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The newsroom at CNBC headquarters, also used to host Power Lunch CNBC's control room in New Jersey Melissa Lee and Simon Hobbs on assignment during the show Squawk on the Street The TV studio at the NASDAQ MarketSite, where CNBC's market updates and the show Fast Money are hosted CNBC New Jersey headquarters The newsroom at CNBC's New Jersey headquarters A Squawk Box outside broadcast, hosted ...
Rick Santelli (Chicago) - CNBC on-air editor, also covering the Fed and foreign exchange market; Pippa Stevens - markets and investing reporter; Jane Wells - special correspondent; Emily Wilkins (Washington, D.C.) - political reporter covering regulatory issues and policies
From 1999 to 2002, he served as correspondent for several CNBC programs including Business Center as well as a special correspondent for Fox X-press on Fox News. Prior to joining NBC, Quintanilla served as co-anchor for CNBC's early-morning program, Wake Up Call. Beginning December 19, 2005, Quintanilla co-anchored Squawk Box.
Rebecca "Becky" Quick (born July 18, 1972) is an American television journalist/newscaster and co-anchorwoman of CNBC's financial news shows Squawk Box and On the Money. Biography [ edit ]
Brian Sullivan is an anchor and correspondent for CNBC. He is the network's Senior National Correspondent and has also presented a number of the station's flagship programs, most recently Last Call, until it ended in July 2024, having previously hosted Worldwide Exchange. Before this Brian co-hosted Power Lunch and Street Signs.
During the 1984 presidential election, between Ronald Reagan and Walter Mondale, ABC News used a map which showed Republican states as red and Democratic states as blue. According to David Brinkley, that was because Red = R = Reagan. [17] Mainstream political discussion following the 2000 presidential election used red state/blue state more ...
On January 7, 2015, Squawk Box moved to a new street-side studio inside the Time-Life Building in New York City after almost two decades in New Jersey (at CNBC's original facilities in Fort Lee from its August 7, 1995, debut to October 10, 2003, and at CNBC's facilities in Englewood Cliffs from October 13, 2003, to January 6, 2015).
Rick John Santelli (born July 6, 1956) is an American editor for the CNBC Business News network. [3] He joined CNBC as an on-air editor on June 14, 1999, reporting primarily from the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade. He was formerly the vice president for an institutional trading and hedge fund account for futures-related products.