What is RSS feed? | About Us
RSSMicro - RSS Feed Search Engine
Dedicated RSS Feed Search Engine
Search for News, Blogs, and RSS Feeds

Alexis Glick

 
Search 4.3 million RSS feeds, the most comprehensive RSS feed search on the web.
TOP STORIES
5,800 news sources, updated continuously
RSSMicro results for Alexis Glick
Show results within: Past Week  |  Sort by: Date
RSS Feed
Search Score Search Score: 5/10


Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 17 days ago
   While the economic crisis is making news everywhere, from the presidential campaign trail to the Senate hearings, networks have covered the issue heavily. Beginning last Monday, the business news networks became a focal point — on television and on TVNewser. Today at 2pmET, Alexis Glick will be here to answer your questions in a TVNewser live chat. You can email them in to TVNewser@mediabistro.com, or come by at 2:00 to have Alexis answer them live. THE LIVE CHAT HAS STARTED: Click here to check it out. Past TVNewser live chats: • MSNBC's Rachel Maddow • FNC's Greta Van SusterenNew Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 17 days ago
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 17 days ago
Exclusive : With the economy in crisis mode, Fox Business anchor Alexis Glick is answering your questions live on TVNewser. You can email your questions to TVNewser@mediabistro.com or ask them during the live chat starting at 2 p.m.! TVNewser Live Chat - Alexis Glick (TVN) New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.topix.com --- 26 days ago
The beginning of today's episode of The View was preempted by brief coverage of a speech by President Bush, as well as commentary from ABC regarding the state of the markets. ...
Source: mortgagenewsclips.com --- 26 days ago
If Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac experience losses in their mortgage portfolios of just 10 percent, it could cost taxpayers $500 billion, say observers… INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY ———— WellPoint’s (Health Insurer) Fannie, Freddie shares lost $214 mln in value - Reuters - Forbes ———— Here’s one small detail about the FDIC Insurance Fund you might not know. It [...] ...
Source: wallstfolly.typepad.com --- 6 days ago
International Risk Analytics' Chris Whalen was being interviewed by Fox Business over Wells Fargo trumping Citigroup's deal to buy the banking operations of Wachovia, and Citi's response. They were in a heated discussion, with Alexis Glick arguing that Citigroup claims... ...
Source: www.crwenews.com --- 11 days ago
...
Source: www.moreover.com --- 53 days ago
Houston - Alexis Glick is one of the most important personalities at and is one of the leading forces behind its editorial polices as Vice President of the network. On Thursday at 11 AM, Ms. ...
Source: latimesblogs.latimes.com --- 24 days ago
Headlines: The Dow industrials lost 449 points and change today. We are in the eye of the storm. Washington Mutual shares closed at $2.01, and the thrift is a source of increasing concern to the government, which, according to Alexis Glick of Fox Business News, "cannot afford to let this bank fail." More from Glick:This morning a source tells me that Washington Mutual, the 6th largest bank and largest savings and loan bank in this country, cannot legally fail... ...We’re talking about risk to the depositor and to the Federal Home Loan Banks of $239 billion. Let me remind you that the FDIC or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has $45 billion. We are talking about a bank with $181 billion of deposits. They cannot afford to let this bank fail. The New York Times reports WAMU has hired Goldman Sachs to find a buyer:Washington Mutual, the struggling savings and loan, has been working on several efforts to save itself, including a potential sale, people briefed on the matter said Wednesday. ... Goldman Sachs, which Washington Mutual has hired, started the auction several days ago, these people said. Among the potential bidders that Goldman has talked to are Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and HSBC.Your thoughts? Comments? An update: your blogger has discovered Twitter, and I encourage you to join me, or perhaps even follow me. I'm hoping it's a new way for me to learn more about the L.A. real estate market -- directly from you. Her ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 2 days ago
> MSNBC has been conducting its own text message voting during debates, reaching over 100,000 after Tuesday's (still far less than FNC's 750,000 after the VP debate ). Also, text comments are being read on air throughout the week. > The latest FBN personality to show up on CBS is Alexis Glick , who appeared on The Early Show yesterday to talk about the financial crisis. Liz Claman appeared on the program several times during September . > A new CNBC special, "The Nuclear Option," premieres October 14 at 9pmET. The one-hour documentary, reported by Melissa Francis , looks at the nuclear energy push in America. New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 8 days ago
