Geraldo Rivera (born July 4, 1943, New York City, New York, U.S.) is an American investigative journalist, talk show host, conservative political commentator, and television personality best known for his sensationalistic reporting and his tendency to include himself in stories.
Rivera was the son of a Puerto Rican father and a Russian Jewish mother. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Arizona State University and received a juris doctorate from Brooklyn Law School. In 1970 his work as an attorney for Puerto Rican activists in New York led to television interviews that became his break into journalism. He joined WABC-TV in New York as a reporter, eventually working on both Good Morning America and 20/20. In 1972 Rivera won a Peabody Award for a story on the abuse of patients at Willowbrook State School, a New York institution for the mentally ill. In 1975, Rivera’s late-night talk show Good Night America showed the home movie of the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy to a nationwide audience for the first time. The graphic nature of the film renewed calls for investigations into the death. Rivera stayed with ABC until 1985 but was fired after criticizing ABC News president Roone Arledge for refusing to air a colleague’s story on the relationship between John Kennedy and actress Marilyn Monroe.
In 1986 Rivera produced a two-hour live syndicated special, The Mystery of Al Capone’s Vault, in which he opened what proved to be an empty vault found in the former headquarters of Chicago gangster Al Capone. The show attracted millions of viewers. The following year he began hosting a daytime talk show, Geraldo (1987–98), and soon became known for his theatrics and controversial guests. In an episode featuring racist skinheads and white supremacists and a black activist, an on-air brawl occurred, and Rivera’s nose was broken. Twice he had plastic surgery on the show. He also produced a prime-time special, Devil Worship: Exposing Satan’s Underground (1988), on a purported (but false) epidemic of Satanic ritual abuse in the United States. He again sensationalized the subject on later episodes of Geraldo, leading many people to wrongly believe that Satanic ritual abuse was widespread in the country. The episodes had tremendous influence and caused many people to be wrongly accused and convicted of child abuse. In 1995 Rivera realized his mistake and publicly apologized.
In 1994 Rivera signed with CNBC (Consumer News and Business Channel) to do Rivera Live. Three years later he became a reporter for NBC (National Broadcasting Co.) and covered the impeachment of U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton. In 2001 Rivera joined the Fox News Channel and became a war correspondent. His tenure was marked by two controversies: the first was sparked by his inaccurate report from Afghanistan that he was at the scene of a friendly fire incident, and the second involved his reporting during a military operation in Iraq in which he, while embedded with a U.S. military unit, drew a map in the sand on camera, describing the planned movements of the unit.
Rivera later hosted the syndicated At Large with Geraldo Rivera (2005–07) and the Fox News program Geraldo at Large (2007–14). Notable highlights of those later shows included an exclusive interview with pop star Michael Jackson before a trial on child molestation charges. In 2012 Rivera sparked controversy yet again when he commented on the fatal shooting of unarmed African American teenager Trayvon Martin, saying that the young man had been shot on account of his seemingly threatening clothing (a hoodie). The comments were widely perceived to play upon stereotypes. Rivera subsequently apologized.
Aside from his journalistic work, Rivera made several acting appearances, often as himself. He appeared in the movies The Bonfire of the Vanities (1988) and Natural Born Killers (1994). He also wrote the autobiographies Exposing Myself (1992) and The Geraldo Show (2018) and several other books, including The Great Progression: How Hispanics Will Lead America to a New Era of Prosperity (2009).