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Montel Williams is an Emmy Award-winning talk-show host, a decorated
former naval intelligence officer, an entrepreneur, motivational speaker,
and philanthropist.
He is the author the New York Times bestselling inspirational memoirs Climbing Higher and Mountain, Get Out of My Way, and the coauthor
of the New York Times bestseller Bodychange.
And now he's launched a new online program that's designed to help
you reach your goals and transform your life. Based on his new book,
Living Well,Montel's customized online program provides you with all
the intereactive tools you need to look great and feel spectacular!
Montel also continues to have a very successful television career.
For the past 17 years he has hosted The Montel Williams Show, a daily,
one-hour, nationally syndicated talk show that provides an engaging
forum for provocative and meaningful discussions about family, communication, and personal and social responsibility. In addition to
receiving the 1996 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Talk Show
host, Montel's program was also nominated for Outstanding Talk
Show in 2001, and Outstanding Talk Show Host in 2002.
Montel's unique place in the television landscape has made him a
welcome prescence beyond the studio. Last December, Williams
traveled to the Middle East to see first-hand how the troops were
coping during the holiday season. Just after the Virginia Tech shooting
, he interviewed a former high-school classmate of Cho Seung Hui.
He has also conducted interviews in federal prisons, at the scene of
Ground Zero after 9/11, and throughout the Gulf Coast after
Hurricane Katrina.
Prior to hosting his own television show, Montel was a special-duty
intelligence officer in the navy, specializing in cryptology. A graduate
of the Naval Academy, he received a number of military awards and
citations during his naval career. Before attending the Academy, he
enlisted in the Marine Corps after graduating from a Baltimore,
Maryland-area high school.
One of Montel's key beliefs is that "success is determined by what
you give back to others," which is why he has worked actively with
a variety of charitable organizations throughout the years.
In 1999, Montel announced his diagnosis with MS, a potentially
debilitating autoimmune disease that affects the brain and spinal cord.
To raise both awareness and funds for MS research, he created the
Montel Williams MS Foundation.
In 2006 Montel became National Spokesperson for the Partnership
for Prescription Assistance, a major industry campaign to extend
prescription drug help to all Americans.
Montel has four children, ages 12 through 23, and resides in
New York City. He is an avid snowboarder, who finds the sport
challenging and theraputic, relieving some of the neuralgic pain
in his legs. He married Tara Fowler in October 2007. |
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