms, and argues that the belief he is conservative is untrue. On April 10, 2012, Threshold Editions, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, published Stossel's third book No, They Can't: Why Government Fails – But Individuals Succeed. It argues that government policies meant to solve problems instead produce new ones, and that free individuals and the private sector perform tasks more efficiently than the government does.[26]

With financial support from the libertarian Palmer R. Chitester Fund, Stossel and ABC News launched a series of educational materials for public schools in 1999 entitled "Stossel in the Classroom".[27][28] It was taken over in 2006 by the Center for Independent Thought and releases a new DVD of teaching materials annually. In 2006, Stossel and ABC released Teaching Tools for Economics, a video series based on the National Council of Economics Education standards.[29]

Since February 2011, Stossel has written a weekly newspaper column for Creators Syndicate.[30][31] His articles appear in such online publications as Newsmax, Reason, and Townhall.[32]

Political and personal beliefs

Contrarianism

Stossel's news reports and writings attempt to debunk popular beliefs. His Myths and Lies series of 20/20 specials challenges a range of widely held beliefs. He also hosted The Power of Belief (October 6, 1998), an ABC News Special that focused on assertions of the paranormal and people's desire to believe. Another report outlined the belief that opposition to DDT is misplaced and that the ban on DDT has resulted in the deaths of millions of children,[33] mostly in poor nations.[34]

Libertarianism

Stossel speaking at the Free State Project's New Hampshire Liberty Forum in 2007

As a libertarian, Stossel says that he believes in both personal freedom[35] and the free market. He frequently uses television airtime to advance these views and challenge viewers' distrust of free-market capitalism and economic competition. He received an Honoris Causa Doctorate from Francisco Marroquin University, a libertarian university in Guatemala, in 2008. He told The Oregonian, on October 26, 1994:

I started out by viewing the marketplace as a cruel place, where you need intervention by government and lawyers to protect people. But after watching the regulators work, I have come to believe that markets are magical and the best protectors of the consumer. It is my job to explain the beauties of the free market.[36]
I'm a little embarrassed about how long it took me to see the folly of most government intervention. It was probably 15 years before I really woke up to the fact that almost everything government attempts to do, it makes worse.[37]

Stossel argues that individual self-interest, or "greed", creates an incentive to work harder and to innovate.[38] He has promoted school choice as a way to improve American schools, believing that when people are given a choice, they will choose the schools best suited for their children.[39] Referring to educational tests that rank American students lower than others he says:

The people who run the international tests told us, "the biggest predictor of student success is choice." Nations that "attach the money to the kids" and thereby allow parents to choose between different public and private schools have higher test scores. This should be no surprise; competition makes us better.[40]

Stossel has criticized government programs for being inefficient, wasteful, and harmful.[41] He has also criticized the American legal system, opining that it provides lawyers and vexatious litigators the incentive to file frivolous lawsuits indiscriminately. Stossel contends that these suits often generate more wealth for lawyers than for deserving clients, stifle innovation and personal freedoms, and cause harm to private citizens, taxpayers, consumers and businesses.[42] Although Stossel concedes that some lawsuits are necessary in order to provide justice to people genuinely injured by others with greater economic power,[43] he advocates the adoption in the U.S. of the English rule as one method to reduce the more abusive or frivolous lawsuits.[44]

Stossel opposes corporate welfare, bailouts[45] and the war in Iraq.[4] He also opposes legal prohibitions against pornography, marijuana, recreational drugs, gambling, ticket scalping, prostitution, polygamy,[46] homosexuality, and assisted suicide,[47] and believes most abortions should be legal.[48] He advocates lower and simpler taxes,[49] and has endorsed or explored various ideas in his specials and on his TV series for changing the tax system, including switching to a flat tax,[50] and replacing the income tax with the FairTax.[51]

When the Department of Labor reissued federal guidelines in April 2010 governing the employment of unpaid interns under the Fair Labor Standards Act based on a 1947 Supreme Court decision,[52] Stossel criticized the guidelines, appearing in a police uniform during an appearance on the Fox News program America Live, commenting, "I’ve built my career on unpaid interns, and the interns told me it was great – I learned more from you than I did in college." Asked why he did not pay them if they were so valuable, he said he could not afford to.[53]

Agnosticism

In the 16 December 2010 episode of Stossel titled “Skeptic or Believer,” Stossel identified himself as an agnostic, explaining that although he had no belief in God, he did not believe God was an impossibility.[54]

Praise and criticism

Awards

Stossel has won 19 Emmy Awards. He was honored five times for excellence in consumer reporting by the National Press Club, has received a George Polk Award for Outstanding Local Reporting and a Peabody Award.[55] According to Stossel, when he was in favor of government intervention and skeptical of business, he was deluged with awards, but in 2006 he stated, "They like me less... Once I started applying the same skepticism to government, I stopped winning awards."[37] On April 23, 2012, Stossel was awarded the Chapman University Presidential Medal, by the current president, James Doti, and chancellor, Danielle Struppa. The award has been presented to only a handful of people over the past 150 years.[56] Stossel received an honorary doctorate from Universidad Francisco Marroquín.[57]

