Chris Wallace
![Wallace at the premiere of ''[[Good Night, and Good Luck (play)|Good Night, and Good Luck]]'' in 2025
<!-- | alias = Christopher Tarzan<ref name=Gajewski/> presently not displaying this due to some disagreements about whether or not to do so, being discussed on talk page-->| birth_name = Christopher Wallace](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/59/ChrisWallace-byPhilipRomano.jpg)
As a teenager, Wallace became an assistant to Walter Cronkite during the 1964 Republican National Convention. After graduating from Harvard University, he worked as a national reporter for ''The Boston Globe''. He transitioned towards broadcast news at NBC (1975–1988), where he served as a White House correspondent, the Sunday anchor for ''NBC Nightly News'' (1982–1984, 1986–1987) and moderator of ''Meet the Press'' (1987–1988). He then worked for ABC, where he served as an anchor for ''Primetime Thursday'' and ''Nightline'' (1989–2003). He is the only person to have served as host and moderator of more than one of the major American political Sunday morning talk shows, which he did during his time at NBC.
From 2003 to 2021, he hosted ''Fox News Sunday'' and took high profile interviews with Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Vladimir Putin. He made history when he became the first Fox News journalist to moderate a United States Presidential debate in 2016 between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. He returned to moderate the 2020 debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. In 2021, he left Fox to join CNN as host of the interview series ''Who's Talking to Chris Wallace?'' (2022–2024) and anchored ''The Chris Wallace Show'' (2023–2024). In November 2024, Wallace left CNN following the expiration of his three year contract. Provided by Wikipedia
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