In Profile (Fox News Edition): Cavuto, Claman, Wallace

By Chris Ariens 

Neil Cavuto talks with NPR’s David Folkenflik about anchoring 17 hours a week on two cable TV networks, while battling multiple sclerosis: “I have a progressive disease. I’m not naive about it. It can compromise your voice. The nerve endings that feed your esophagus on up will close. I can’t worry about it. I’ll know when I know. Someone said, ‘you tell us when it can’t happen or when you can’t do it.’ And I will.”

Liz Claman talks with YourTeenMag.com on being a parent in the spotlight: “When my children were younger I had to ban them from Googling me. There were a plethora of comments on [my body]. That didn’t bother me because since the beginning of time people have commented on others’ looks. However, it has gone so far as anonymous people photoshopping my photos. They cut my head off and put it on a different body having a wardrobe malfunction or showing nudity. I stopped trying a long time ago to get that scrubbed from the web because the more you try, the worse it gets. That stuff has actually hurt me from getting opportunities in the past because people think it’s real.”

Chris Wallace talks with Fatherly.com about a mistake he made as a kid that he tried to ensure his kids didn’t: “I used to get anxious about a lot of things. I could work myself into quite a snit before I had to take a test and I very much did not want my kids to follow that pattern. But I couldn’t just tell them that, I had to show them through my behavior. With bringing up kids, it’s not what you say, it’s what you do. They don’t pay attention to your words, they pay attention to your actions.”

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