Stop us if you’ve heard this one before: A prominent TV reporter walks into a bar…
A handful of the news anchors at MSNBC recently held a dinner to welcome Ana Cabrera, the former CNN journalist, to the network, where she has taken the reins of its 10 a.m. hour. Chris Jansing and Katy Tur, familiar faces to MSNBC viewers, were holding court, but Andrea Mitchell, a legendary Washington correspondent who has anchored an early afternoon show on MSNBC since 2008, was missing, due to making an appearance at Henry Kissinger’s 100th birthday.
“I thought a 100th birthday party for somebody would end early,” Mitchell confesses. “But it didn’t.”
Cabrera, Jansing, Tur, Mitchell have all found time to get together more frequently in recent weeks. They, along with their colleague, José Díaz-Balart, are playing a more critical role at MSNBC — but not in hours when such significance might be expected.
A handful of the news anchors at MSNBC recently held a dinner to welcome Ana Cabrera, the former CNN journalist, to the network, where she has taken the reins of its 10 a.m. hour. Chris Jansing and Katy Tur, familiar faces to MSNBC viewers, were holding court, but Andrea Mitchell, a legendary Washington correspondent who has anchored an early afternoon show on MSNBC since 2008, was missing, due to making an appearance at Henry Kissinger’s 100th birthday.
“I thought a 100th birthday party for somebody would end early,” Mitchell confesses. “But it didn’t.”
Cabrera, Jansing, Tur, Mitchell have all found time to get together more frequently in recent weeks. They, along with their colleague, José Díaz-Balart, are playing a more critical role at MSNBC — but not in hours when such significance might be expected.
- 9/19/2023
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
MSNBC is adding another notable news anchor to its dayside lineup.
Ana Cabrera, who left CNN at the end of last year, will anchor MSNBC’s 10 a.m. hour in a program called Ana Cabrera Reports.
Jose Diaz-Balart most recently anchored the hour for MSNBC, but shifted to 11 a.m. as part of a larger shake-up earlier this year.
MSNBC has reworked its daytime lineup over the last few years under the “Reports” brand name, with news anchors like Diaz-Balart, Katy Tur, Chris Jansing, Andrea Mitchell and others hosting their own versions of the news-driven format. As with the other Reports shows, Cabrera’s program will include in-the-field reporting, interviews with newsmakers and discussions around current events.
Before joining MSNBC Cabrera was an anchor and national correspondent for CNN for nearly 10 years.
Ana Cabrera, who left CNN at the end of last year, will anchor MSNBC’s 10 a.m. hour in a program called Ana Cabrera Reports.
Jose Diaz-Balart most recently anchored the hour for MSNBC, but shifted to 11 a.m. as part of a larger shake-up earlier this year.
MSNBC has reworked its daytime lineup over the last few years under the “Reports” brand name, with news anchors like Diaz-Balart, Katy Tur, Chris Jansing, Andrea Mitchell and others hosting their own versions of the news-driven format. As with the other Reports shows, Cabrera’s program will include in-the-field reporting, interviews with newsmakers and discussions around current events.
Before joining MSNBC Cabrera was an anchor and national correspondent for CNN for nearly 10 years.
- 4/5/2023
- by Alex Weprin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Ana Cabrera has been named the new host of MSNBC’s 10 a.m. hour as part of network president Rashida Jones’ ongoing effort to focus on hard news programming.
On April 10, the network will launch “Ana Cabrera Reports,” which will see the award-winning journalist break down the latest news and bring expert in-the-field reporting on the day’s most important stories to viewers, paired with interviews and discussions with newsmakers, journalists, thought leaders and others.
The show will be executive produced by Kerrie Wudyka and based in New York at MSNBC Headquarters at 30 Rockefeller Plaza.
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Cabrera, who has more than two decades of experience, has reported from across the globe on major domestic and international news stories including the Ferguson, Missouri protests, the Canadian parliament shooting and...
On April 10, the network will launch “Ana Cabrera Reports,” which will see the award-winning journalist break down the latest news and bring expert in-the-field reporting on the day’s most important stories to viewers, paired with interviews and discussions with newsmakers, journalists, thought leaders and others.
The show will be executive produced by Kerrie Wudyka and based in New York at MSNBC Headquarters at 30 Rockefeller Plaza.
Also Read:
Jen Psaki Warns Democrats to Hide Support of Trump Indictment: ‘Not the Time for a Mass Order of Lock-Him-Up T-Shirts’ (Video)
Cabrera, who has more than two decades of experience, has reported from across the globe on major domestic and international news stories including the Ferguson, Missouri protests, the Canadian parliament shooting and...
- 4/5/2023
- by Lucas Manfredi
- The Wrap
Ana Cabrera is joining MSNBC’s daytime lineup, with the launch of Ana Cabrera Reports on April 10.
Her move to MSNBC had been expected since she announced in December that she was departing CNN. The hourlong show will air at 10 a.m. Et. Kerrie Wudyka is the executive producer.
Cabrera had been with CNN since 2013, based in Denver, before anchoring CNN Newsroom. At the network, she hosted two presidential town halls, and she has reported on major stories including the protests in Ferguson, Mo. and North Korea prisoner Kenneth Bae’s return to the U.S. She previously was an anchor for Wgmh-tv, the ABC affiliate in Denver, and was an anchor and reporter at NBC and Fox affiliates in Spokane, Wa.
Ana Cabrera
Cabrera won a regional Emmy for her anchoring of Colorado’s High Park fire in 2012.
Cabrera is filling a slot previously occupied by Jose Diaz-Balart. His...
Her move to MSNBC had been expected since she announced in December that she was departing CNN. The hourlong show will air at 10 a.m. Et. Kerrie Wudyka is the executive producer.
Cabrera had been with CNN since 2013, based in Denver, before anchoring CNN Newsroom. At the network, she hosted two presidential town halls, and she has reported on major stories including the protests in Ferguson, Mo. and North Korea prisoner Kenneth Bae’s return to the U.S. She previously was an anchor for Wgmh-tv, the ABC affiliate in Denver, and was an anchor and reporter at NBC and Fox affiliates in Spokane, Wa.