> CNBC was mentioned this morning during House talks on the bailout bill. Rep. David Dreier said, "Anyone who watched CNBC's coverage saw a direct juxtaposition — one half of the screen showed this house floor, the other half of the screen showed the floor of the stock exchange." > Clusterstock's Henry Blodget reports FBN was first to publish an exclusivity agreement between Wachovia and Citi. Alexis Glick broke the news just before 9:15amET. > Al Hunt interviews FDIC chair Sheila Bair on the bailout and other issues, tonight on "Political Capital" at 7:30pmET. Also on the program are Bloomberg correspondents Rich Miller and Alison Fitzgerald . New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 5 days ago
The Boston Globe's Joanna Weiss writes about the balance needed to present business news information to viewers in a way they can understand and appreciate. She uses a weather analogy to describe the difference between "business news" and "regular news." "The anchor can affect the direction of the storm," writes Weiss. "Or speak in a language you may not understand. Or get so caught in the market's momentum that it's hard to tell political analysis from panic." FBN's Alexis Glick says it's easy to get caught up in the "mechanics" of telling the story. "We just get too inside the minutiae of the arguments that are going on internally between Wall Street and congressional members and economists," she says. Also quoted in the story are CNBC's Becky Quick , Joe Kernen and FBN's Eric Bolling , who describe the "thousands" of emails they have been receiving. And the viewers appreciate the response. Kernen says, "some have e-mailed to say that after watching for a few days, they now understand much more of the business language they're hearing." New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 34 days ago
FBN has launched a series every Friday called, "Opportunity in America: My Hometown," where an anchor or reporter spends the entire day reporting from their hometown on various issues facing the area. On Friday, contributor Charles Payne reported from Harlem, and specifically the neighborhood he grew up. He interviewed business owners and other community leaders, and gave his own assessment of the economic issues that have improved or stayed the same from when he grew up in the area. Click continued to see one of the segments, in which Payne gets choked up while describing to anchor Alexis Glick what it was like to take his mother back to the city where he was raised... continued... New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 19 days ago
As the markets continue to dip and the economy remains the topic du jour following the turmoil last week, TVNewsers reflected on the story. CNN senior business correspondent Ali Velshi is interviewed in the New York Times , and describes the need for selective wording. "We're very careful not to throw words around like 'meltdown' and 'free fall,'" he said. This weekend on CNN's Reliable Sources, Velshi said the meltdown stories came "too late." "It didn't have that urgency," he said. "One of the things about the Dow in particular or stock market is it gives you urgency. You can see that number in the corner of your screen urgently. Gas prices, you can see urgently. You can see them change every day." Broadcasting & Cable's Robert Marich talked to CNBC's Maria Bartiromo and FBN's Alexis Glick in the wake of the coverage last week . continued... New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 37 days ago
> So New York Magazine's Daily Intelligencer thinks the New York Post's Page Six wrote about MSNBC's Rachel Maddow today because of an answer she gave in TVNewser's live chat with her . Or so they correctly predicted yesterday . > CBS' Byron Pitts talks about how he stays healthy covering the conventions these long days and nights: "I take green tea extract drops three times a day, I take cough drops because reporters are always losing their voices in these situations and I always chat with my Bible a few times a day." > Do you want to know where FBN's Alexis Glick lives? She and her family (and her apartment) are profiled in this month's Metropolitan Home magazine. New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 14 days ago
Fox Business Network blew out their regular programming of infomercials and aired live business programming from 10am-Noon. The Stuart Varney -hosted program included viewer phone calls. But insiders tell us when the phone calls didn't stop, FBN kept going. Jenna Lee and Dagen McDowell co-anchored from 12p-2pET. The network then re-aired Neil Cavuto's special that aired on FNC from 10-Noon this morning. And tonight, Alexis Glick and Brian Sullivan will anchor a live special at 7pmET. For FBN, three weeks shy of its first birthday, this shows a commitment to "Main Street" viewers worried about what's next, while not worrying (too much anyway) about losing revenue from the infomercials. For its part, CNBC stayed with weekend infomercials, airing cut-ins on the progress of the bailout bill. CNBC will air a one-hour special tomorrow night after the Asian markets open. New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 12 days ago
