Jane Velez-Mitchell
Jane Velez-Mitchell
Jane Velez-Mitchell is a television journalist and author. For six years she hosted her own show on HLN, Jane Velez-Mitchellreplacing Glenn Beck, who moved to Fox News Channel. She is often seen commenting on high-profile cases for CNN, TruTV, E! and other national cable TV shows. Velez-Mitchell frequently guest hosts for Nancy Grace on her Headline News show. Velez-Mitchell reported for the nationally syndicated show Celebrity Justice. She also appears as a substitute host on HLN's Showbiz Tonight. In October...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionJournalist
CountryUnited States of America
Shopping in the right kind of stores and looking for healthier foods can be a wonderful adventure to health.
She gets away with it. Everybody co-signs her bad behavior. It's like we all are co-dependent on Lindsay Lohan. When are we going to stand up to her?
McDonald's says it's phasing out pig gestation crates. When I heard that news, I almost started crying.
There's no constitutional right for your parents to pay for college.
There's no better feeling in the world than knowing that my show played a role in stopping animal abuse or alleviating animal suffering.
There's no excuse in a technological age where we've got drones - you know, overhead, and we can monitor anything, all sorts of minutia - that we can't track living flesh-and-blood children.
I've bought perfectly healthy horses for a couple of hundred dollars just as they were about to be loaded on a slaughterhouse-bound truck.
Public downfalls are more painful and humiliating than private ones.
Real life is often sloppy, tragic, ugly, embarrassing, unglamorous, and not made for TV.
The worst environmental decision you can make as a human being is to have 14 kids.
Scientists have shown that pigs are capable of playing simple video games, learning from each other, and even learning names.
After coming out as gay, I soon felt a lot more comfortable in my life, moment to moment.
Something is sick with our society that we have to deal with.
Every day, it seems, a new extreme weather catastrophe happens somewhere in America, and the medias all over it, profiling the ordinary folks wiped out by forest fires, droughts, floods, massive sinkholes, tornadoes.