Ana Cabrera
Cabrera won a regional Emmy for her anchoring of Colorado’s High Park fire in 2012.
Cabrera is filling a slot previously occupied by Jose Diaz-Balart. His...
- 4/5/2023
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
Chris Jansing is accustomed to doing marathon stints in front of the camera for NBC News and MSNBC. In the aftermath of 9/11, she sometimes found herself reporting or anchoring for seven hours or more. “I lived on tater tots for, I think, two months,” she recalls in a recent interview. “It was the one thing that could fill me up and wouldn’t ruin my lipstick.”
Her latest assignment will require her to be on air only for two hours a day. But it may prove just as challenging.
In an era when cable-news anchoring stints are usually doled out 60 minutes at a time, Jansing is taking on more. The new edition of her “Chris Jansing Reports” at 1 p.m. expands to two hours, and her widening territory comes as MSNBC’s identity is increasingly tied up with a growing spate of opinion and “news perspective” programs. Her show, she says,...
Her latest assignment will require her to be on air only for two hours a day. But it may prove just as challenging.
In an era when cable-news anchoring stints are usually doled out 60 minutes at a time, Jansing is taking on more. The new edition of her “Chris Jansing Reports” at 1 p.m. expands to two hours, and her widening territory comes as MSNBC’s identity is increasingly tied up with a growing spate of opinion and “news perspective” programs. Her show, she says,...
- 2/13/2023
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Hallie Jackson’s MSNBC show will end next month as she expands her daily NBC News Now program by an hour.
That move is part of a series of lineup changes MSNBC announced on Thursday. Chris Jansing will add an hour to her anchoring duties, as Chris Jansing Reports expands to two hours from 1 Pm Et to 3 Pm Et. Katy Tur Reports will move to 3 Pm.
Meanwhile, Jose Diaz-Balart’s show will move back an hour to 11 Am Et, with a rotating lineup of hosts at 10 Am until a permanent anchor is named. Andrea Mitchell Reports will remain at noon Et.
The changes will take place on Feb. 13.
Jackson launched Hallie Jackson Reports on MSNBC in September, 2021, and previously anchored MSNBC Live at 10 Am starting in 2016.
She launched Hallie Jackson Now on NBC News Now in November, 2021, doing double duty as the network expanded its programming on the streaming network.
That move is part of a series of lineup changes MSNBC announced on Thursday. Chris Jansing will add an hour to her anchoring duties, as Chris Jansing Reports expands to two hours from 1 Pm Et to 3 Pm Et. Katy Tur Reports will move to 3 Pm.
Meanwhile, Jose Diaz-Balart’s show will move back an hour to 11 Am Et, with a rotating lineup of hosts at 10 Am until a permanent anchor is named. Andrea Mitchell Reports will remain at noon Et.
The changes will take place on Feb. 13.
Jackson launched Hallie Jackson Reports on MSNBC in September, 2021, and previously anchored MSNBC Live at 10 Am starting in 2016.
She launched Hallie Jackson Now on NBC News Now in November, 2021, doing double duty as the network expanded its programming on the streaming network.
- 1/13/2023
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
MSNBC is shifting the roles of anchors Chris Jansing and Hallie Jackson on broadcast and streaming programming, the network confirmed Thursday to TheWrap.
The network has added an hour to “Chris Jansing Reports,” which will now air from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on MSNBC. Jackson, who has been anchoring the 3 p.m. hour of “MSNBC Reports,” will shift to streaming on NBC News Now with an hour of “Hallie Jackson Now.” Katy Tur will now anchor the 3 p.m. slot.
Other notable changes to MSNBC’s line-up include José Díaz-Balart shifting to 11 a.m. while Andrea Mitchell assumes anchoring duties at noon and Katy Tur anchors the 3 p.m. hour. As the 10 a.m. time slot remains without a permanent anchor, the hour will be anchored by rotating hosts until a new anchor is select.
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“Over the last year,...
The network has added an hour to “Chris Jansing Reports,” which will now air from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on MSNBC. Jackson, who has been anchoring the 3 p.m. hour of “MSNBC Reports,” will shift to streaming on NBC News Now with an hour of “Hallie Jackson Now.” Katy Tur will now anchor the 3 p.m. slot.
Other notable changes to MSNBC’s line-up include José Díaz-Balart shifting to 11 a.m. while Andrea Mitchell assumes anchoring duties at noon and Katy Tur anchors the 3 p.m. hour. As the 10 a.m. time slot remains without a permanent anchor, the hour will be anchored by rotating hosts until a new anchor is select.
Also Read:
NBC News and MSNBC Lays Off 75 Staffers Across Networks
“Over the last year,...
- 1/12/2023
- by Loree Seitz
- The Wrap
The new year is kicking off with some notable changes at NBC’s newsgathering operations, including daytime and streaming programming shifts as well as layoffs impacting the division.
Over at the digital platform NBC News Now, Hallie Jackson is getting a vote of confidence with an additional hour of the senior Washington correspondent’s show, which will now air from 5 to 7 p.m. Et.
“On Now, she’s covered everything from the midterms, to mental health, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and climate change, making sense of the news of the day for our viewers in her signature conversational style, and now, going even deeper with the new hour,” stated Janelle Rodriguez, who was just promoted to executive vp NBC News Now to oversee the service in addition to NBC Nightly News.
On the cable news side, MSNBC is retooling its daytime programming schedule, with changes including José Díaz-Balart taking over the 11 a.
Over at the digital platform NBC News Now, Hallie Jackson is getting a vote of confidence with an additional hour of the senior Washington correspondent’s show, which will now air from 5 to 7 p.m. Et.
“On Now, she’s covered everything from the midterms, to mental health, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and climate change, making sense of the news of the day for our viewers in her signature conversational style, and now, going even deeper with the new hour,” stated Janelle Rodriguez, who was just promoted to executive vp NBC News Now to oversee the service in addition to NBC Nightly News.
On the cable news side, MSNBC is retooling its daytime programming schedule, with changes including José Díaz-Balart taking over the 11 a.
- 1/12/2023
- by Erik Hayden
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
CNN isn’t the only cable-news network reworking its daytime schedule.
