JuJu Chang, Co-Emcee

Juju Chang is the news anchor for ABC News' "Good Morning America" and an Emmy Award-winning correspondent for "20/20" and "Nightline". She also hosts "Moms Get Real" a digital show for ABC News Now, and posts a web log called "JuJu Juggles" about work, motherhood and the madness of everyday living.

Chang contributed to breaking news coverage of the earthquake in Haiti and has received an Emmy for coverage of California wildfires. She's previously won a Gracie for a "20/20" story on gender equality in the sciences. Her other recent stories include an hour-long examination of the long-term impact of foreign adoptions; the struggles of people with Albinism globally, including the plight of Tanzanian albinos; and an in-depth portrait of one family as it deals with the gender transition of the dad.

Chang has also reported on the case of Hannah Overton, a young Texas mother of five, sentenced to life in prison for the salt-poisoning death of her foster son Andrew Burd.

She has reported for "Nightline" on a wide variety of topics including the Heparin tainting scandal, the diet wars and the state of the in vitro fertilization industry.

Chang also won a Gracie for a story about judicial activism on PBS' "Now," and a Freddie for a series she hosted, also for PBS, called "The Art of Women's Health."

From 1999 to 2000, she anchored the early morning newscasts of ABC News' "World News Now" and "World News This Morning."

Chang has previously reported primarily for "World News Tonight," covering such stories as the U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya, Hurricane George, and the anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear accident.

Chang was based in Washington, D.C., from 1996-97, where she covered the White House, Capitol Hill, and the 1996 presidential election for NewsOne, ABC's affiliate news service.

Prior to her assignment in Washington, she was a reporter for KGO-TV in San Francisco, from 1995-96, where she covered a variety of state and local issues.

Before her on air career, Chang served as a producer and off-air reporter for "World News Tonight."