  John Stossel joined the ABC news
magazine, “20/20,” in 1981. He began doing one-hour primetime specials
in 1994.
Stossel’s first special, “Are We Scaring Ourselves To Death?,” examined
exaggerated fears over risks such as crime and pollution. It was
followed by “The Blame Game,” which looked at Americans’ growing
tendency to blame their misfortunes on others.
He looked at gender differences in “Boys and Girls Are Different,” the
mechanics of mating in “Love, Lust, and Marriage,” and the science
behind happiness for “The Mystery of Happiness.” He examined bogus
lawsuits in “The Trouble With Lawyers” and bogus scientific claims in
“Junk Science: What You Know That May Not Be So.” “Freeloaders” focused
on how getting “something for nothing” appeals to all of us, including
rich people who use the power of government to help themselves. “Greed”
offered a positive perspective on enlightened self-interest, challenging
conventional wisdom on how we view businessmen, philanthropy and the
social impact of such individuals as Michael Milken and Mother Teresa.
Mr. Stossel openly questioned why Americans are routinely jailed for
voluntarily participating in the so-called “consensual crimes” in “Sex,
Drugs and Consenting Adults.”
The specials, which have consistently rated among the top news programs
when broadcast, have earned Stossel uncommon praise: “the most
consistently thought-provoking TV reporter of our time” (Dallas Morning
News), “has the gift for entertaining while saying something profound”
(Orlando Sentinel).
Recently for “20/20,” Stossel has reported on a case of alleged sexual
misconduct at Brown University, on teens who suffer from Tourette’s
syndrome, on women -- some in apparently happy marriages -- who discover
later in life that they are lesbians; and on why many Americans younger
than 35 believe that the Social Security system will not exist when they
face retirement. In a new segment for “20/20,” “Give Me a Break,”
Stossel has taken skeptical looks at people who want to censor cartoons,
regulate flagpoles, and have Congress rule on what prices are “fair.”
Stossel has received 19 Emmy Awards. He has been honored five times for
excellence in consumer reporting by the National Press Club. Among his
other awards are the George Polk Award for Outstanding Local Reporting
and the George Foster Peabody Award.
In his early years at ABC, Stossel served as consumer editor at “Good
Morning America.” Prior to that, he was consumer editor for WCBS-TV in
New York City. He began as a researcher for KGW-TV in Portland, Oregon.
He is a 1969 graduate of Princeton University with a B.A. in psychology.
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