MSNBC is expanding Chris Jansing’s afternoon perch to two hours from one as the Washington D.C-based Hallie Jackson, who also anchors a late-afternoon program on NBC News Now, leaves the cable outlet to focus on the streaming work. Meanwhile, weekend host Jonathan Capehart, who has held forth on Sundays, will now do an hour on both Saturday and Sunday. All the moves come as NBCUniversal’s new operations refine their efforts under a reorganization unveiled Wednesday.
The moves were revealed to staffers Thursday in memos from Rashida Jones, president of MSNBC, and Janelle Rodriguez, the NBC News executive vice president who oversees NBC News Now. Programming changes at MSNBC will take place February 13 for weekday programs and February 18 for weekend programs, Jones said in her note.
Jackson, who has anchored various hours on MSNBC over the last few years,...
MSNBC is expanding Chris Jansing’s afternoon perch to two hours from one as the Washington D.C-based Hallie Jackson, who also anchors a late-afternoon program on NBC News Now, leaves the cable outlet to focus on the streaming work. Meanwhile, weekend host Jonathan Capehart, who has held forth on Sundays, will now do an hour on both Saturday and Sunday. All the moves come as NBCUniversal’s new operations refine their efforts under a reorganization unveiled Wednesday.
The moves were revealed to staffers Thursday in memos from Rashida Jones, president of MSNBC, and Janelle Rodriguez, the NBC News executive vice president who oversees NBC News Now. Programming changes at MSNBC will take place February 13 for weekday programs and February 18 for weekend programs, Jones said in her note.
Jackson, who has anchored various hours on MSNBC over the last few years,...
- 1/12/2023
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Dax Tejera, the executive producer of the ABC News Sunday public affairs show “This Week,” has died.
Tejera died suddenly of a heart attack on Friday, Dec. 23, according to a memo sent to staff by ABC News president Kim Godwin on Saturday. He was only a few weeks shy of his 38th birthday.
Tejera was named executive producer of “This Week” at 35, just weeks before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. The newscast quickly climbed to No. 1 among Adults 25-54. He joined ABC News as a senior producer in the Washington Bureau in 2017 and produced remote-anchored broadcasts from across the country along with specials from the Trump-Kim summit in Singapore and Trump-Putin summit in Helsinki.
Prior to overseeing the Sunday show as executive producer, Tejera managed newsmaking interviews and covered major breaking news, including the Covid pandemic, the 2020 presidential election and the January 6th riot at the Capitol.
Tejera worked...
Tejera died suddenly of a heart attack on Friday, Dec. 23, according to a memo sent to staff by ABC News president Kim Godwin on Saturday. He was only a few weeks shy of his 38th birthday.
Tejera was named executive producer of “This Week” at 35, just weeks before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. The newscast quickly climbed to No. 1 among Adults 25-54. He joined ABC News as a senior producer in the Washington Bureau in 2017 and produced remote-anchored broadcasts from across the country along with specials from the Trump-Kim summit in Singapore and Trump-Putin summit in Helsinki.
Prior to overseeing the Sunday show as executive producer, Tejera managed newsmaking interviews and covered major breaking news, including the Covid pandemic, the 2020 presidential election and the January 6th riot at the Capitol.
Tejera worked...
- 12/24/2022
- by Scott Mendelson
- The Wrap
Click here to read the full article.
Dax Tejera, the executive producer of the ABC News Sunday public affairs show This Week, has died. He was 37.
Tejera died suddenly of a heart attack Friday, Dec. 23, according to a memo sent to staff by ABC News president Kim Godwin on Saturday.
Tejera, a veteran TV news producer at both ABC and NBC News, had led the Sunday show anchored by George Stephanopoulos, Jonathan Karl and Martha Raddatz since just before the Covid-19 pandemic erupted around the world. He joined ABC News in 2017 as a senior producer based in Washington, D.C.
Before joining ABC News, he worked as executive producer of Jorge Ramos’ program for the ABC-Univision joint venture Fusion, and before that was a producer at MSNBC, where he worked on shows anchored by Chris Jansing and Alex Wagner (who now occupies the 9 p.m. time slot).
Tejera was known for his competitive spirit,...
Dax Tejera, the executive producer of the ABC News Sunday public affairs show This Week, has died. He was 37.
Tejera died suddenly of a heart attack Friday, Dec. 23, according to a memo sent to staff by ABC News president Kim Godwin on Saturday.
Tejera, a veteran TV news producer at both ABC and NBC News, had led the Sunday show anchored by George Stephanopoulos, Jonathan Karl and Martha Raddatz since just before the Covid-19 pandemic erupted around the world. He joined ABC News in 2017 as a senior producer based in Washington, D.C.
Before joining ABC News, he worked as executive producer of Jorge Ramos’ program for the ABC-Univision joint venture Fusion, and before that was a producer at MSNBC, where he worked on shows anchored by Chris Jansing and Alex Wagner (who now occupies the 9 p.m. time slot).
Tejera was known for his competitive spirit,...
- 12/24/2022
- by Alex Weprin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Queen Elizabeth II will be laid to rest on Monday. Her funeral, held at Westminster Abbey, is set to commence at approximately 6 am Et.
What follows is a rundown of TV news coverage; all start times are Eastern:
More from TVLineThe Crown Pausing Production 'Out of Respect' for Queen Elizabeth's PassingFall Premiere Week: What's New, Returning and LeavingQueen Elizabeth II Remembered: ABC's Thursday-Night Coverage Plan
ABC
Start time: 5:30 am
Anchored by: Robin Roberts and David Muir
CBS
Start time: 5:30 am
Anchored by: Gayle King and Norah O’Donnell
CNN
Start time: 5 am
Anchored by: Anderson Cooper and Erin Burnett...
What follows is a rundown of TV news coverage; all start times are Eastern:
More from TVLineThe Crown Pausing Production 'Out of Respect' for Queen Elizabeth's PassingFall Premiere Week: What's New, Returning and LeavingQueen Elizabeth II Remembered: ABC's Thursday-Night Coverage Plan
ABC
Start time: 5:30 am
Anchored by: Robin Roberts and David Muir
CBS
Start time: 5:30 am
Anchored by: Gayle King and Norah O’Donnell
CNN
Start time: 5 am
Anchored by: Anderson Cooper and Erin Burnett...
