Jump to content

Fox News Live

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fox News Live
Presented byArthel Neville
Eric Shawn
Alicia Acuna
Gillian Turner
Griff Jenkins
Mike Emanuel
Aishah Hasnie
Jacqui Heinrich
Bill Melugin
Bryan Llenas
Rotating Anchors
Country of originUnited States
Production
Production locationsNew York City
Washington, D.C.
Los Angeles
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time5 hours (Saturday)
3 hours (Sunday)
Original release
NetworkFox News
Release1999 (1999) –
February 24, 2008 (2008-02-24)
(first run)

March 6, 2021 (2021-03-06)
present
(second run)

Related
The Live Desk, Weekend Live, Fox Online, America's News Headquarters, America's Newsroom, and The Glenn Beck Program
Fox Real Time logo on Fox News

Fox News Live is an American news-talk television program, the hard-news daytime programming of the Fox News Channel. It also referred to the short headline segments of nearly every hour on Fox News.[1]

About

[edit]

The show featured news, guest analysis, and interviews. Like other American cable news stations, there is news mixed with feature-like stories, as well as commentary and short debates between people on opposite sides of issues, usually between associates of candidates and officials, think-tank members, and journalists.

The headline segments, shown during every non–hard news hour throughout the day, were usually two-to-three-minute recaps of the news of the day, unique to Fox News Channel with an added timestamp on the intro graphic.

Supplementing headline updates, FNC introduced a fast-paced version of these headline updates in 2006, called "Fox Real Time," which appeared during live news coverage, typically only being one-minute in length. After the first year of their introduction, their appearances greatly diminished, and eventually only appeared during hours of Weekend Live

Since the network originally started the continuous hours of Fox News Live in the morning, they have slowly shifted away from the setup, replacing the 3:00 p.m. and 1:00 p.m. hours of the programming with Studio B in 2002, and DaySide in 2003 respectively. In 2006, DaySide was then replaced with The Live Desk due to Mike Jerrick and Juliet Huddy (the then hosts of DaySide) leaving the network to host the syndicated morning talk program, The Morning Show. In 2007, the shift continued with the replacement of the first two hours with America's Newsroom. In November 2007, with the addition of Happening Now and America's Pulse to the weekday lineup all weekday airings of Fox News Live have been discontinued. However, the Fox News Live format continues with America's Election HQ and later after election, America's News HQ, which airs on all FNL slots at the weekend. On March 5, 2021, it was announced that America's News HQ was renamed "Fox News Live."

Anchors

[edit]

Show Anchors

[edit]

Headline Segment Anchors

[edit]
  • Anita Vogel, 2001—present
  • Jonathan Hunt, 2002—present
  • Marianne Rafferty, 2006–present
  • Kevin Corke, 2014—present
  • Jackie Ibañez, 2014—present
  • Jon Scott, 2018—present
  • Ashley Strohmier, 2020–present
  • Chanley Painter, 2024–present

Run Times

[edit]

Saturday

Sunday

Over Nights (Weekends)

  • Bottom of every hour starting at 8PM EST

Former Show Anchors

[edit]

Former Headline Segment Anchors

[edit]

Chronology

[edit]
Time slot Last aired Followed program
9am-11am February 9, 2007 America's Newsroom
11am-1pm November 2, 2007 Happening Now
1pm-2pm May 13, 2003 DaySide
2pm-3pm November 2, 2007 America's Pulse
3pm-4pm August 9, 2002 Studio B
5pm-6pm 2000 The Big Story
6pm-7pm 1998 Special Report with Bret Baier
Weekends 2002 Weekend Live
Weekends February 24, 2008 America's Election Headquarters

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "FOX News Live". Fox News. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
[edit]