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Email Address of Journalists, News Editors, TV Anchors & Web Reporters
Written by Amit Agarwal on Aug 25, 2007
Want to contact the author of some story published on TV, newspaper or news website. Here are some email addresses of media personalities.

ABC News, Barbara Walters, 2020
ABC News, George Stephanopoulos, thisweek
ABC News, John Stossel, 2020
ABC News, Nightline, nightline
ABC News, Ted Koppel, nightline
Associated Press, Jennifer Loven, jloven
Associated Press, Kathleen Carroll (Executive Editor), kcarroll
Associated Press, Larry Margasak, lmargasak
Associated Press, Michael Silverman (Managing Editor), msilverman
Associated Press, Michelle DeArmound, opinion
Associated Press, Nedra Pickler, npickler
Associated Press, Ron Fournier, rfournier
Associated Press, Sandra Johnson (Washington Bureau Chief), sjohnson
Associated Press, Seth Sutel, pr
Associated Press, Terry Hunt, thunt
CBS News, 48 Hours, 48hours
CBS News, 60 Minutes II, 60II
CBS News, 60 Minutes, 60m
CBS News, Bill Plante, bpc
CBS News, CBS Evening News with Dan Rather, evening
CBS News, Early Show, earlyshow
CBS News, Erin Moriarty, efm
CBS News, Face The Nation, ftn
CBS News, Mark Knoller, mkx
CBS News, Peter Maer, pma
CBS News, Rita Braver, rbc
CBS News, Sunday Morning, sundays
CBSnews.com, Dick Meyer (Editorial Director), grain
CNN, Aaron Brown, aaron.brown
CNN, American Morning, am
CNN, Anderson Cooper 360, 360
CNN, Andrea Koppel, andrea.koppel
CNN, Bill Schneider, bill.schneider
CNN, Bruce Morton, bruce.morton
CNN, Candy Crowley, candy.crowley
CNN, Carol Lin, carol.lin
CNN, Crossfire, crossfire
CNN, Daryn Kagan, daryn.kagan
CNN, David Ensor, david.ensor
CNN, Daybreak, daybreak
CNN, Howard Kurtz, kurtzh
CNN, In The Money, inthemoney
CNN, Inside Politics, insidepoliticts
CNN, James Carville, crossfire
CNN, Jeanne Meserve, jeanne.meserve
CNN, Jeff Greenfield, jeff.greenfield
CNN, Jim Walton (President of CNN News Group), jim.walton
CNN, Judy Woodruff, deirdre.walsh
CNN, Kelly Wallace, kelly.wallace
CNN, Kyra Phillips, kyra.phillips
CNN, Live At CNN, live
CNN, Live From, livefrom
CNN, Live Today, livetoday
CNN, Lou Dobbs, lou.dobbs
CNN, Lou Dobbs, loudobbs
CNN, Miles O’Brien, miles.obrien
CNN, Moneyline, moneyline
CNN, Newsnight, newsnight
CNN, Paul Begala, crossfire
CNN, Paula Zahn Now, paulazahnnow
CNN, Paula Zahn, paula.zahn
CNN, Paula Zahn, paulazahn
CNN, Rick Davis (Executive Vice President – CNN News Standards and Practices), rick.davis
CNN, Robert Novak, robert.novak
CNN, Tom Hannon (Political Director), tom.hannon
CNN, Tucker Carlson, crossfire
CNN, Weekend American Morning, wam
CNN, Wolf Blitzer, wolf
Fox News, After Hours, afterhours
Fox News, At Large with Geraldo Rivera, atlarge
Fox News, Brian Wilson, brian.wilson
Fox News, Brit Hume, brit.hume
Fox News, Bulls & Bears, bullsandbears
Fox News, Cashin’In, cash
Fox News, Cavuto on Business, cavuto
Fox News, Collins Spencer, collins.spencer
Fox News, Comments, comments
Fox News, DaySide with Linda Vester, dayside
Fox News, Forbes on FOX, forbes
Fox News, FOX & Friends, friends
Fox News, FOX Magazine, foxmagazine
Fox News, FOX News Live, feedback
Fox News, FOX News Sunday, fns
Fox News, FOX News Watch, newswatch
Fox News, FOX Report with Shepard Smith, foxreport
Fox News, Hannity & Colmes (Alan Colmes), Colmes
Fox News, Hannity & Colmes (Sean Hannity), Hannity
Fox News, Heartland w/ John Kasich, heartland
Fox News, James Rosen, james.rosen
Fox News, Jim Angle, jim.angle
Fox News, Major Garrett, major.garrett
Fox News, Molly Henneberg, molly.henneberg
Fox News, On the Record with Greta, ontherecord
Fox News, On the Record with Greta, ontherecord
Fox News, Special Report with Brit Hume, special
Fox News, Studio B with Shepard Smith, studiob
Fox News, The Beltway Boys, beltway
Fox News, The Big Story with John Gibson, myword
Fox News, The O’Reilly Factor, oreilly
Fox News, Viewer Services, viewerservices
Fox News, War Stories, warstories
Fox News, Wendell Goler, wendell.goler
Fox News, Your World with Neil Cavuto, cavuto
MSNBC, Alison Stewart, world
MSNBC, Amy Robach, world
MSNBC, Bob Kur, robert.kur
MSNBC, Chris Jansing, world
MSNBC, Chris Matthews, hardball
MSNBC, Contessa Brewer, world
MSNBC, Countdown with Keith Olbermann, countdown
MSNBC, Dan Abrams, abramsreport
MSNBC, David Schuster, dshuster
MSNBC, Deborah Norville, norville
MSNBC, Deborah Norville, norville
MSNBC, Dennis Sullivan (Executive Editor – Campaign Coverage), dennis.sullivan
MSNBC, Don Imus, imus
MSNBC, Don Imus, imus
MSNBC, Hardball with Chris Matthews, hardball
MSNBC, Imus in the Morning, Imus
MSNBC, Joe Scarborough, joe
MSNBC, Joe Trippi, jtrippi
MSNBC, Keith Olbermann, countdown
MSNBC, Lester Holt Live, Lesterholt
MSNBC, Lester Holt, lester.holt
MSNBC, MSNBC Investigates, msnbcinvestigates
MSNBC, Randy Meier, world
MSNBC, Richard Kaplan (President), feedback
MSNBC, Ron Reagan, rreagan
MSNBC, Scarborough Country, joe
NBC News, Dateline, dateline
NBC News, Meet The Press (Tim Russert), mtp
NBC News, Nightly News with Tom Brokaw, nightly
NBC News, Today Show, today

