Qui va sortir amb Arianna Huffington?
Bernard Levin data de Arianna Huffington de ? fins a ?. La diferència d'edat era de 21 anys, 10 mesos i 26 dies.
Arianna Huffington
Arianna Huffington (nascuda amb el nom Arianna Stassinópulos del grec Αριάννα Στασινόπουλος a Atenes el 15 de juliol de 1950) és una columnista grecoamericana. És més coneguda per ser co-fundadora de l'espai web de notícies The Huffington Post. A mitjans de 1990 era una conservadora reconeguda, però a final d'aquesta mateixa dècada adoptà unes creences polítiques més liberals. És l'exesposa del congressista republicà Michael Huffington.
L'any 2003 es va presentar com a candidata independent a governadora en les eleccions de destitució de Califòrnia. L'any 2009, Huffington va passar a ser el número 12 de la primera llista de dones més influents en els mitjans de comunicació per la revista Forbes. A més a més també va aconseguir escalar fins al número 42 a la llista Top 100 dels mitjans de comunicació de The Guardian.
El dia 7 de febrer del 2011, AOL va anunciar l'adquisió de The Huffington Post per 315 milions de dòlars (223 milions d'euros aproximadament), de manera de Huffington fou nomenada presidenta i editora en cap de The Huffington Post Media Group, que inclou els Engadget, AOL Music, Patch Media i StyleList.
llegir més...Bernard Levin
Henry Bernard Levin (19 August 1928 – 7 August 2004) was an English journalist, author and broadcaster, described by The Times as "the most famous journalist of his day". The son of a poor Jewish family in London, he won a scholarship to the independent school Christ's Hospital and went on to the London School of Economics, graduating in 1952. After a short spell in a lowly job at the BBC selecting press cuttings for use in programmes, he secured a post as a junior member of the editorial staff of a weekly periodical, Truth, in 1953.
Levin reviewed television for the Manchester Guardian and wrote a weekly political column in The Spectator noted for its irreverence and influence on modern parliamentary sketches. During the 1960s he wrote five columns a week for the Daily Mail on any subject that he chose. After a disagreement with the proprietor of the paper over attempted censorship of his column in 1970, Levin moved to The Times where, with one break of just over a year in 1981–82, he remained as resident columnist until his retirement, covering a wide range of topics, both serious and comic.
Levin became a broadcaster, first on the weekly satirical television show That Was the Week That Was in the early 1960s, then as a panellist on a musical quiz, Face the Music, and finally in three series of travel programmes in the 1980s. He began to write books in the 1970s, publishing 17 between 1970 and 1998. From the early 1990s, Levin developed Alzheimer's disease, which eventually forced him to give up his regular column in 1997, and to stop writing altogether not long afterwards.
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