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Nightly Business Report

Nightly Business Report was an American business news magazine television program that aired on public television stations from January 22, 1979 to December 27, 2019, for most of that time syndicated by American Public Television. Internationally the show was seen on CNBC Europe and CNBC Asia.

Nightly Business Report
Title card
Also known asNBR
GenreNewsmagazine
Created byLinda O'Bryon
Presented byList of presenters
Theme music composerEdd Kalehoff
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons40
No. of episodes10,680
Production
Production locationsNew York City, New York, U.S.
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time30 minutes
Production companiesNBCUniversal (2013–2019)
NBR Worldwide Inc. (2010–2013)
NBR Enterprises, Inc. and WPBT Miami/Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. (1979–2010)
DistributorAmerican Public Television
(1980–2005; 2011–2019)
PBS (1979–1980; 2005–2011)[1]
Release
Original networkPBS or PBS Member Stations
Picture formatNTSC (1979–2008)
HDTV 1080i (2009–2019)
Original releaseJanuary 22, 1979 (1979-01-22) –
December 27, 2019 (2019-12-27)

From January 22, 1979 to March 1, 2013, the show was produced at WPBT in Miami, Florida. In February 2013, CNBC purchased the program and closed its Miami operations. Tyler Mathisen joined Susie Gharib as co-anchor when it relaunched on March 4, 2013 to coincide with Gharib's return to CNBC after leaving it in 1998 to join NBR.[2] Gharib left NBR on December 31, 2014; she was replaced on January 5, 2015 by Sue Herera, previously Mathisen's co-anchor on CNBC's Power Lunch.[3] On March 9, 2018, Mathisen left the program, and was replaced three days later by original Power Lunch anchor Bill Griffeth who reunited with his former PL co-anchor Herera.

On November 11, 2019, CNBC announced that Nightly Business Report would be discontinued at the end of the year. The final broadcast aired on December 27, 2019, which ended NBR's nearly 41–year run.[4]

Format

The daily program consisted of reports on the changes in the stock market, indices, and stocks of note for the day, including the Dow Jones Industrial Average, NASDAQ, the S&P 500, and other major markets, as well as interviews with important business persons, generally CEOs of major companies as well as economists, market analysts and policy makers.

Special programs on market holidays departed from this format, and often dealt with a single subject or theme; New Year's Day and Independence Day editions tended to focus on retrospectives and predictions for the past and coming fiscal periods. The program often concluded with a commentary. Segments within the program included Market Monitor, Street Critique, Women in Leadership, and Planet Forward to name a few.[5] There was a 15-minute morning version of NBR called Morning Business Report during the mid-1990s.[6]

Broadcast history

The idea for a business news program had come from several businessmen on the WPBT Board. Linda O'Bryon, who was WPBT's News Director at the time, headed the effort to get NBR on the air. In the fall of 1978, she was approached by senior management and asked to create a daily business news program. She developed the program concept and expanded the editorial staff to launch NBR (then called "The Nightly Business Report").[7] Paul Kangas was among the first to join, signing on as its stock market commentator. O'Bryon and Merwin Sigale were the first co-anchors. The editorial/production team that launched the program included WPBT veterans Rodney Ward, Bruce Eibe, and Jeff Huff, and Jack Kahn, who was the program's first producer.

Starting on January 22, 1979, NBR launched on 125 public stations around the country. The first regular commentator on the program was Alan Greenspan, then a private economist, who remained as an NBR commentator until his appointment as Chairman of the Federal Reserve in 1987. A number of public television stations supplemented the program's newsgathering efforts by serving as "bureaus" for the program.

