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Squawk on the Street, which debuted on December 19, 2005, is a business show on CNBC that follows the first 90 minutes of trading on Wall Street in the United States. Originally airing as a one-hour program, the show doubled its airtime to two hours on July 19, 2007 (due in part to Liz Claman's departure from the network). [1] This replaced the first hour of Morning Call (later renamed The Call on August 8, 2007), which now airs one hour later and had its airtime reduced in half.
[edit] About the showSquawk on the Street, which is seen at 9:00am ET, is broadcast live at the New York Stock Exchange and hosted by Mark Haines (the original host of Squawk Box) and Erin Burnett. David Faber (who also hosts and contributes to his "Faber Report" segments) reports from CNBC Global Headquarters, while Haines and Burnett are in the "Squawk Nest," or "Luxury Box" (as Haines calls it) above the NYSE. Contributors include Melissa Lee, Bob Pisani (NYSE), Bertha Coombs, Scott Wapner (NASDAQ), Sharon Epperson (NYMEX) and Rick Santelli (Chicago Mercantile Exchange or Chicago Board of Trade). [edit] Program FormatThe show begins with Haines on the floor of the NYSE, introducing the aforementioned David Faber at "CNBC Global HQ," and Erin Burnett, whom she begins with "The Rundown" segment, starting with Bob Pisani on the floor at the NYSE. The other market pre-open segments include the "Word on the Street" segment, in which either Haines or Burnett (or both) talks to a trader on the floor of the NYSE, and "Instant Analysis," in which either Haines or Burnett (or both) talk to an analyst either via satellite or on set. Around the midway point of the show's first hour is the "Opening Bell Countdown," which has a countdown clock on the lower right of the screen. After the opening bells ring at the NYSE and NASDAQ MarketSite, Haines and Burnett send viewers through the opening minutes of the trading day with the "Opening Buzz" segment (see below). The show ends with the anchoring duo looking at the "Stocks to Watch." [edit] Segments
[edit] Program FactsWhen David Faber is off, or on assignment, the anchors talk to a trader on the floor of the NYSE in place of the "Faber Report" segments. The "Tick-by-Tick" chart was first seen on Squawk on the Street in July 2006 before expanding to all other CNBC Business Day programs shortly thereafter. The program replaced the last hour of Squawk Box, which now airs one hour earlier. In the 2007-06-22 edition, the final half-hour of Squawk on the Street was shown commercial-free as news of Blackstone's debut on the NYSE broke. [edit] See also
[edit] References[edit] External links
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