A little space on the internets dedicated to one of the best reporters out there.

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This tumblr will no longer be updated, but it will continue to be here for archival purposes. Thank you all for following.


Posts tagged photo


Photo

Jun 10, 2011
@ 10:56 pm
Permalink
165 notes

Well, hello there.

Well, hello there.

(via xoxoanderson-deactivated2012070)


Photo

Jun 6, 2011
@ 9:07 pm
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14 notes

And I’m just posting this one because he looks like one suave GQMF.

And I’m just posting this one because he looks like one suave GQMF.


Photo

Jun 6, 2011
@ 9:05 pm
Permalink
18 notes

Anderson at the 2011 CFDA Fashion Awards!
More photos here.

Anderson at the 2011 CFDA Fashion Awards!

More photos here.


Photo

Jun 4, 2011
@ 1:06 pm
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22 notes

Look at this fine man showing off his glasses. LOOK AT HIM.

Look at this fine man showing off his glasses. LOOK AT HIM.


Photo

Jun 4, 2011
@ 1:04 pm
Permalink
39 notes

Anderson talking to his staff during a taping of his new show.
(look at all the blue… it’s mesmerizing…)

Anderson talking to his staff during a taping of his new show.

(look at all the blue… it’s mesmerizing…)


Photo

Jun 4, 2011
@ 1:02 pm
Permalink
4 notes

Anderson answering questions at a Q&A on his new show!

Anderson answering questions at a Q&A on his new show!


Photo

Jun 3, 2011
@ 8:17 pm
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12 notes

The staff at AC360 successfully pulled off their birthday surprise for Anderson!

The staff at AC360 successfully pulled off their birthday surprise for Anderson!


Photo

Jun 3, 2011
@ 6:21 pm
Permalink
33 notes


“I’m not trying to replace Oprah, she’s irreplaceable,” says  Anderson Cooper, when asked if he’s trying to fill Winfrey’s very  sizable TV shoes with the launch of Anderson, his new daytime talk show. “She’s still going to be on television, and a bigger presence than people realize.”


Cooper, who turns 44 Thursday, seems poised to become the Ryan  Seacrest of news. In addition to his show on CNN and his segments for 60 Minutes,  Cooper’s premiering a new talk show this fall on CTV that he says will  combine elements of Oprah, Ellen DeGeneres and Phil Donahue.
“For some people, the news doesn’t connect with their daily lives,  but on daytime television, you can connect with an audience in an  emotional way,” says Cooper, the Yale-educated son of Gloria Vanderbilt  and writer Wyatt Emory Cooper, who covered the war in Burma with a  forged press pass when he couldn’t land a journalism job after school.  “If Walter Cronkite was on TV today, I think he’d also have a sailing  show on the Travel Network.”
The afternoon talk show, which will be filmed in Manhattan, will be a  mixture of pop culture guests and the heartwarming stories of everyday  people. It’s a populist approach, says Cooper, that he hopes will leave  his audience inspired.
“I find it rewarding doing CNN and 60 Minutes, but it’s nice  to exercise different muscles,” says Cooper, who was recently in the  news when his team was attacked during the Egyptian revolt. “I watch The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills and Atlanta as much as anyone else, and I don’t think that makes me any less credible because I care about Syria, as well.”
This won’t be Cooper’s first trip away from the news desk. In 2000, while working as a reporter on 20/20, he began to feel burnt-out from the job.
“I was outside a strip club at 3 a.m. with Brandi and Tiffany  protesting a lap dance ordinance and thought, ‘What is the difference  between this and a reality show?’ ” asks Cooper, who left the program to  host The Mole, an early reality-TV show. “Then 9/11 happened,  and on 9/12, I got a call from CNN asking if I would go to Afghanistan –  things had changed and I had to get back into news.”
Cooper says he’ll be able to leave his talk show at a moment’s notice  to cover breaking stories, (he hadn’t seen Winfrey’s last episode  because he was in Missouri covering the tornado), but that newscasters  and entertainment personalities no longer have to be from Venus or Mars.
“Viewers know that the person on the news is just pretending to be  all-knowing and that person blow-drys their hair and is overpaid and  wearing makeup,” Cooper says. “It’s very easy to become a cheesy TV  personality and I think I’ve been able to resist it so far and I  certainly don’t want to become a cheesy person now.”