In 1989, Jim Wicks was named co-anchor, and moved from the flagship station of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in Toronto where he was main anchor. At the end of his contract, Wicks moved to ABC News in Cleveland. He has since left the television news business and returned to his motion picture career where he got his start. He works in post-production as a film colorist.[8]

From 1989 to 1991, broadcast journalist Frank Mottek served as substitute anchor for Paul Kangas providing the "Stock Market Report and Commentary." Mottek solo anchored the program on January 1, 1991 and periodically co-anchored NBR with Paul Kangas while filling in for the other two main anchors. Mottek is currently business news anchor in Los Angeles on all news station KNX and host of the business news program Mottek On Money.[9]

In 1998, financial journalist Susie Gharib joined the anchor desk with Paul Kangas. Gharib anchored from the heart of New York's financial district, while Kangas remained at the program's production center in Miami.

During the 1990s, NBR was co-produced by Reuters, and later its subsidiary, Bridge Information Systems.

NBR was also seen internationally through Worldnet, the U.S. Radio and Television Armed Services network and on SBS in Australia and Triangle Television in New Zealand. Audio of the program aired on Sirius XM satellite radio at 7:00pm ET. NBR operated three reporting bureaus with full-time staff members as well as bureaus in Denver, Silicon Valley, and Phoenix operated in partnership with the public television stations in those markets.

Over the years, NBR has received numerous awards. In 2005, for extended coverage of China's emergence as an international economic power, and in 2006 the website was honored with a Best In Class award from the International Media Council. Rodney Ward took over from Linda O'Bryon in 2006,[10] serving as executive editor and senior vice president through 2011. O'Bryon eventually became President and Chief Executive Officer of South Carolina ETV; she retired in 2017.

In 2009, NBR began broadcasting in high definition, with broadcasts presented in a letterboxed format for viewers with standard-definition television sets watching either through cable or satellite television. The program also introduced a new set and upconverted its existing graphics package to HD.

Paul Kangas's last broadcast for Nightly Business Report was on December 31, 2009, ending a 30-year run.[11] The following day, on January 1, 2010, Tom Hudson took over as NBR's anchor, broadcasting from Miami,[11] and reporting on topics such as Federal Reserve interest rate policy, corporate governance and shareholder activism as well as providing insights to daily market activity. Prior to co-anchoring Nightly Business Report, he was host and managing editor of the nationally syndicated financial television program First Business. In July 2011, Hudson was named Managing Editor and Co-anchor, a newly combined position with both editorial and managerial responsibility.

On August 23, 2010, it was announced that WPBT-TV had sold the show to NBR Worldwide Inc., a newly formed, privately held company headed by Mykalai Kontilai, who became the majority owner of the program. Kontilai, an entrepreneur in the Instructional Television Distribution (ITV) industry. Gary Ferrell, a former president and chief executive of North Texas Public Broadcasting (parent company of KERA-TV in Dallas, Texas), is the company's Chief Financial Officer. The sale was first proposed in February.[12] According to WPBT, the station would continue to be associated with the show as a presenting station, and the sale reflected their assessment that NBR Worldwide Inc. had "the ideas and resources and potential to take it to the next level" and "can do more things with it than WPBT could."[12][13] Rick Schneider, President and Chief Executive Officer of WPBT, said the staff and editorial team won't change and "Nobody loses their job as a result of this."[14] Until the name changed, the program was carried under the "Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc." banner and produced by NBR Enterprises, Inc./WPBT Miami.

Schneider's promises proved short-lived. In November 2010, NBR Worldwide Inc. announced a restructuring of the Nightly Business Report staff.[15] That restructuring resulted in job cuts for four on-air contributors and half the reporting staff, including Scott Gurvey (New York bureau chief), Stephanie Dhue (Washington), Jeff Yastine (Miami) and Jamila Trindle (Washington DC), in addition to founding producer Jack Kahn and three other behind-the-scenes personnel.[16]

On November 16, 2010, NBR Worldwide Inc. announced the promotions of Rodney Ward from Executive Editor to Executive Vice President of Special Projects. Ward's former executive editor duties were assumed by managing editor Wendie Feinberg, who was also promoted to Vice President/Managing Editor. Those changes also did not last long. On July 11, 2011, following the decision of PBS to drop the broadcast from its national schedule and cut all funding, NBR Worldwide Inc. announced the departures of Rodney Ward as Executive Vice President of Special Projects, and Wendie Feinberg, as Vice President/Managing Editor. In a press release,[17] NBR Worldwide said the moves were "...part of its ongoing efforts to streamline operations and maximize resources." Chief Executive Officer Mykalai Kontilai said Miami-based anchor Tom Hudson would assume the role and title of Managing Editor, in addition to his current on-air duties.

