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Jeff Greenfield

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Jeff Greenfield
Jeff Greenfield atMiller Center,2011
Born
Jeffrey Greenfield

(1943-06-10)June 10, 1943(age 81)
New York City, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Wisconsin
Yale Law School
Occupation(s)Television journalist, author
Notable creditCBS Evening NewsCorrespondent (2007–2011)
TitleSenior Political Correspondent
Spouses
  • Harriet Carmichael
    (m.1968;div.1993)
  • Karen Anne Gannett[1]
    (m.1993, divorced)
  • Dena Sklar
    (m.2002)
Children2
Websitewww.jeffgreenfield.net

Henry Jeffrey Greenfield(born June 10, 1943) is an American television journalist and author.[2][3]

Early life

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He was born in New York City, to Benjamin and Helen E. Greenfield.[4][5]He grew up inManhattanand graduated in 1960 from theBronx High School of Science.He has a sister, Janet Greenfield Elmo.[6]

In 1964, he graduated with honors, obtaining a Bachelor of Arts degree from theUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison,where he served as editor-in-chief of theDaily Cardinal.[5]While at the university, Greenfield was inducted into theIron Cross (Secret Society).[5]In 1966, Greenfield graduated with honors with aBachelor of Lawsdegree fromYale Law School,where he was a Note and Comment editor of theYale Law Journal.[5]

Career

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Greenfield was hired as aspeechwriterfor SenatorRobert F. Kennedy,assisting with RFK's speech, "On the Mindless Menace of Violence".[7]He worked on the 1968 Presidential campaign of Kennedy. Greenfield worked as chief speechwriter for New York Mayor John Lindsay.[5]

Greenfield worked for seven years with political consultant David Garth.[5]

Over the course of his career, Greenfield has reported primarily on domestic politics and the media, and occasionally on culture. He appeared on theFiring Linetelevision program as early as 1968. He was the host of the national public television series "CEO Exchange,"featuring in-depth interviews with high-profile chief executive officers, for five seasons. He served as media commentator forCBS Newsfrom 1979 to 1983 and as political and media analyst forABC Newsfrom 1983 to 1997, often appearing on theNightlineprogram. He served as a senior analyst atCNNfrom 1998 to 2007. On May 1, 2007, Greenfield returned to CBS News, where he served as a senior political correspondent until April 2011.[8]He hosted PBS's "Need to Know" from May 7, 2010, to June 28, 2013.[9][10]More recently he has done political commentary on NBC Nightly News.

He has also written or contributed to 14 books and has written forTime,The New York Times,National Lampoon,Slate,andPOLITICOMagazine.[11][12]He wrote one novel, which is about the Electoral College.

Greenfield has won fiveEmmy Awards,[13]two for his reporting from South Africa (1985 and 1990) and one for a profile ofH. Ross Perot(1992).Then Everything Changedwas a finalist for the 2011Sidewise Award for Alternate History,Long Form.

Personal life

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Greenfield has been married three times.

  • His first wife was Carrie Carmichael, an author, whom he divorced in February 1993. They have two children: daughter Casey, also a Yale Law School graduate, and son David. Casey married screenwriterMatt Manfrediin 2004 and they divorced in 2006. Casey has a son with CNN legal analystJeffrey Toobin.[14][3]
  • On April 24, 1993, Greenfield married Karen Anne Gannett,[15]from whom he is now divorced.
  • In June 2002, he married Dena Sklar, a real estate broker.[16]They live in Santa Barbara, California, and New York City.[17]

Greenfield has seven grandchildren.[18][19]

Books

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  • with Jerry Bruno,The Advance Man.William Morrow.1971.ASINB000K0GKVS.
  • Newfield, Jack; Greenfield, Jeff (1972).A Populist Manifesto: The Making of A New American majority(1st ed.). Praeger Publishers. p.221.ISBN1135578559.
  • Jeff Greenfield's Book of Books.National Lampoon.1979.ISBN978-0-930368-37-1.
  • No Peace, No Place: Excavations Along the Generational Fault.Doubleday. 1973.ISBN978-0-385-01936-1.
  • Television: The First Fifty Years.Abrams. 1977.ISBN978-0-8109-1651-7.
  • Playing to Win: An Insider's Guide to Politics.Simon and Schuster. 1980.ISBN978-0-671-24762-1.
  • The People's Choice: A Novel.Putnam. 1995.ISBN0-452-27705-1.
  • Oh, Waiter, One Order of Crow! Inside the Strangest Presidential Election Finish in American History.Putnam. 2001.ISBN978-0-399-14776-0.
  • Greenfield, Jeff (2011).Then Everything Changed: Stunning Alternate Histories of American Politics: JFK, RFK, Carter, Ford, Reagan.G.P. Putnam's Sons.ISBN978-0-399-15706-6.
  • Greenfield, Jeff (2012).43*: When Gore Beat Bush—A Political Fable.ISBN978-1-614-52046-7.
  • Greenfield, Jeff (2013).If Kennedy Lived: The First and Second Terms of President John F. Kennedy: An Alternate History.G.P. Putnam's Sons.ISBN978-0-399-16696-9.

