Morning Call (CNBC)

Morning Call
Genre business news program
Presented by Liz Claman
Tyler Mathisen
Ted David
Mark Haines
Michelle Caruso-Cabrera
Martha MacCallum
see below
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Running time 120 minutes
Release
Original network CNBC
Original release February 4, 2002 (2002-02-04) – August 7, 2007 (2007-08-07)
Chronology
Preceded by Market Watch
Followed by The Call

Morning Call is an American TV business program on CNBC, aired from 10AM to 12 noon ET weekdays. Previous programs shown in the same time slot were The Money Wheel with Ted David and Martha MacCallum (now she joined Fox News Channel) and Market Watch.

Morning Call, which premiered as Midday Call on February 4, 2002, offered a clear focus on real-time market coverage at the heart of the trading day.

About the program

On February 3, 2006, Ted David, who had co-anchored Morning Call with Liz Claman since 2003, left the program while being promoted to senior anchor at CNBC Business Radio. From 2006-02-06 to 2007-07-17, Claman was joined in the 10-11am hour by Mark Haines (who reported from the New York Stock Exchange), and in the 11am-noon hour by various anchors, including Dylan Ratigan (see anchor roster below).

On July 20, 2007, CNBC replaced the first hour of the two-hour program with an expanded Squawk on the Street, due in part to Claman's departure from the network (which she joined Fox News Channel's sister network financial unit three months later).[1] Dylan Ratigan and Trish Regan served as interim anchors for the program, which was completely revamped on 2007-07-23. In addition to the aforementioned 2007-07-23 revamp, the anchors were joined on set by a guest contributor, very similar to Squawk Box.

On August 8, 2007, the show was renamed—and replaced—by The Call. The name change to The Call with Dylan Ratigan (who left the show in late 2008 and was replaced by Larry Kudlow), Melissa Francis, and Trish Regan on that date was due in part to avoid confusion with the early-morning Bloomberg Television program of the same name.

Anchor roster

Time First hour (10AM ET) Host(s) Second hour (11AM ET) Host(s)
2002—2003
Liz Claman & Tyler Mathisen Ted David & Martha MacCallum
Jan 2003—Dec 2003
& Ted David & Liz Claman
Dec 2003—Dec 2004
& Michelle Caruso-Cabrera
Dec 2004—Jun 2005
(solo) (solo)
Jul 2005—Feb 2006
& Ted David & Liz Claman
Feb 2006—Dec 2006(?)
& Mark Haines (NYSE) Liz Claman & Michelle Caruso-Cabrera
Jan 2007—2007-07-19
& various anchors (Dylan Ratigan, Carl Quintanilla, Becky Quick, Trish Regan, Darby Dunn, etc.)
2007-07-20—2007-08-07
merged to Squawk on the Street

Segments

The following segments below were carried over to The Call as of 2007-08-08:

The following segments below moved to the second hour of Squawk on the Street as of 2007-07-23:

On location

Occasionally, Morning Call was broadcast live on location, such as the NYMEX. One of these examples came on May 31, 2007, when this program was named Morning Call, Liz Claman anchored the entire 2-hour program from the NYMEX (along with Haines at the NYSE for the first hour and Ratigan at CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ for the second hour). She was joined on location at the NYMEX by Sharon Epperson on the day the weekly crude oil, gasoline, distillate, and natural gas inventories report were released by the EIA.

CNBC Europe

The second hour of Morning Call was not seen on CNBC Europe as the European network instead aired European Closing Bell at 1700 Central European Time. As of July 19, 2007, this program (which was later renamed The Call, as mentioned above) is no longer broadcast on CNBC Europe apart from on European market holidays and during daylight saving time.

Worldwide Morning Call

Around CNBC's global branches, there were many variations of Morning Call around the world:

Channel Program Still Run? Presenter
CNBC Europe Morning Exchange (2003-06-02—2005-12-16) Ross Westgate
Nikkei CNBC Tokyo Morning Express (?—present)
CNBC-TV18 Bazaar Morning Call (2004—present) Mitali Mukherjee
CNBC-e Piyasa Ekranı (2004—present)
Class-CNBC Linea Mercati Mattina (?—present)
CNBC Africa Morning Call (2007-06-04—present) Petro Ndoro and Leigh Roberts
Open Exchange (2007-01-04—present) Alishia Naidoo and Leigh Roberts
CNBC Arabiya Sabah Al Aswak (2003—present)

See also

References

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