Email address list that’s still needs sorting:

info, hrt, program, program_hr, satelit, marketing, pristojba, hrtweb_vijesti, 7.30syd, currentaffairs, austory, currentaffairs, 4corners, insidebusiness, landline, currentaffairs, hotline, aime.vanhecke, visites, news, info, editor, master, dr.dk, drkommunikation, info, service, info, info, postmaster, info, mail, news, live, info, mail, news, info, mail, news, eco, news, info, media.services, news, editor, viewer_liaisonC3, radio. news, info, editor, mail, ingela.fagerstrom, info, interactivesales, editor, news@@info, news, avlibr, info, news, avlibr, info, news, news, info, editor, news, info, editor@@news, info, editor, brocke, info, info, news, mail, post, post, info, news, fernsehen, radio, redaktion, videotext, webmaster, post, info, info, feedback.russian, info, info, news, editor

You’ll also like:
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Export Phone Numbers of your Facebook Friends
Running out of space on Gmail? Get It Back in 5 minutes
Get Google Forms Data in an Email Message
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OldWorld

TECH
FINANCE
POLITICS
STRATEGY
LIFE
Last week, the estimated global population reached 7 billion. In fewer than 100 years, the world will likely hit the 10 billion mark.
It seems like an appropriate time to take a look a back at what the world was like in the first century, when there were only around 200 million people in the world, and the Roman empire ruled the planet.

Although we can’t know very much for certain about the first century, a surprising number of things we still use today were introduced in this era, including a definitive census and the precursor to e-readers: the "book."

Rome was the world’s largest city

Wikimedia
With an estimated population between 800,000 and 1 million residents, Rome was the largest and most powerful city by the year 1 AD. Much of what we know about civilization in this ancient era comes from history recorded during Rome’s reign.

The world’s population was somewhere around 231 million

Along the Nile Wikimedia
Give or take a whole bunch. It would be impossible to know anything close to the real number, but estimates have put the global population in the 200 million range.