Praise

The Nobel Prize-winning Chicago School monetarist economist Milton Friedman lauded Stossel, stating: "Stossel is that rare creature, a TV commentator who understands economics, in all its subtlety."[58] Steve Forbes, the editor of Forbes magazine, described Stossel as riveting and "one of America’s ablest and most courageous journalists."[58] P. J. O'Rourke, best-selling author of Eat the Rich and Parliament of Whores praised Stossel, stating:

... about John Stossel's fact-finding. He seeks the truths that destroy truisms, wields reason against all that's unreasonable, and ... puncture(s) sanctimonious idealism.... He makes the maddening mad. And Stossel’s tales of the outrageous are outrageously amusing.[58]

An article published by the libertarian group Advocates for Self Government notes praise for Stossel.[59] Independent Institute Research Analyst Anthony Gregory, writing on the libertarian blog, LewRockwell.com, described Stossel as a "heroic rogue... a media maverick and proponent of freedom in an otherwise statist, conformist mass media."[60] Libertarian investment analyst Mark Skousen said Stossel is "a true libertarian hero".[61]

Criticism and controversy

Progressive organizations such as Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) and Media Matters for America (MMfA) have criticized Stossel's work,[62][63] for what they perceived as a lack of balance of coverage and distortion of facts. For example, Stossel was criticized for a segment on his October 11, 1999, show during which he argued that AIDS research has received too much funding, "25 times more than on Parkinson's, which kills more people." FAIR responded that AIDS had killed more people in the United States in 1999, but Stossel was speaking in more broad terms than a single country over a single year.[64]

In a February 2000 Salon.com feature on Stossel entitled "Prime-time propagandist", David Mastio wrote that Stossel has a conflict of interest in donating profits from his public speaking engagements to, among others, a non-profit called "Stossel in the Classroom" which includes material for use in schools, some of which uses material made by Stossel.[65]

University of Texas economist James K. Galbraith has alleged that Stossel, in his September 1999 special Is America #1?, used an out-of-context clip of Galbraith to convey the notion that Galbraith advocated the adoption by Europe of the free market economics practiced by the United States, when in fact Galbraith actually advocated that Europe adopt some of the United States' social benefit transfer mechanisms such as Social Security, which is the economically opposite view. Stossel denied any misrepresentation of Galbraith's views and stated that it was not his intention to convey that Galbraith agreed with all of the special's ideas. However, he re-edited that portion of the program for its September 2000 repeat, in which Stossel paraphrased, "Even economists who like Europe's policies, like James Galbraith, now acknowledge America's success."[66][67]

Organic vegetables

A February 2000 story about organic vegetables on 20/20 included statements by Stossel that tests had shown that neither organic nor conventional produce samples contained any pesticide residue, and that organic food was more likely to be contaminated by E. coli bacteria. The Environmental Working Group objected to his report, mainly questioning his statements about bacteria, but also managed to determine that the produce had never been tested for pesticides. They communicated this to Stossel, but after the story's producer backed Stossel's statement that the test results had been as described, the story was rebroadcast months later, unchanged, and with a postscript in which Stossel reiterated his claim. Later, after a report in The New York Times confirmed the Environmental Working Group's claims, ABC News suspended the producer of the segment for a month and reprimanded Stossel. Stossel apologized, saying that he had thought the tests had been conducted as reported. However, he asserted that the gist of his report had been accurate.[68][69][70][71][72]

Frederick K. C. Price

In a March 2007 segment about finances and lifestyles of televangelists, 20/20 aired a clip of Apostle Frederick K. C. Price, a TV minister, that was originally broadcast by the Lifetime Network in 1997. Price alleged that the clip portrayed him describing his wealth in extravagant terms, when he was actually telling a parable about a rich man. ABC News twice aired a retraction and apologized for the error.[73] The suit concluded with an out of court settlement including a public apology by ABC.[74]

“Sick Sob Stories”

In an opinion piece published in The Wall Street Journal in September 2007 called "Sick Sob Stories", Stossel described the case of Tracy and Julie Pierce that was explored in Michael Moore’s film, Sicko.[75]  Julie Pierce criticized Stossel, saying her husband would have been saved by the Canadian health care system, and she thought Stossel should have interviewed her and her doctor before writing about them.[76]  Stossel expressed sympathy, but said she had been misled to believe the treatment was routinely available in Canada.  He said that the treatment is also considered “experimental” in Canada, and is provided there even more rarely than in the United States.[77] Stossel himself did not title the piece “Sick Sob Stories”; that title was given to the piece by The Wall Street Journal.[77]