- 9/19/2022
- by Ryan Schwartz
- TVLine.com
Click here to read the full article.
The funeral of Queen Elizabeth II on Monday, Sep. 19, is shaping up to be a global spectacle. World leaders, including President Biden, will be in attendance, and the world’s media will be there, too.
The queen’s funeral will be the first time such an event has been broadcast on television. In 1952, when Queen Elizabeth ascended to the throne, the funeral procession of King George VI was televised in the U.K., but the funeral itself remained private. Not so this time.
While the BBC will be the official broadcaster of the proceedings, every U.S. TV news organization will be in attendance, flying in many of their top anchors and blowing up their typical programming lineups to carry it live.
Here’s what’s planned from the U.S. TV news networks.
ABC News
Good Morning America anchor Robin Roberts and...
The funeral of Queen Elizabeth II on Monday, Sep. 19, is shaping up to be a global spectacle. World leaders, including President Biden, will be in attendance, and the world’s media will be there, too.
The queen’s funeral will be the first time such an event has been broadcast on television. In 1952, when Queen Elizabeth ascended to the throne, the funeral procession of King George VI was televised in the U.K., but the funeral itself remained private. Not so this time.
While the BBC will be the official broadcaster of the proceedings, every U.S. TV news organization will be in attendance, flying in many of their top anchors and blowing up their typical programming lineups to carry it live.
Here’s what’s planned from the U.S. TV news networks.
ABC News
Good Morning America anchor Robin Roberts and...
- 9/16/2022
- by Alex Weprin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
One of the news industry’s worst-kept secrets is finally seeing the light of day.
Jen Psaki, the White House Press Secretary who resigned from the role a few weeks ago, is slated to join MSNBC in the fall, where she will host a new streaming program that is expected to launch in the first quarter of 2023. She will also appear on NBC and during MSNBC’s special programming related to the 2022 midterm elections and the 2024 presidential election. MSNBC is confirming a hire that has been known about in TV-news circles for several months.
“Her extensive experience in government and on the campaign trail and perspective as a White House and Washington insider is the type of analysis that sets MSNBC apart,” said Rashida Jones, MSNBC’s president, in a prepared statement. “She’s a familiar face and trusted authority to MSNBC viewers, and we look forward to her insight during this consequential election season.
Jen Psaki, the White House Press Secretary who resigned from the role a few weeks ago, is slated to join MSNBC in the fall, where she will host a new streaming program that is expected to launch in the first quarter of 2023. She will also appear on NBC and during MSNBC’s special programming related to the 2022 midterm elections and the 2024 presidential election. MSNBC is confirming a hire that has been known about in TV-news circles for several months.
“Her extensive experience in government and on the campaign trail and perspective as a White House and Washington insider is the type of analysis that sets MSNBC apart,” said Rashida Jones, MSNBC’s president, in a prepared statement. “She’s a familiar face and trusted authority to MSNBC viewers, and we look forward to her insight during this consequential election season.
- 5/24/2022
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
NBC News Now is expanding its lineup of daily programming, and that includes adding public affairs show Meet the Press Now, a move from MSNBC. Chuck Todd will anchor the show that will be streaming Monday through Friday, at 4/3c, beginning June 6, on the streaming news network. Taking over Meet the Press Daily‘s time slot — weekdays at 1/12c, beginning on May 26 — is veteran award-winning journalist and MSNBC Senior National Correspondent Chris Jansing with MSNBC Reports. “NBC News is the leader in streaming news,” NBC News President Noah Oppenheim said in a statement. “Since our launch, we’ve been committed to delivering the best of NBC News’ journalism, free, to streaming audiences everywhere. Chuck was one of the first broadcast anchors to see the massive potential of streaming and bringing Meet the Press‘s daily franchise to NBC News Now reinforces the platform’s status as the destination for news on streaming.
- 5/6/2022
- TV Insider
MSNBC is making another big change to its lineup.
Chuck Todd‘s Meet the Press Daily — an extension of NBC’s venerable news program Meet the Press — is relocating from MSNBC to streaming outlet NBC News Now, where it will now be known as Meet the Press Now. The newly branded hour will stream weekdays at 4 pm Et beginning Monday, June 6.
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As a result of the move, MSNBC Senior National Correspondent Chris Jansing will begin anchoring MSNBC Reports at 1 pm,...
Chuck Todd‘s Meet the Press Daily — an extension of NBC’s venerable news program Meet the Press — is relocating from MSNBC to streaming outlet NBC News Now, where it will now be known as Meet the Press Now. The newly branded hour will stream weekdays at 4 pm Et beginning Monday, June 6.
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As a result of the move, MSNBC Senior National Correspondent Chris Jansing will begin anchoring MSNBC Reports at 1 pm,...
- 5/6/2022
- by Ryan Schwartz
- TVLine.com
Meet the Press Daily with Chuck Todd will move from MSNBC to the network streaming service NBC News Now.
Starting on June 6, his daily show will stream as Meet the Press Now, marking the latest effort to expand the offerings on the free platform.
Todd’s Meet the Press Daily, also known as Mtp Daily, had aired at 1 Pm Et each day, and will move to 4 Pm Et on NBC News Now. Chris Jansing will take over the 1 Pm hour starting on May 26 with MSNBC Reports.
The network also announced that senior investigative and consumer correspondent Vicky Nguyen would join Morgan Radford, NBC News correspondent, as co-host of NBC News Now Live from 11 Am to 1 Pm. Correspondent Aaron Gilchrist will anchor NBC News Now Live from 2 Pm to 4 Pm.
Todd has moderated Sunday’s Meet the Press, the longest running show in TV history, since 2014. He launched the spinoff Meet the Press Daily on MSNBC,...
Starting on June 6, his daily show will stream as Meet the Press Now, marking the latest effort to expand the offerings on the free platform.
Todd’s Meet the Press Daily, also known as Mtp Daily, had aired at 1 Pm Et each day, and will move to 4 Pm Et on NBC News Now. Chris Jansing will take over the 1 Pm hour starting on May 26 with MSNBC Reports.
