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Squawk on the Street

Squawk on the Street
CNBC Squawk On the Street Ident 2014.png
Logo from 2014
Genre Business news
Presented by Carl Quintanilla (2011–present)
David Faber (2005–present)
Jim Cramer (2011–present)
Sara Eisen (2014–present)
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Location(s)
Running time 120 minutes
Release
Original network CNBC
Picture format 4:3 (December 19, 2005-October 10, 2014)
16:9 (October 13, 2014-present)
Original release December 19, 2005 (2005-12-19) – present
External links
Website

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). This replaced the first hour of Morning Call (later renamed The Call on August 8, 2007), which aired one hour later and had its airtime reduced in half. On October 17, 2011, Squawk on the Street was expanded to 3 hours, from 9am to noon ET. The Call was canceled as a result of this program's expansion. On May 19, 2014, Squawk on the Street reverted to 2 hours (9am to 11am ET) as a new program, Squawk Alley, debuted on that day.

Squawk on the Street, which is seen at 9:00am ET, is broadcast live at the . Mark Haines and Erin Burnett were the original co-anchors at the NYSE. Haines (the original host of Squawk Box), died on May 24, 2011, 18 days after Burnett left CNBC (May 6, 2011) to host CNN's Outfront (see below Mark Haines). David Faber (who also hosts and contributes to his "Faber Report" segments) originally reported from CNBC Global Headquarters, while Haines and Burnett were in the "Squawk Nest," or "Luxury Box" (as Haines called it) above the NYSE. Contributors include Bob Pisani (NYSE), Bertha Coombs and Scott Wapner. Coombs and Wapner were the original NASDAQ contributors, Wapner left the show in 2010 focusing to host on Fast Money Halftime Report and was replaced by Seema Mody. Leaving Coombs remained in that report along with Mody, were Sharon Epperson (NYMEX) and Rick Santelli (CME Group).


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Wikipedia

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