I’m not trying to replace Oprah, she’s irreplaceable,” says Anderson Cooper, when asked if he’s trying to fill Winfrey’s very sizable TV shoes with the launch of Anderson, his new daytime talk show. “She’s still going to be on television, and a bigger presence than people realize.”

Cooper, who turns 44 Thursday, seems poised to become the Ryan Seacrest of news. In addition to his show on CNN and his segments for 60 Minutes, Cooper’s premiering a new talk show this fall on CTV that he says will combine elements of Oprah, Ellen DeGeneres and Phil Donahue.

“For some people, the news doesn’t connect with their daily lives, but on daytime television, you can connect with an audience in an emotional way,” says Cooper, the Yale-educated son of Gloria Vanderbilt and writer Wyatt Emory Cooper, who covered the war in Burma with a forged press pass when he couldn’t land a journalism job after school. “If Walter Cronkite was on TV today, I think he’d also have a sailing show on the Travel Network.”

The afternoon talk show, which will be filmed in Manhattan, will be a mixture of pop culture guests and the heartwarming stories of everyday people. It’s a populist approach, says Cooper, that he hopes will leave his audience inspired.

“I find it rewarding doing CNN and 60 Minutes, but it’s nice to exercise different muscles,” says Cooper, who was recently in the news when his team was attacked during the Egyptian revolt. “I watch The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills and Atlanta as much as anyone else, and I don’t think that makes me any less credible because I care about Syria, as well.”

This won’t be Cooper’s first trip away from the news desk. In 2000, while working as a reporter on 20/20, he began to feel burnt-out from the job.

“I was outside a strip club at 3 a.m. with Brandi and Tiffany protesting a lap dance ordinance and thought, ‘What is the difference between this and a reality show?’ ” asks Cooper, who left the program to host The Mole, an early reality-TV show. “Then 9/11 happened, and on 9/12, I got a call from CNN asking if I would go to Afghanistan – things had changed and I had to get back into news.”

Cooper says he’ll be able to leave his talk show at a moment’s notice to cover breaking stories, (he hadn’t seen Winfrey’s last episode because he was in Missouri covering the tornado), but that newscasters and entertainment personalities no longer have to be from Venus or Mars.

“Viewers know that the person on the news is just pretending to be all-knowing and that person blow-drys their hair and is overpaid and wearing makeup,” Cooper says. “It’s very easy to become a cheesy TV personality and I think I’ve been able to resist it so far and I certainly don’t want to become a cheesy person now.”


Photo

Jun 3, 2011
@ 4:04 pm
Permalink
7 notes

A new photo from ‘Anderson’!

Anderson  recently spent a day in his new studio (home to the show) shooting with  a live studio audience. Here he’s introduced to the audience for the  first time.

A new photo from ‘Anderson’!

Anderson recently spent a day in his new studio (home to the show) shooting with a live studio audience. Here he’s introduced to the audience for the first time.


Photo

Jun 2, 2011
@ 1:22 pm
Permalink
2 notes

andersoncooperismyhero:

Anderson in Toronto at a news station…so handsome!

Wow, never thought I’d see this happening haha!  Anderson is with etalk hosts Ben Mulroney and Tanya Kim!

andersoncooperismyhero:

Anderson in Toronto at a news station…so handsome!

Wow, never thought I’d see this happening haha!  Anderson is with etalk hosts Ben Mulroney and Tanya Kim!

(via cannedsoupisgood-deactivated201)