The network also announced that senior investigative and consumer correspondent Vicky Nguyen would join Morgan Radford, NBC News correspondent, as co-host of NBC News Now Live from 11 Am to 1 Pm. Correspondent Aaron Gilchrist will anchor NBC News Now Live from 2 Pm to 4 Pm.
Todd has moderated Sunday’s Meet the Press, the longest running show in TV history, since 2014. He launched the spinoff Meet the Press Daily on MSNBC,...
- 5/6/2022
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
People who want to “Meet The Press” with Chuck Todd Monday through Friday will have to do so via their broadband connection, not their set-top box.
“Meet The Press Daily,” the weekday counterpart to NBC News’ flagship Sunday public-affairs program, will move to NBC News Now starting June 6, the latest example of how much more focused big TV-news outlets are on streaming video as a rising generation of news aficionados reaches out to digital venues for the latest information and headlines. Todd’s streaming program will be called “Meet The Press Now.” Chris Jansing, the NBC News veteran, will take over his 1 p.m. hour on MSNBC.
“Chuck was one of the first broadcast anchors to see the massive potential of streaming and bringing ‘Meet the Press’s’ daily franchise to NBC News Now reinforces the platform’s status as the destination for news on streaming,” said Noah Oppenheim, president of NBC News,...
“Meet The Press Daily,” the weekday counterpart to NBC News’ flagship Sunday public-affairs program, will move to NBC News Now starting June 6, the latest example of how much more focused big TV-news outlets are on streaming video as a rising generation of news aficionados reaches out to digital venues for the latest information and headlines. Todd’s streaming program will be called “Meet The Press Now.” Chris Jansing, the NBC News veteran, will take over his 1 p.m. hour on MSNBC.
“Chuck was one of the first broadcast anchors to see the massive potential of streaming and bringing ‘Meet the Press’s’ daily franchise to NBC News Now reinforces the platform’s status as the destination for news on streaming,” said Noah Oppenheim, president of NBC News,...
- 5/6/2022
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
MSNBC anchor Stephanie Ruhle told viewers on Monday that she has been recovering from Covid-19, having spent the better part of the last two weeks in bed and isolating.
“My husband and my kids, they have it too,” Ruhle said. “We still don’t know how we got it, but we are getting better and we are very, very lucky.”
Ruhle returned to anchoring but said that she was broadcasting from home.
“I am grateful to be on the mend and broadcasting safely from home, where I am still isolating until I know for sure that I am no longer contagious and positive,” she said.
Chris Jansing had been filling in for Ruhle as she recovered.
“We have a virus that is ravaging our country, and we need to do a whole lot more to stop it,” she said. “And as a person who is sick and scared, I am begging you,...
“My husband and my kids, they have it too,” Ruhle said. “We still don’t know how we got it, but we are getting better and we are very, very lucky.”
Ruhle returned to anchoring but said that she was broadcasting from home.
“I am grateful to be on the mend and broadcasting safely from home, where I am still isolating until I know for sure that I am no longer contagious and positive,” she said.
Chris Jansing had been filling in for Ruhle as she recovered.
“We have a virus that is ravaging our country, and we need to do a whole lot more to stop it,” she said. “And as a person who is sick and scared, I am begging you,...
- 12/7/2020
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
MSNBC announced Thursday that the two-hour weekend time slot once held by Joy Reid will be broken up between two new anchors, Tiffany Cross and Jonathan Capehart.
Cross’ program will air on Saturdays and premiere Dec. 12 while Capehart’s will air on Sundays beginning on Dec. 13. Both shows will be based in Washington, D.C. Like Reid before them, both will broadcast from 10 a.m. Et to 12 p.m. Et on their respective days.
Pulitzer-winning Capehart has been a contributor at MSNBC since 2009, which network president Phil Griffin noted in a statement about the new lineup: “Jonathan Capehart has been a longtime member of the MSNBC family and his steadfast dedication to great journalism, along with Tiffany Cross’ fresh expert analysis, offer our MSNBC weekend morning audience the best of both worlds from two very different life and worldview experiences.”
Cross has frequently guest-hosted on MSNBC. A veteran of CNN’s weekend show teams,...
Cross’ program will air on Saturdays and premiere Dec. 12 while Capehart’s will air on Sundays beginning on Dec. 13. Both shows will be based in Washington, D.C. Like Reid before them, both will broadcast from 10 a.m. Et to 12 p.m. Et on their respective days.
Pulitzer-winning Capehart has been a contributor at MSNBC since 2009, which network president Phil Griffin noted in a statement about the new lineup: “Jonathan Capehart has been a longtime member of the MSNBC family and his steadfast dedication to great journalism, along with Tiffany Cross’ fresh expert analysis, offer our MSNBC weekend morning audience the best of both worlds from two very different life and worldview experiences.”
Cross has frequently guest-hosted on MSNBC. A veteran of CNN’s weekend show teams,...
- 12/3/2020
- by Lindsey Ellefson
- The Wrap
NBC News and ABC News broke into their networks’ Saturday-night schedules to cover protests breaking around the country in reaction to the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, while the nation’s three main cable-news networks featured ongoing coverage of public dissent instead of regularly scheduled programming.
Viewers saw surprising scenes of protest in cities ranging from Los Angeles and New York City to Salt Lake City and Chicago across the course of Saturday evening. In some instances, reporters like NBC’s News Ali Velshi got close to tear gas being fired. In others, anchors worried openly on air that correspondents in crowds might be in danger from the crowds they were covering.
At 10 p.m. eastern, NBC News anchor Chris Jansing led a report during what would normally have been a re-air of an old “Saturday Night Live” on NBC. Meanwhile, ABC News took up the entire hour with...
Viewers saw surprising scenes of protest in cities ranging from Los Angeles and New York City to Salt Lake City and Chicago across the course of Saturday evening. In some instances, reporters like NBC’s News Ali Velshi got close to tear gas being fired. In others, anchors worried openly on air that correspondents in crowds might be in danger from the crowds they were covering.