Global warming

Stossel challenges the notion that man-made global warming would have net negative consequences, pointing to assertedly warmer periods in human history.[78] Central to his argument is the idea that groups and individuals get much more public attention, donations, and government funding when they proclaim "this will be terrible" than groups that say "this is nothing to worry about." He points to groups like the World Wildlife Fund, Greenpeace, the Environmental Defense Fund, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and to activists such as Rachel Carson and former U.S. Vice President Al Gore as examples of environmental scaremongers.[79]

In 2001, the media watchdog organization FAIR criticized Stossel's reportage of global warming in his documentary, Tampering with Nature, for using "highly selective...information" that gave "center stage to three dissenters from among the 2,000 members of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which recently released a report stating that global temperatures are rising almost twice as fast as previously thought."[80]

He claims that proposals surrounding the proposed solutions to reduce global warming are "myths," which will not only not solve the problem but will restrict freedom.[4]

David Schultz incident

On December 28, 1984, during an interview for 20/20 on professional wrestling, wrestler David Schultz struck Stossel after Stossel stated that he thought professional wrestling was "fake". Stossel stated that he suffered from pain and buzzing in his ears eight weeks after the assault.[81] Stossel sued and obtained a settlement of $425,000 from the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). In his book, Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity, he writes that he has come to regret doing so, having adopted the belief that lawsuits harm many innocent people.[82] Schultz maintains that he attacked Stossel on orders from Vince McMahon, the head of the then-WWF.[83]

Personal life

Stossel lives in New York City, in the apartment building The Beresford, with his wife, Ellen Abrams.[84] They have two children, Lauren and Max.[7][85] They also own a home in Massachusetts.[86]

Stossel came to embrace his Jewish heritage after marrying his wife, who is Jewish, and their children have been raised in that tradition.[9][10] Stossel identified himself as an agnostic in the December 16, 2010, episode of Stossel, explaining that he had no belief in God but was open to the possibility.[54]

Stossel's brother, Thomas P. Stossel, is a Harvard Medical School professor[87] and co-director of the Hematology Division at Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital.[88] He has served on the advisory boards of pharmaceutical companies such as Merck and Pfizer.[89] Stossel's nephew is journalist and magazine editor Scott Stossel.[90]

On April 20, 2016, Stossel, who stated that he had never smoked,[91] revealed that he had lung cancer which was caught early and given an excellent prognosis.[92]

Books

See also

References

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  2. Johnson, Carlisle (January 15, 2008). "Interview with John Stossel by Carlisle Johnson". Francisco Marroquin University (Guatemala)
  3. Stossel, John (February 27, 2007). "Excerpt: John Stossel's 'Give Me a Break'". ABC News. Retrieved April 13, 2007.
  4. 1 2 3 Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity. Fraser Institute. Posted July 3, 2006. Retrieved July 21, 2009. Archived June 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  5. Jim Rutenberg and Felicity Barringer (August 14, 2000). "Apology Highlights ABC Reporter's Contrarian Image". The New York Times. Retrieved December 12, 2007.
  6. "Stuttering Didn’t Silence His Story: 20/20’s John Stossel Inspires Others". The Stuttering Foundation. May 1, 2006
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  8. 1 2 Stossel, John (2004). Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media. HarperCollins. pp. 2–3
  9. 1 2 Hallowell, Billy (December 13, 2012). "Did You Know John Stossel Is an Agnostic? Watch Him Challenge Fox’s Gretchen Carlson on Religion". The Blaze.
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  11. Zwecker, Bill (February 23, 2011). "Fox anchor identifies with 'The King’s Speech'". Chicago Sun-Times.
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  13. Stossel. 2004. pp. 10–11
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  44. Stossel; 2004; p. 283
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  81. Kaplan, Peter W. (February 23, 1985). "TV Notes; ABC Reporter May Sue Wrestler Who Hit Him". New York Times. Retrieved September 28, 2007.
  82. Wrestling Babylon by Irvin Muchnick ECW Press 2007 p. 118; and, Give Me a Break by John Stossel, p. 211
  83. Johnson, Steven (October 8, 2006). "Dr. D dominates PWHF dinner". Canoe. Retrieved September 26, 2007.
  84. Wiggins, James, V.I.P Address Book (2008), p. 653
  85. "John Stossel Biography". HarperCollins. Retrieved September 24, 2007.
  86. "A Practical Earth Day". Stossel. Season 5. Episode 12. April 17, 2014. Fox Business Network.
  87. Stossel, 2004, p. 214.
  88. Stossel, John (2006). Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity. Hyperion Books p. 56
  89. Wilson, Duff (March 2, 2009). "Harvard Medical School in Ethics Quandary". The New York Times.; and, "Kaiser Health News".
  90. Stossel, John (September 2, 2009). "Thank Goodness for John Goodman". Fox Business Network.
  91. Joyella, Mark (May 13, 2016). "John Stossel Credits His ‘Overanxious Wife’ for Early Discovery of Cancer". TVNewser. Retrieved 2016-07-23.
  92. Stossel, John (April 20, 2016). "Stossel: I have lung cancer. My medical care is excellent but the customer service stinks". Fox News.

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