The most populated areas were the communities based around the Ganges, Tigris, Yangtze, Nile and Po rivers.

Jewish girls could be married as early as 12 years and a day

Flickr – Fabio Trifoni
Though to be fair, it was more common to wait until they reached 12 and a half.

In those days, marriage took place in two stages. The formal betrothal would first be agreed upon between the husband and the girl’s father. Several months to a year later, the girl would move into her new husband’s house. It wasn’t until they started living together that the marriage became official.

Women had almost no, or very limited, legal and economic rights

Wikimedia
Women rarely had economic independence. A woman’s wages would always go directly to her father or husband, depending on her marital status. Legally, women weren’t allowed to file for divorce, while men could ask for a "writ of renouncement."

On the other hand, men had to be sure to buy back their wives if they were captured.

China’s census in 2 AD counted 57,671,400 people

Flickr – avlxyz
Considered the world’s oldest surviving ancient census, the Han dynasty wanted to count its people to determine revenues and military strength in each region.

Even in the first century, China accounted for a huge portion of the world’s overall population.

The first vending machines sold holy water

Flickr – mikeleeorg
Vending machines were invented in the first century in the city of Alexandria. But first century citizens weren’t buying potato chips or soda: they were buying holy water.

"When a coin was dropped into a slot, its weight would pull a cork out of a spigot and the machine would dispense a trickle of holy water."

People started getting their hands on the modern "book"

Flickr – Friar’s Balsam
Prior to the first century, most of what was written could be found on scrolls of parchment. But once the AD era started, the practice of stringing together wooden tablets into a "codex" began.

The precursor to the book as we know it today, the codex became popular once it was co-opted by a new religious group — called the Christians — for their holy book: the Bible.

The economies of the city and the country were radically different

Flickr – ALBOWIEB
There are still variations in prices between urban and rural areas today, but nothing like it was in the first century. For example, fruit was three to six times more expensive in Jerusalem than in the rural areas surrounding it. Livestock was also costlier in the city, and doves (for sacrifices) were sold at a premium.

You could work as a camel driver, pigeon contest organizer, and dog dung collector

Flickr – motogr@pher
There were some strange jobs in the first century world. The list of jobs that were looked down upon by the general public included the shepherd, "the dealer in products from the sabbatical year," butchers, and doctors.

Men hung out at the public baths after work

Wikimedia Commons/Alan Pennington
Public baths were a fundamental part of Roman culture and daily life. At the end of the workday, men of all ages and social classes would convene at the local baths to converse, discuss business, and relax. The baths also provided areas to exercise and plays sports as well as buy food.

Gladiators were the equivalent to modern-day movie stars

Flickr/Jean-Louis Zimmermann
Despite the extreme violence, gladiator fighting was one of the most popular forms of public entertainment in first century Rome.

While most gladiators were criminals, slaves, or prisoners or war, successful contestants usually achieved great fame and fortune. These men in armor who battled wild animals and other human challengers for sport were celebrated in frescoes and mosaics throughout the Roman world.

People attended chariot races instead of football games

Flickr/Dale Gillard
Like gladiator contests, chariot racing was a dangerous and bloody sport that often resulted in the death of drivers or horses. But that only made the event more popular.

Almost 200,000 devoted fans would come out to watch the chariot races that took place in Circus Maximus, considered the oldest stadium in Rome.

There was terrorism

meibukanmaster.blogspot.com
Early terrorists, known as Sicarii or "dagger-men" were an extremist group that opposed Roman leadership over the Jews and wanted to take back Jerusalem.

The Sicarii were famous for using small daggers and stealth tactics to murder their enemies in crowded places before slipping away.

Tunics and togas were the popular fashion of the day

Wikimedia Commons
Most men and women in Ancient Rome wore a basic undergarment called a tunic, which they belted at the waist. The length and design of the tunic distinguished the wearer’s social status. Elite Romans wore longer tunics with stripes, whereas slaves and manual laborers generally wore tunics that came above the knee and allowed freer movement. Only male citizens were allowed to wear the togas. These draped over the body on top of the tunic.

Infant mortality rates were extremely high

Only about 75% of babies in the first century AD survived their first year; half of all children died before the age of 10. It was also up to the father to decide whether or not the family would keep a newborn baby. If the baby was defoe family could not afford to keep it, the baby would be abandoned in the street where someone might take it in as a slave