At 10 p.m. eastern, NBC News anchor Chris Jansing led a report during what would normally have been a re-air of an old “Saturday Night Live” on NBC. Meanwhile, ABC News took up the entire hour with...
- 5/31/2020
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
A bevy of working TV-news correspondents from a range of media outlets expressed surprise and outrage after a CNN correspondent was arrested while covering protests in Minneapolis.
Police arrested CNN journalist Omar Jimenez and his crew on air early Friday during a live broadcast in Minneapolis, as they covered riots sparked by George Floyd’s death, sparking intense outrage as well as an apology by Minnesota governor Tim Walz to top executives at the cable-news network . CNN called the arrests a “violation of First Amendment rights.” By 7:40 a.m. eastern, Jimenez had been released and was back on air. Governor Walz told CNN he “deeply apologizes” and said the arrests were “unacceptable.”
But a range of TV-news correspondents were shocked by the act, as Jimenez had done nothing to warrant being removed from the scene. Journalists from CBS News, NBC News and CNN were among those stunned by the maneuver.
Police arrested CNN journalist Omar Jimenez and his crew on air early Friday during a live broadcast in Minneapolis, as they covered riots sparked by George Floyd’s death, sparking intense outrage as well as an apology by Minnesota governor Tim Walz to top executives at the cable-news network . CNN called the arrests a “violation of First Amendment rights.” By 7:40 a.m. eastern, Jimenez had been released and was back on air. Governor Walz told CNN he “deeply apologizes” and said the arrests were “unacceptable.”
But a range of TV-news correspondents were shocked by the act, as Jimenez had done nothing to warrant being removed from the scene. Journalists from CBS News, NBC News and CNN were among those stunned by the maneuver.
- 5/29/2020
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Hurricane Florence has yet to swirl over North Carolina, but the nation’s TV-news operations are already setting up to meet her.
“It’s a large area, and we really want to be able to cover a big part of it,” says Wendy Fisher, vice president of newsgathering for ABC News, which has already dispatched multiple crews of anchors, reporters, camera operations and technicians to various points in the southeastern U.S. “Most hurricanes “hit the beach and then they peter out” she adds. “This one, there are warnings that it will linger. We kind of have to cover several different stories,” ranging from the storm itself to the consequences of its aftermath.
All the big news networks have plans to cover Hurricane Florence, which meteorologists predict will slam into the U.S. east coast later this week. It is now a category 4 hurricane and has sustained winds of 130 miles per hour.
“It’s a large area, and we really want to be able to cover a big part of it,” says Wendy Fisher, vice president of newsgathering for ABC News, which has already dispatched multiple crews of anchors, reporters, camera operations and technicians to various points in the southeastern U.S. “Most hurricanes “hit the beach and then they peter out” she adds. “This one, there are warnings that it will linger. We kind of have to cover several different stories,” ranging from the storm itself to the consequences of its aftermath.
All the big news networks have plans to cover Hurricane Florence, which meteorologists predict will slam into the U.S. east coast later this week. It is now a category 4 hurricane and has sustained winds of 130 miles per hour.
- 9/12/2018
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
While authorities continue to investigate the mysterious sonic attack that injured workers at the U.S. embassy in Havana earlier this year, MSNBC anchor Chris Jansing decided to let viewers hear the ultra-high-pitched sound for themselves. “Experts say it can cause brain injuries and hearing loss,” Jansing said at the end of her Friday broadcast, offering a warning before immediately proceeding to play the sound. “If you don’t want to hear this press mute now, but experts do not believe it’s dangerous to hear for short durations through standard devices like TVs,” she said. Also Read: Did Trump...
- 10/13/2017
- by Jon Levine
- The Wrap
For Missy Franklin, the Rio Olympics ended as they started - in tears. The golden girl who won five medals at the 2012 Olympics finished 14th in the semi-final of her signature event, the 200-meter backstroke, on Thursday - failing the qualify for Friday's final. Franklin's time of 2:09.74 is nearly six seconds behind the world record she set in the event at the 2012 Games. When asked what she learned from her incredibly difficult week in Rio, Franklin replied: "I'll let you know in a couple weeks, maybe a couple months. Right now, it sucks," according to the Denver Post. Franklin...
- 8/12/2016
- by Tiare Dunlap, @tiaredunlap
- PEOPLE.com
All eyes were on MSNBC Tuesday at 3 p.m. Et, not necessarily to see Pope Francis’ historic arrival in the U.S., but to see how Brian Williams would handle his long-awaited return to the anchor desk. Would he be emotional? Would he address the fact that he was sent to TV’s equivalent of Siberia? The answer is no. “Good day. I’m Brian Williams at MSNBC headquarters here in New York,” Williams said at the top of the hour. “In a short time, Pope Francis will arrive in this country for the first time.” He then tossed to Chris Jansing,...
- 9/22/2015
- by Itay Hod
- The Wrap
A deadly shooting that has left nine dead at the historic Emanuel Ame Church, a beacon of the civil rights movement, has sent news divisions scrambling to mobilize crews. All three broadcast evening news anchors are headed to Charleston, S.C. World News Tonight anchor David Muir will lead ABC's coverage while senior national correspondent Cecilia Vega and correspondent Steve Osunsami will join Muir on the ground. Today co-host Savannah Guthrie — who is filling in for Lester Holt while he is on vacation — will anchor Nightly News from Charleston. She'll join correspondents Chris Jansing, Ron Allen and Craig
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- 6/18/2015
- by Marisa Guthrie
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TheWrap’s guide to television coverage of President Barack Obama’s speech, including who’s anchoring the broadcasts and providing analysis
President Barack Obama will give his seventh annual State of the Union address on Tuesday night at 9 p.m. Et, with expected topics including national security, immigration, health care and the environment. Sen. Jon Ernst (R-ia) is expected to provide the Republican response.
After the president’s address, while the Republicans are giving their response and the networks are starting to break down their analyses, Obama will be preparing for something altogether different. His administration has invited three YouTube...
President Barack Obama will give his seventh annual State of the Union address on Tuesday night at 9 p.m. Et, with expected topics including national security, immigration, health care and the environment. Sen. Jon Ernst (R-ia) is expected to provide the Republican response.