In November 2011, Rick Ray succeeded Kontilai as Chief Executive Officer of NBR Worldwide, Inc. after Kontilai sold the company to Atalaya Capital Management, a private equity firm based out of NYC. In addition, he also became the new executive producer of NBR. Gary Ferrell also departed the company at this time. Several additional members of the editorial staff were also fired.

In December 2012, Atalaya fired another seven NBR editorial employees, including Chicago Bureau Chief Diane Eastabrook. The program also announced the complete closing of its Chicago bureau, leaving it with staff reporters only in New York and Washington, D.C. Of the terminated employees, NBR Managing Editor Tom Hudson said, "I consider it an honor to call them colleagues."[18]

On March 1, 2013, NBR aired its final broadcast under the production of WPBT. Effective March 4, 2013, CNBC would produce NBR. As a result, anchor Tom Hudson and many other correspondents Darren Gersh (Washington DC Bureau Chief) Suzanne Pratt (New York) And Erika Miller (New York) were laid off, and the show's Miami studios were shut down as well. CNBC's Tyler Mathisen replaced Hudson, and anchored alongside Susie Gharib from CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. Gharib left NBR at the end of 2014 and was replaced with Sue Herera, who was previously Mathisen's co-anchor on CNBC's Power Lunch; Herera would remain with the program until a few weeks before it ended.

On March 12, 2018, Bill Griffeth, formerly co-anchor of CNBC's Closing Bell, joined NBR to replace Tyler Mathisen. Griffeth was reunited with his former Power Lunch co-anchor, Sue Herera, on this program.

On November 11, 2019, CNBC announced that NBR would air its last broadcast on December 27, 2019.[4] At the end of that night's broadcast, Griffeth made an on-air announcement of the program's end, thanking both the public television community and viewers for their support (and ending the program's long run by paying homage to longtime anchor Paul Kangas by playing a clip of his "Best of good buys" sign-off); the text was an adaptation of a post at the NBR website made earlier that day.[19]

Anchors

Miami

  • Paul Kangas (1979–2009)
  • Tom Hudson (2009–2013)
  • Del Frank (1979–1985)
  • Jim Wicks (1989–1991)
  • Frank Mottek (1989–1992)
  • Linda O'Bryon (1979–2006)
  • Dean Shepherd (1985–1988)
  • Jeff Yastine (1993–2010)

New York

Title cards and theme music

The themes and bumper music[definition needed] that were used from 1979 to 1991 were composed by Edd Kalehoff, also known for themes on other television series and game shows. The longest-running theme, also composed by Kalehoff, was used from 1991 to November 15, 2002. Along with an update to the graphics and presentation, the theme was updated on November 18, 2002 and was used until January 1, 2010. A new theme, logo, and set for the show's Miami headquarters debuted on January 4, 2010. This theme lasted until April 27, 2012. On April 30, 2012, a new virtual theme[definition needed] was introduced to the show with new graphics and music. On March 4, 2013, another new set of graphics was introduced, yet the theme music remained the same. On January 4, 2016, the graphics were changed again; this time they were modeled after CNBC's current graphics package (which itself had been used since October 2014).

