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  1. Oct 12, 2012 · Email. With guns blazing, Martha Raddatz took over the reins of Thursday's vice presidential debate and never let go. While Vice President Biden and GOP Rep. Paul Ryan engaged in an intense...

    • She Went to High School with Roseanne Barr.
    • She’S A College Dropout.
    • She’S Been to Iraq More Than 20 times.
    • She Took Part in A Bomb-Dropping Mission.
    • But That Wasn’T The Most Dangerous thing.
    • She Told Her Son One of History’s Biggest Secrets.
    • She Used Chamillionaire’s “Ridin’ Dirty” as A Ringtone.

    Born in Idaho Falls, Idaho in 1953, Martha Raddatz attended East Lake High in Salt Lake City, Utah and attended class with Roseanne Barr. While Raddatz earnedher diploma in 1971, Barr opted out of further education to pursue a career in comedy.

    (Not that there’s anything wrong with that.) Raddatz attended the University of Utah near her childhood home in Salt Lake without much of an idea of what she wanted to do for a living. When a job position opened up at nearby television affiliate KTVX, Raddatz opted to drop out of college during her senior year. While she later describedthe decision...

    Raddatz worked her way up to positions at an ABC affiliate in Boston and at National Public Radio before becoming ABC's chief White House correspondent in 2005. Uncomfortable remaining in the press corps in Washington, Raddatz insisted on traveling to Iraq multiple times in order to gain a better understanding of how the war was affecting the area....

    Eager to experience the rigors of combat firsthand, Raddatz spent years trying to convince the U.S. military to allow her to fly along on a bombing raid. She finally got her wish: Raddatz was inside an F-15E when it was loadedwith explosive devices weighing more than 500 pounds each.

    Crossing a river in Jalalabad near Afghanistan, Raddatz hitched a ride on a makeshift inflatable raft steeredby an eight-year-old local. It was the only path that would get her near an area that was once home to Osama bin Laden.

    Raddatz’s globetrotting has had one undesirable side effect: it has proven worrisome to her kids, including her son Jake, who grew concerned for her mother’s safety whenever she was about to travel. In 2011, Raddatz was headed for Kabulwhen she received word that the U.S. government had located and killed Osama bin Laden. Calling Jake to tell him s...

    During her time as a White House correspondent, Raddatz often had trouble hearing incoming calls or messages on her cell phone—press gatherings are frequently busy, crowded, and noisy. To allow her to acknowledge important incoming calls, she asked Jaketo program a loud ringtone into her cell. He chose Chamillionaire’s “Ridin’ Dirty.” In a 2007 Whi...

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  3. Oct 12, 2012 · In the minutes leading up to the debate, moderator Martha Raddatz took her seat with her back to the audience. She joked that she is used to reporting from war zones, a place where she seldom...

  4. Martha Raddatz. Martha Raddatz ( / ˈrædɪts /; born February 14, 1953) is an American reporter with ABC News. She is the network's Chief Global Affairs Correspondent reporting for ABC's World News Tonight with David Muir, Nightline, and other network broadcasts. In addition to her work for ABC News, Raddatz has written for The New Republic ...

    • 2
    • 1999–present
    • ABC News Chief Global Affairs Correspondent,
    • February 14, 1953 (age 70), Idaho Falls, Idaho, U.S.
  5. Oct 12, 2012 · Martha Raddatz demanded specifics during widely lauded role as moderator, bringing a fresh concept to US political debates Emma Gilbey Keller Fri 12 Oct 2012 00.57 EDT

  6. Nov 27, 2023 · ABC News. -- Martha Raddatz is ABC News’ chief global affairs correspondent and co-anchor of “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.” She has covered national security, foreign policy and politics for decades — reporting from the Pentagon, the State Department, the White House and conflict zones around the world.

  7. Martha Raddatz is co-anchor of “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” and ABC News Chief Global Affairs Correspondent. She has covered all aspects of foreign policy for nearly 20 years – reporting from the Pentagon, the State Department, the White House, and from conflict zones around the world. Prior to her current role she served as ...