References

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  1. ^Plummer, William (December 4, 1995)."Electoral College Humor".People.RetrievedJuly 18,2019.
  2. ^CBS News
  3. ^abFinn, Robin (February 18, 2012)."Casey Greenfield v. the World".The New York Times.RetrievedMarch 22,2021.
  4. ^New York Times: "Paid Notice: Deaths GREENFIELD, HELEN E.October 17, 2001
  5. ^abcdef"People - Jeff Greenfield".WNYC.Archived fromthe originalon May 20, 2012.RetrievedMarch 22,2021.Before joining CNN, Greenfield was a political and media analyst for ABC News (1983-97), appearing primarily on "Nightline" and delivering weekly commentaries for "World News" Sunday. Previously, he was the media commentator for CBS News (1979-83). Greenfield has also appeared on William F. Buckley's "Firing Line" and PBS' "We Interrupt This Week." He was the anchor of PBS' "CEOExchange," a limited-run series, for five seasons.
  6. ^"Paid Notice: Deaths GREENFIELD, HELEN E."The New York Times.October 18, 2001.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedMay 5,2024.
  7. ^Newfield, Jack (1988).Robert Kennedy: A Memoir(reprint ed.). New York: Penguin Group. pp.248–250.ISBN0-452-26064-7.
  8. ^Kurtz, Howard (March 30, 2007)."CNN Analyst Jeff Greenfield to Join CBS".The Washington Post.RetrievedMay 9,2008.
  9. ^"Need To Know Renewed By PBS Through June 2013".prnewswire.com(Press release).RetrievedMarch 21,2021.
  10. ^"May 3, 2013: Retraining America".Need to Know.PBS. April 30, 2013.RetrievedMarch 21,2021.
  11. ^Greenfield, Jeff."The Ugly History of Stephen Miller's 'Cosmopolitan' Epithet".POLITICO Magazine.RetrievedMarch 22,2021.
  12. ^"Jeff Greenfiedl".X.com.RetrievedMay 5,2024.
  13. ^"3 Reasons Not to Worry About Trump's Fourth of July—and 1 Big Reason to Worry".Politico.July 3, 2019.RetrievedJuly 3,2019.
  14. ^New York Times: "Casey Greenfield, Matt Manfredi"November 21, 2004
  15. ^"WEDDINGS; Jeff Greenfield and Karen Gannett".The New York Times.April 25, 1993.
  16. ^LANE, TAHREE (November 2, 2013)."Jeff Greenfield to discuss book on what might have been had JFK lived".The Blade.Toledo, Ohio: The Blade. Archived fromthe originalon March 22, 2021.RetrievedMarch 22,2021.I was basing this on what they had done during the big controversy in 1962 when the steel companies raised their prices and President Kennedy felt they had broken their word to him. This was all about keeping down steel prices and damping down inflation, so the Kennedy administration and Robert Kennedy in particular used the power they had in a way that would have been highly, highly controversial had it become known. They were using tax returns of the steel executives and they were threatening anti-trust actions. So I extrapolated from that, if that's what they did to stop the steel price increases, I think they would have used every means fair and not so fair to keep the story from bringing him down.
  17. ^Scott, Walter."What has happened to CNN's Jeff Greenfield?".Dayton Daily News.No. November 3, 2002. Dayton, Ohio: Newspapers.com. p. 177.RetrievedMarch 22,2021.In June, he wed Dena Sklar, a former associate director at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. And Greenfield tells us he's writing a novel, a satire of the media titled 'Jackpot', due out next year.
  18. ^"Veteran political analyst Jeff Greenfield speaking to campus, alumni about turbulent events of 1968 (and today)".Marietta College.RetrievedMarch 22,2021.
  19. ^"Jeff Greenfield".Institute of Politics.University of Chicago.RetrievedMarch 22,2021.


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