References

  1. ^ Sefton, Dru. (November 17, 2011). Kontilai out at Nightly Business Report. Current.org American University ISSN 0739-991X.
  2. ^ . Miami Herald. Archived from the original on February 23, 2013.
  3. ^ Chris Roush, Gharib leaves “Nightly Business Report,” replaced by Herera, Talking Biz News, January 2, 2015
  4. ^ a b Steinberg, Brian (November 11, 2019). "PBS' 'Nightly Business Report' to Cease Production by Year End". Variety. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  5. ^ "Series." NBR | Nightly Business Report. NBR Worldwide Inc., 2012. Web. 28 May 2012. <http://www.nbr.com/videos/series>.
  6. ^ Heady, Robert; Heady, Christy; Ottolenghi, Hugo (December 6, 2004). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Managing Your Money. ISBN 9781592572984.
  7. ^ . PBS. NBR Worldwide, Inc. July 20, 2011. Archived from the original on December 1, 2011.
  8. ^ jimwicks.com, https://www.linkedin.com/in/jimwicks/
  9. ^ http://www.frankmottek.com, https://knx1070.radio.com/media/podcast/mottek-money,https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yN5Edz-NyM/
  10. ^ "Ward replaces O'Bryon at Nightly Business Report". Talking Biz News. Talking Biz News. December 9, 2006. from the original on January 1, 2020. Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  11. ^ a b Jensen, Elizabeth (January 1, 2010). "PBS revamps its business news, hoping to revive a stodgy image". The Bulletin. Bend, Oregon.
  12. ^ a b Elizabeth Jensen (August 18, 2010). "'Nightly Business Report' Sold by PBS Station". The New York Times. Retrieved August 20, 2010.
  13. ^ Dru Sefton (August 23, 2010). "Buyer will take Nightly Business Report to a new level: WPBT sells to entrepreneur with history of legal disputes". Current. Retrieved December 16, 2010.
  14. ^ Kelly House (August 19, 2010). "'Nightly Business Report' has new owner". The Miami Herald. Retrieved December 14, 2010.
  15. ^ Jensen, Elizabeth (November 12, 2010). "'Nightly Business Report' Cuts Jobs". The New York Times.
  16. ^ Elizabeth Jensen (November 21, 2010). "A Figure at Troubled Companies Has Big Plans for PBS Program". The New York Times. Retrieved December 16, 2010.
  17. ^ "NBR Worldwide Inc. announced departures..." July 18, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  18. ^ Robert Feder (December 12, 2012). "Nightly Business Report cuts jobs, closes Chicago Bureau". Time Out Chicago. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  19. ^ NBR Staff (December 27, 2019). . Archived from the original on March 6, 2020. Retrieved December 27, 2019.

External links

  • NBR.com (which now directs to the CNBC website)

