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Al Roker (now weatherman for the Today show on NBC) Carol Roth (Closing Bell, host of The Noon Show on WGN Radio) Darren Rovell (now with ESPN & ABC News) John W. Schoen (now Data Editor for CNBC Digital.) Bill Seidman (chief commentator for CNBC; died in 2009) Tom Snyder (died in 2007) Mary Thompson; Erinn Westbrook (now pursuing a career as ...
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Seema Mody is a reporter and anchor for CNBC.She joined CNBC in July 2011 after previously being one at CNBC-TV18 in Mumbai, India. While airing on CNBC-TV18, Mody co-anchored two programs, Power Breakfast and After the Bell, as well as co-producing and anchoring other special features.
Melissa Lee is a reporter, journalist, and news anchor for CNBC.Since January 2009, she has occasionally hosted Closing Bell when the anchor is unavailable. She has also hosted Options Action, and is now the host of CNBC's 5pm ET daily show Fast Money.
In 2013, she was hired by CNBC to co-host Worldwide Exchange and Squawk on the Street. [2] On March 12, 2018, Brian Sullivan replaced Eisen (and co-anchor Wilfred Frost) as anchor of Worldwide Exchange. Eisen, in turn, replaced Sullivan on Power Lunch. On November 29, 2018, Eisen and Frost began co-anchoring Closing Bell.
Kelly Evans (born July 17, 1985) is an American journalist and co-anchor of Power Lunch on the CNBC business news channel. [1] She was previously based in CNBC Europe's London, England, headquarters from May 2012 to May 2013 and is now based in CNBC's headquarters in New Jersey.
After Erin Burnett's departure Amanda Drury (late of CNBC Asia) and Brian Sullivan (late of the Fox Business Network) became this program's new anchor team and were to be the show's final anchors. On October 13, 2014, Street Signs was launched in full 1080i high-definition as part of CNBC's network-wide switch to a full 16:9 letterbox presentation.
An on-air still photo of Ettinger is included in "Bloomberg By Bloomberg," Michael Bloomberg's 2001 autobiography. [13] She spent nearly 12 years at Bloomberg News covering Wall Street and the financial markets, and also anchored live coverage of the September 11th terrorist attacks from Bloomberg's midtown Manhattan studios.