After the president’s address, while the Republicans are giving their response and the networks are starting to break down their analyses, Obama will be preparing for something altogether different. His administration has invited three YouTube...
- 1/20/2015
- by Jason Hughes
- The Wrap
Hawks like Senator Lindsey Graham (R-sc) and others have been warning for weeks that Isis, the band of Sunni militants currently marauding across Iraq, have designs to strike the United States, possibly in a 9/11-level attack. On Meet the Press Sunday morning, guest host Chris Jansing asked outgoing House Intelligence Chair Mike Rogers (R-mi) if there was any actual intelligence to support that claim.
- 8/24/2014
- by Evan McMurry
- Mediaite - TV
MSNBC mixed up its Brady Bunch stars on Monday. During a segment on the cable network's 10 a.m. show Jansing & Co. about Ann B. Davis' death, the cable network accidentally showed a photo of another actress who played Brady Bunch housekeeper Alice Nelson. MSNBC aired an image of Henriette Mantel, who played Alice in The Brady Bunch Movie. After returning from a commercial break, the cable network immediately corrected its mistake, showing a photo of Davis. Host Chris Jansing apologized for the error. "And there’s the Ann B. Davis we know and
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- 6/3/2014
- by Hilary Lewis
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NBC News today named Chris Jansing as Senior White House Correspondent. Peter Alexander was named National Correspondent. Jansing will report primarily for NBC Nightly News, providing day-to-day coverage of the Obama administration and White House politics. Alexander will report not only on the White House but also on national affairs beyond Washington DC. Jansing will return to NBC News full time next month, relocating from New York to join Todd, Alexander, and Kristen Welker in the unit. MSNBC said it will announce Jansing’s replacement in the coming weeks. NBC News President Deborah Turness and NBC News Political Director and Chief White House Correspondent Chuck Todd made the announcements. In addition to their primary responsibilities, both Jansing and Alexander will contribute to general White House coverage as needed, including travel, MSNBC appearances, and other cross-platform reporting. Kristen Welker will continue to report for both Today and NBC Nightly News, including weekend editions of both broadcasts.
- 5/2/2014
- by THE DEADLINE TEAM
- Deadline TV
Around 11:30 Pm Et last night word that new satellite images had pinpointed two large objects in the ocean a couple thousand miles off the coast of Australia electrified TV news teams covering missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370. Fox New Channel‘s Shepard Smith jumped back on the air at midnight to report on the new development, but anchored from the newsroom studio because it takes a big team to fire up The Deck. CNN‘s Anderson Cooper and Don Lemon teamed up; MSNBC‘s Betty Nguyen anchored for that network, handing off to Chris Jansing around 2 Am. ABC‘s lucky David Wright was flying on a U.S. Navy surveillance plane in the Indian Ocean when it was directed to the sightings, and told Nightline “We’ll be the first on the site.” But when ABC’s Good Morning America clocked in this morning, Wright, now back in Perth,...
- 3/20/2014
- by LISA DE MORAES, TV Columnist
- Deadline TV
Appearing on MSNBC on Thursday to talk about President Barack Obama’s position on ongoing budget negotiations, Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-md) was asked by anchor Chris Jansing about the revelations surrounding Hillary Clinton’s “hit list” in which he was included. Van Hollen said that the list which singles out Democrats that did not support Clinton’s 2008 presidential bid, presuming it truly exists, was a “total mystery.”...
- 1/13/2014
- by Noah Rothman
- Mediaite - TV
The toss from one show to another on cable news is often a free-for-all where anything can happen and somehow nothing is inappropriate. That was more true than ever Thursday morning when MSNBC host Thomas Roberts worked in a sly plug for NBC's live broadcast of The Sound of Music by singing a snippet of "So Long, Farewell." Let's just say Chris Jansing was less than impressed with his skills, asking, "Is it me or is that the weirdest thing you've ever heard?"...
- 12/5/2013
- by Matt Wilstein
- Mediaite - TV
Amy Holmes, former speechwriter for Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-tn) and anchor of Real News on The Blaze TV, ripped New York City’s controversial “stop-question-and-frisk” policy in an appearance with MSNBC’s Chris Jansing. Holmes said that she believes the policy is racially discriminatory because, in her wealthier and whiter Manhattan neighborhood, criminal behavior is practiced in the open without fear of police reprisal.
- 8/19/2013
- by Noah Rothman
- Mediaite - TV
Columbia University associate professor Marc Lamont Hill told MSNBC’s Chris Jansing on Tuesday that he found the tone an anonymous juror in the trial of George Zimmerman took in her interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper “baffling.” He said that she was, in his opinion, “overly-sympathetic” toward Zimmerman. Hill added that he was disappointed that the jury abided by the judge’s instructions and refused to consider race as a factor contributing to the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.
- 7/16/2013
- by Noah Rothman
- Mediaite - TV
Lamenting the outcome of the trial of George Zimmerman for the 2012 murder of Trayvon Martin on Monday morning, MSNBC host Touré told host Chris Jansing that the verdict of not guilty shows that it is a “walking while black” is “apparently a crime.” He said that the trial shows that African-Americans need to teach their children that “they are suspects before proven innocent.”...
- 7/15/2013
- by Noah Rothman
- Mediaite - TV
As the Supreme Court begins two days of arguments in landmark marriage equality cases, the topic of gay marriage is lighting up the cable news landscape like an exploding rainbow. On Tuesday's Jansing & Co., Huffington Post reporter Ryan Grim darkened the skies considerably by telling host Chris Jansing that credit for the sea change on marriage equality ought to go (albeit ironically) to former George W. Bush adviser and Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove.
- 3/26/2013
- by Tommy Christopher
- Mediaite - TV
CNN confirmed that Jake Tapper’s weekday program will air at 4 p.m. beginning in March and that the show also has tapped Federico Quadrani as executive producer. He joins CNN from MSNBC where he was executive producer of weekend programming and also Chuck Todd’s The Daily Rundown. He’s currently the exec producer of anchor Chris Jansing’s weekday morning program Jansing & Company. Story: Hello, I'm Jeff Zucker. You're Fired. “Federico’s talent for story development and live production will be a perfect fit for Jake’s new program,” Sam Feist, CNN Washington bureau chief and senior vp, said in a statement.