nightly, business, report, american, business, news, magazine, television, program, that, aired, public, television, stations, from, january, 1979, december, 2019, most, that, time, syndicated, american, public, television, internationally, show, seen, cnbc, e. Nightly Business Report was an American business news magazine television program that aired on public television stations from January 22 1979 to December 27 2019 for most of that time syndicated by American Public Television Internationally the show was seen on CNBC Europe and CNBC Asia Nightly Business ReportTitle cardAlso known asNBRGenreNewsmagazineCreated byLinda O BryonPresented byList of presentersTheme music composerEdd KalehoffCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons40No of episodes10 680ProductionProduction locationsNew York City New York U S Camera setupMulti cameraRunning time30 minutesProduction companiesNBCUniversal 2013 2019 NBR Worldwide Inc 2010 2013 NBR Enterprises Inc and WPBT Miami Community Television Foundation of South Florida Inc 1979 2010 DistributorAmerican Public Television 1980 2005 2011 2019 PBS 1979 1980 2005 2011 1 ReleaseOriginal networkPBS or PBS Member StationsPicture formatNTSC 1979 2008 HDTV 1080i 2009 2019 Original releaseJanuary 22 1979 1979 01 22 December 27 2019 2019 12 27 From January 22 1979 to March 1 2013 the show was produced at WPBT in Miami Florida In February 2013 CNBC purchased the program and closed its Miami operations Tyler Mathisen joined Susie Gharib as co anchor when it relaunched on March 4 2013 to coincide with Gharib s return to CNBC after leaving it in 1998 to join NBR 2 Gharib left NBR on December 31 2014 she was replaced on January 5 2015 by Sue Herera previously Mathisen s co anchor on CNBC s Power Lunch 3 On March 9 2018 Mathisen left the program and was replaced three days later by original Power Lunch anchor Bill Griffeth who reunited with his former PL co anchor Herera On November 11 2019 CNBC announced that Nightly Business Report would be discontinued at the end of the year The final broadcast aired on December 27 2019 which ended NBR s nearly 41 year run 4 Contents 1 Format 2 Broadcast history 3 Anchors 3 1 Miami 3 2 New York 4 Title cards and theme music 5 References 6 External linksFormat EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The daily program consisted of reports on the changes in the stock market indices and stocks of note for the day including the Dow Jones Industrial Average NASDAQ the S amp P 500 and other major markets as well as interviews with important business persons generally CEOs of major companies as well as economists market analysts and policy makers Special programs on market holidays departed from this format and often dealt with a single subject or theme New Year s Day and Independence Day editions tended to focus on retrospectives and predictions for the past and coming fiscal periods The program often concluded with a commentary Segments within the program included Market Monitor Street Critique Women in Leadership and Planet Forward to name a few 5 There was a 15 minute morning version of NBR called Morning Business Report during the mid 1990s 6 Broadcast history EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The idea for a business news program had come from several businessmen on the WPBT Board Linda O Bryon who was WPBT s News Director at the time headed the effort to get NBR on the air In the fall of 1978 she was approached by senior management and asked to create a daily business news program She developed the program concept and expanded the editorial staff to launch NBR then called The Nightly Business Report 7 Paul Kangas was among the first to join signing on as its stock market commentator O Bryon and Merwin Sigale were the first co anchors The editorial production team that launched the program included WPBT veterans Rodney Ward Bruce Eibe and Jeff Huff and Jack Kahn who was the program s first producer Starting on January 22 1979 NBR launched on 125 public stations around the country The first regular commentator on the program was Alan Greenspan then a private economist who remained as an NBR commentator until his appointment as Chairman of the Federal Reserve in 1987 A number of public television stations supplemented the program s newsgathering efforts by serving as bureaus for the program In 1989 Jim Wicks was named co anchor and moved from the flagship station of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in Toronto where he was main anchor At the end of his contract Wicks moved to ABC News in Cleveland He has since left the television news business and returned to his motion picture career where he got his start He works in post production as a film colorist 8 From 1989 to 1991 broadcast journalist Frank Mottek served as substitute anchor for Paul Kangas providing the Stock Market Report and Commentary Mottek solo anchored the program on January 1 1991 and periodically co anchored NBR with Paul Kangas while filling in for the other two main anchors Mottek is currently business news anchor in Los Angeles on all news station KNX and host of the business news program Mottek On Money 9 In 1998 financial journalist Susie Gharib joined the anchor desk with Paul Kangas Gharib anchored from the heart of New York s