Breaking : As the markets continue to tank [at this writing the dow is down 719 points] CNBC and Fox Business are blowing out their regular programming and staying live until 11pmET tonight. • Tonight's Programming Changes FNC — 5pm - Alexis Glick co-anchors with Heather Nauert . FBN — Until 6 - Liz Claman and David Asman . 6pm - Neil Cavuto . 7pm - Asman and Dagen MCDowell . 8pm - Dave Ramsey 9pm - Cavuto anchors "Your Money, Your Questions," with viewer phone calls and emails. 4am Tuesday - FBN begins one hour earlier CNBC — 8pm - Maria Bartiromo . 9pm - Mark Haines and Erin Burnett . 1am Tuesday - Squawk Box Europe 4am Tuesday - Worldwide Exchange 5am Tuesday - Squawk Box (beginning one hour earlier) (all times ET) New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media ...
Source: www.mediabistro.com --- 26 days ago
While CNBC anchors provided analysis on NBC, FBN anchors provided analysis on all the other networks. This morning, Liz Claman guested on CBS' The Early Show for an interview with Harry Smith , and Alexis Glick was on ABC with the ladies of The View. On a day Claman described as "horrifying," on CBS, the FBN anchors' expertise came into play. "We've been covering all this very closely ever since Bear Stearns," Claman tells TVNewser. "We didn't want to spread panic, but our job is to look closely at all these names." And Claman found a fan in Smith. "Harry Smith said, 'I watch you all the time. I'm so glad you're here,'" reports the FBN anchor. The appearance was just the beginning for Claman. She'll speak to FOX affiliates around the country, she's anchoring the 2, 3, 4, and 5:00pmET hours on FBN and she appears tonight on The O'Reilly Factor. She was on America's Newsroom on FNC earlier this morning and did a segment for Inside Edition as well. Claman describes how she began to hear the rumblings of a Lehman crash. She says that just before her 3:00pmET show on Tuesday, she noticed a drop in Lehman's stock price, and yelled to her producer to "tear up the show." "We went all Lehman," she says. "During commercial breaks I was on the phone." Correspondent Adam Shapiro hustled out of the building to get a live shot from in front of Lehman HQ on Tuesday, and by Thursday, Claman was getting credible information from her sources withi ...
Source: www.charlotte.com --- 12 days ago
Dual scoreboards on live television flashed the U.S. House of Representatives' vote on a financial bailout and the Dow Jones industrial average. In the end, they both came up losers. The nation's teetering economy played out in an extraordinary TV drama Monday. No one was certain about what would happen when those numbers finally stopped moving: at 228 to 205 against the bailout and a 777-point drop in the Dow. "It was riveting," said Alexis Glick, anchor and vice president of business news for the Fox Business Network. "It was both a combination of fear and reality." News networks showed a count of the House vote on a split screen with the Dow. It was one of those rare political instances where a vote is taken and leadership doesn't really know what's going to happen. As it became clear the bailout package was failing, the Dow plunged 400 points in front of your eyes. "There was almost an audible gasp as this happened," said Melissa Francis of MSNBC. The Internet age makes viewers used to the multiple streams of information, said CNN U.S. President Jon Klein. CNN correspondents were taking care to convey the importance of the situation without inciting fear, he said. "This is not Armageddon," said Ali Velshi, CNN economic correspondent. "The world is not coming to an end." But Klein didn't necessarily get to everybody. Glenn Beck declared to Wolf Blitzer that the financial crisis will lead us to the Great Depression. Blitzer not ...
Source: newsbusters.org --- 2 days ago
The Securities and Exchange Commission ended the 16-day ban on short selling Oct. 9, which has left many journalists asking if the ban actually worked to keep more banks from failing. The staff at the Business & Media Institute's video blog, "The Biz Flog," could have told you the ban wasn't a good idea when they put together "Who's Afraid of a Big Bad Short Seller?" But, it's nice to see some members of the media questioning if the ban worked: "While the ban was in place, other market forces pushed key indices into a rapid decline. We are going to see if that ban actually slowed the freefall or perhaps made it worse," Fox Business Network host Alexis Glick said on "Money for Breakfast," Oct. 9. Glick went on to point out that the ban also affected companies that weren't banks: "This time around it was a massive ban on all financial institutions and then you had the likes of CVS and GM and GE. I mean the companies on the list of just a little less than a thousand were massive, but did it really have any proper impact on the equity markets?" Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Avalon Partners, told Glick that the ban didn't work because, "If you look at these prices they still went down and most of these companies are still at yearly lows." But they weren't the only ones skeptical of the effectiveness of the short selling ban. Tom Petruno, a blogger at The Los Angeles Times' "Money & Co." blog at LATimes.com put it to the nu ...

Find more results for Alexis Glick on RSSMicro.com

Subscribe
 
Related Content

Expanded  |  Mixed  |  Popular



Copyright © 2008 RSSMicro.com