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- 2/11/2013
- by Marisa Guthrie
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NBC Update: Sandy Hook Elementary Massacre - 20 children murdered by 24 year-old lone gunman. News coverage on unfolding event: Brian Williams, Matt Lauer, Savannah Guthrie, Lester Holt, Erica Hill, Ann Curry, Willie Geist, Chris Jansing to Report NBC News will provide comprehensive special coverage of the tragic shooting that took place at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut on Friday morning. Below are programming details. All updates will be released throughout the day as they become available. Friday, December 14 NBC Nightly NewsBrian Williams will anchor a special one-hour edition of .NBC Nightly News. live from Newtown, Ct at 6:30 p.m. Et, featuring reports on the tragedy and the investigation, the families and communities affected,...
- 12/14/2012
- by April MacIntyre
- Monsters and Critics
As Sesame Street continues to be an unwilling participant in the political arena, MSNBC sought to bring us some more details on Wednesday morning when Chris Jansing interviewed Elmo. The pair chatted on a stoop about Elmo's new "President the Musical" — and Jansing confirmed that the lovable Sesame Street character is, indeed, "apolitical." Bet you didn't see that one coming.
- 10/10/2012
- by Meenal Vamburkar
- Mediaite - TV
Congratulations to newlyweds Thomas Roberts and Patrick Abner! The MSNBC news anchor married his longtime partner on Saturday in a lavish Manhattan ceremony filled with family and friends. The couple tied the knot at the Gansevoort Hotel, and the wedding was officiated by California's Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom. Roberts' MSNBC colleagues, including president Phil Griffin and correspondents Tamron Hall and Chris Jansing, were all in attendance, according to TV Newser. Other guests included Aviva Drescher, Meghan McCain, Don Lemon, Carson Kressley and Nate Berkus. Country star Chely Wright also performed a special song for the couple. Not only was the wedding a joyous celebration, but it also held deep...
- 10/2/2012
- E! Online
Congratulations are in order for MSNBC news anchor Thomas Roberts, who tied the knot over the weekend. The newsman married his longtime partner, Patrick Abner, on Saturday at the Gansevoort Park Hotel in Manhattan. On Sunday, Roberts Tweeted a photo of his wedding ring and wrote, "Morning in NYC is pretty sweet waking up as a married man!" He also proudly changed his relationship status on Facebook from "engaged" to "married." The ceremony held special significance, as Roberts was the first national TV anchor to come out while he was on CNN and is the first cable news anchor to marry his same-sex partner.
- 10/1/2012
- by Julia Haskins
- PEOPLE.com
Paging Joe Biden! MSNBC anchor and Jansing and Co. host Chris Jansing channeled our gaffe-y but lovable Vice President this morning when she tossed to commercial with a scene from a White House event honoring U.S. Olympic and Paralympic athletes. Describing the scene, Jansing said "This is a picture now of the South Lawn of the White House, and a big good-looking group behind First Lady Michelle Obama and the President, and Joe Biden as well. These are the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic athletes, and I have one question. Is Michelle Obama going to challenge them to a push-up contest? We will be right back."...
- 9/14/2012
- by Tommy Christopher
- Mediaite - TV
A study released last week of the vocabulary and sentence structure of Congressional floor speeches had some information in it that was troubling for many: the average Congressman speaks at the literacy rate of a high school sophomore. On MSNBC today, Chris Jansing's panel put up a fair argument for why this is happening and why it is okay-- when the general public is the audience, making complex issues accessible is key.
- 5/28/2012
- by Frances Martel
- Mediaite - TV
Former President Jimmy Carter appeared on MSNBC’s Jansing & Co. with Chris Jansing on Wednesday where he weighed in on the 2012 presidential election. Carter told Jansing that he believed President Barack Obama would win a second term in November, but he would be “comfortable” with a Mitt Romney presidency and that “Romney has shown in the past in his previous years as a moderate – a progressive – that he was fairly competent.”...
- 4/25/2012
- by Noah Rothman
- Mediaite - TV
New York Times columnist Charles Blow and Daily News political writer S.E. Cupp engaged in a lively tête-à-tête on MSNBC's Jansing & Co Tuesday about the electability of Rick Santorum. "To my point of the establishment, Charles, are they thinking, maybe Rick Santorum can win?" Chris Jansing asked. "No, maybe they think it, but no one else thinks it. Rick Santorum scares the bejesus out of people!""Clearly people think it!" Cupp interjected. "His poll numbers are up, Charles!"...
- 2/28/2012
- by James Crugnale
- Mediaite - TV
Republican Congressman John Fleming of Louisiana got himself caught out on an awkward limb this morning while talking class warfare with MSNBC's Chris Jansing. When asked about the profit his businesses (Subway and Ups Store franchises) brought him in the past year, he offered that much of the $6.3 million is whittled away by taxes and operational costs, and "So by the time I feed my family, I have maybe $400,000 left over to invest." Yes, barely enough to let themselves eat cake.
- 9/19/2011
- by Zara Golden
- Mediaite - TV
The country's in a bit of a spot economically. Fortunately, our leaders in Washington have very clear plans. Our President's plan seems to involve talking a whole lot while the opposing party plans on sticking their fingers in their ear and yelling "Nanananana!" really loudly. One of the nanana'ers, Rep. Joe Walsh, dropped by Jansing & Co. this morning to explain why he wouldn't be attending President Obama's jobs plan speech to Congress tonight. Unsurprisingly, he and Chris Jansing didn't see eye to eye.
- 9/8/2011
- by Jon Bershad
- Mediaite - TV
Over the weekend, Gop frontrunner Rick Perry made a thuddingly poor comparison, equating the Civil Rights movement with the struggles of corporations and wealthy individuals. During a pitched Twitter battle with BreitbartTV Editor Larry O'Connor over whether Hardball fill-in Chris Jansing "lied" when introducing the Perry clip Tuesday (she didn't), I noticed that Jansing's introduction hewed suspiciously close to the headline of a Thinkprogress item on the same clip.
- 8/25/2011
- by Tommy Christopher
- Mediaite - TV
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