financial district while Kangas remained at the program s production center in Miami During the 1990s NBR was co produced by Reuters and later its subsidiary Bridge Information Systems NBR was also seen internationally through Worldnet the U S Radio and Television Armed Services network and on SBS in Australia and Triangle Television in New Zealand Audio of the program aired on Sirius XM satellite radio at 7 00pm ET NBR operated three reporting bureaus with full time staff members as well as bureaus in Denver Silicon Valley and Phoenix operated in partnership with the public television stations in those markets Over the years NBR has received numerous awards In 2005 for extended coverage of China s emergence as an international economic power and in 2006 the website was honored with a Best In Class award from the International Media Council Rodney Ward took over from Linda O Bryon in 2006 10 serving as executive editor and senior vice president through 2011 O Bryon eventually became President and Chief Executive Officer of South Carolina ETV she retired in 2017 In 2009 NBR began broadcasting in high definition with broadcasts presented in a letterboxed format for viewers with standard definition television sets watching either through cable or satellite television The program also introduced a new set and upconverted its existing graphics package to HD Paul Kangas s last broadcast for Nightly Business Report was on December 31 2009 ending a 30 year run 11 The following day on January 1 2010 Tom Hudson took over as NBR s anchor broadcasting from Miami 11 and reporting on topics such as Federal Reserve interest rate policy corporate governance and shareholder activism as well as providing insights to daily market activity Prior to co anchoring Nightly Business Report he was host and managing editor of the nationally syndicated financial television program First Business In July 2011 Hudson was named Managing Editor and Co anchor a newly combined position with both editorial and managerial responsibility On August 23 2010 it was announced that WPBT TV had sold the show to NBR Worldwide Inc a newly formed privately held company headed by Mykalai Kontilai who became the majority owner of the program Kontilai an entrepreneur in the Instructional Television Distribution ITV industry Gary Ferrell a former president and chief executive of North Texas Public Broadcasting parent company of KERA TV in Dallas Texas is the company s Chief Financial Officer The sale was first proposed in February 12 According to WPBT the station would continue to be associated with the show as a presenting station and the sale reflected their assessment that NBR Worldwide Inc had the ideas and resources and potential to take it to the next level and can do more things with it than WPBT could 12 13 Rick Schneider President and Chief Executive Officer of WPBT said the staff and editorial team won t change and Nobody loses their job as a result of this 14 Until the name changed the program was carried under the Community Television Foundation of South Florida Inc banner and produced by NBR Enterprises Inc WPBT Miami Schneider s promises proved short lived In November 2010 NBR Worldwide Inc announced a restructuring of the Nightly Business Report staff 15 That restructuring resulted in job cuts for four on air contributors and half the reporting staff including Scott Gurvey New York bureau chief Stephanie Dhue Washington Jeff Yastine Miami and Jamila Trindle Washington DC in addition to founding producer Jack Kahn and three other behind the scenes personnel 16 On November 16 2010 NBR Worldwide Inc announced the promotions of Rodney Ward from Executive Editor to Executive Vice President of Special Projects Ward s former executive editor duties were assumed by managing editor Wendie Feinberg who was also promoted to Vice President Managing Editor Those changes also did not last long On July 11 2011 following the decision of PBS to drop the broadcast from its national schedule and cut all funding NBR Worldwide Inc announced the departures of Rodney Ward as Executive Vice President of Special Projects and Wendie Feinberg as Vice President Managing Editor In a press release 17 NBR Worldwide said the moves were part of its ongoing efforts to streamline operations and maximize resources Chief Executive Officer Mykalai Kontilai said Miami based anchor Tom Hudson would assume the role and title of Managing Editor in addition to his current on air duties In November 2011 Rick Ray succeeded Kontilai as Chief Executive Officer of NBR Worldwide Inc after Kontilai sold the company to Atalaya Capital Management a private equity firm based out of NYC In addition he also became the new executive producer of NBR Gary Ferrell also departed the company at this time Several additional members of the editorial staff were also fired In December 2012 Atalaya fired another seven NBR editorial employees including Chicago Bureau Chief Diane Eastabrook The program also announced the complete closing of its Chicago bureau leaving it with staff reporters only in New York and Washington D C Of the terminated employees NBR Managing Editor Tom Hudson said I consider it an honor to call them colleagues 18 On March 1 2013 NBR aired its final broadcast under the production of WPBT Effective March 4 2013 CNBC would produce NBR As a result anchor Tom Hudson and many other correspondents Darren Gersh Washington DC Bureau Chief Suzanne Pratt New York And Erika Miller New York were laid off and the show s Miami studios were shut down as well CNBC s Tyler Mathisen replaced Hudson and anchored alongside Susie Gharib from CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs New Jersey Gharib left NBR at the end of 2014 and was replaced with Sue Herera who was previously Mathisen s co anchor on CNBC s Power Lunch Herera would remain with the program until a few weeks before it ended On March 12 2018 Bill Griffeth formerly co anchor of CNBC s Closing Bell joined NBR to replace Tyler Mathisen Griffeth was reunited with his former Power Lunch co anchor Sue Herera on this program On November 11 2019 CNBC announced that NBR would air its last broadcast on December 27 2019 4 At the end of that night s broadcast Griffeth made an on air announcement of the program s end thanking both the public television community and viewers for their support and ending the program s long run by paying homage to longtime anchor Paul Kangas by playing a clip of his Best of good buys sign off the text was an adaptation of a post at the NBR website made earlier that day 19 Anchors EditMiami Edit Paul Kangas 1979 2009 Tom Hudson 2009 2013 Del Frank 1979 1985 Jim Wicks 1989 1991 Frank Mottek 1989 1992 Linda O Bryon 1979 2006 Dean Shepherd 1985 1988 Jeff Yastine 1993 2010 New York Edit Susie Gharib 1998 2014 Sue Herera 2015 2019 Bill Griffeth 2018 2019 Suzanne Pratt 1990 2013 Tyler Mathisen 2013 2018 Cassie Seifert 1991 1997 Scott Gurvey 1982 2010 Erika Miller 1996 2013 Title cards and theme music EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The themes and bumper music definition needed that were used from 1979 to 1991 were composed by Edd Kalehoff also known for themes on other television series and game shows The longest running theme also composed by Kalehoff was used from 1991 to November 15 2002 Along with an update to the graphics and presentation the theme was updated on November 18 2002 and was used until January 1 2010 A new theme logo and set for the show s Miami headquarters debuted on January 4 2010 This theme lasted until April 27 2012 On April 30 2012 a new virtual theme definition needed was introduced to the show with new graphics and music On March 4 2013 another new set of graphics was introduced yet the theme music remained the same On January 4 2016 the graphics were changed again this time they were modeled after CNBC s current graphics package which itself had been used since October 2014 References Edit Sefton Dru November 17 2011 Kontilai out at Nightly Business Report Current org American University Archived version ISSN 0739 991X Nightly Business Report to leave Miami after CNBC purchase Business MiamiHerald com Miami Herald Archived from the original on February 23 2013 Chris Roush Gharib leaves Nightly Business Report replaced by Herera Talking Biz News January 2 2015 a b Steinberg Brian November 11 2019 PBS Nightly Business Report to Cease Production by Year End Variety Retrieved December 19 2019 Series NBR Nightly Business Report NBR Worldwide Inc 2012 Web 28 May 2012 lt http www nbr com videos series gt Heady Robert Heady Christy Ottolenghi Hugo December 6 2004 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Managing Your Money ISBN 9781592572984 About NPR History PBS NBR Worldwide Inc July 20 2011 Archived from the original on December 1 2011 jimwicks com https www linkedin com in jimwicks http www frankmottek com https knx1070 radio com media podcast mottek money https www youtube com watch v 4yN5Edz NyM Ward replaces O Bryon at Nightly Business Report Talking Biz News Talking Biz News December 9 2006 Archived from the original on January 1 2020 Retrieved January 1 2020 a b Jensen Elizabeth January 1 2010 PBS revamps its business news hoping to revive a stodgy image The Bulletin Bend Oregon a b Elizabeth Jensen August 18 2010 Nightly Business Report Sold by PBS Station The New York Times Retrieved August 20 2010 Dru Sefton August 23 2010 Buyer will take Nightly Business Report to a new level WPBT sells to entrepreneur with history of legal disputes Current Retrieved December 16 2010 Kelly House August 19 2010 Nightly Business Report has new owner The Miami Herald Retrieved December 14 2010 Jensen Elizabeth November 12 2010 Nightly Business Report Cuts Jobs The New York Times Elizabeth Jensen November 21 2010 A Figure at Troubled Companies Has Big Plans for PBS Program The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 NBR Worldwide Inc announced departures July 18 2011 Retrieved January 14 2013 Robert Feder December 12 2012 Nightly Business Report cuts jobs closes Chicago Bureau Time Out Chicago Retrieved January 14 2013 NBR Staff December 27 2019 Message from Bill Griffeth and Sue Herera Archived from the original on March 6 2020 Retrieved December 27 2019 External links EditNBR com which now directs to the CNBC website Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nightly Business Report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nightly Business Report amp oldid 1126224697, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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