Cnbc

  • Business
    Yahoo TV

    John Oliver says CNBC’s Jim Cramer's takes on inflation have 'not aged very well'

    Oliver pointed out that Cramer downplayed inflation not too long ago, only to sound the alarm in recent months.

  • Entertainment
    Yahoo TV

    ‘Jeopardy!’ viewers don’t know who guest host David Faber is, but they love him anyway

    During his intro, David Faber touched on what he learned from Alex Trebek after competing in the Jeopardy! Power Players Tournament back in 2012.

  • Politics
    Yahoo TV

    CNBC's Jim Cramer apologizes after calling Nancy Pelosi 'Crazy Nancy' to her face

    Cramer made the remark as a knock at Trump for the ‘repulsive’ name he’s called Pelosi on multiple occasions.

  • Business
    Variety

    Former Fox News Anchor Shepard Smith Will Join CNBC Evening Lineup

    After giving Fox News Channel the business with an abrupt departure last year, anchor Shepard Smith is likely to find himself more engaged with news about the subject. He's joining finance-focused news outlet CNBC to host a new evening-news program, marking one of the first major outside hires by the NBCUniversal-owned cable network in years. […]

  • Politics
    The Wrap

    Former CNBC Anchor Michelle Caruso-Cabrera Runs Against AOC for Congress

    One-time CNBC anchor Michelle Caruso-Cabrera is running to unseat Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, she announced Tuesday after filing late Monday.“I’m running for NY-14, to fight for the people of Queens & the Bronx, daughter of Cuban immigrants and living the American Dream,” she tweeted, adding an American flag emoji and a link to her website. She will be running in the Democratic primary for the seat currently occupied by Ocasio-Cortez — which covers Brooklyn and her home borough of Queens — an

  • Entertainment
    Yahoo Entertainment

    Andrew Yang after CNBC flub: 'That’s about the 12th apology I’ve gotten'

    Andrew Yang and Stephen Colbert took shots at CNBC for the flub, but at the same time it inspired some interesting ideas.

  • Entertainment
    Variety

    ‘America’s Got Talent’: Asian American Advocacy Groups Condemn Jay Leno, Call on NBC to Sever Business Ties

    Two organizations dedicated to the inclusion and representation of Asian American communities in media have condemned comedian Jay Leno, and called on network NBC to sever its business ties with the former late night host. Both organizations -- Asian Americans Advancing Justice, and the Media Action Network for Asian Americans -- refer to a joke […]

  • Entertainment
    Yahoo TV

    Twitter roasts 'Deal or No Deal' contestant who blew chance at $333,000

    A "Deal or No Deal" contestant with a 50-50 chance of winning $5 or $750,000, and with an offer of $333,000 from the banker, made a terrible decision.

  • News
    Kimberly Potts

    ‘The Profit’ Sneak Peek: Is Marcus About to Make His Worst Partnership Ever?

    Soup’s on in Tuesday’s new episode of The Profit, but as good as the stews and chowders are at The Soup Market in Milwaukee, entrepreneur Marcus Lemonis is in for a big surprise with his newest potential business partner. The soup man — whose business has been struggling since the sudden death of his business partner — resists Marcus’s ideas to freshen up the local chain’s outposts and offer some healthier options in his lineup of hearty bisques. Trust us, this is the worst potential business

  • News
    Ken Tucker

    What Republican Candidates Don't Understand About TV

    Many Republican candidates feel they were terribly abused and exploited by the most recent peek inside their souls conducted by CNBC. Complaining that the debate was unfair, full of liberal bias, stuffed with questions designed to make them attack each other, and generally less comfortable than one of those verbal foot massages they get when they appear on Jimmy Fallon, they’ve struck back. In reaction to the CNBC spitball spectacle, the Republican National Committee is reassessing its commitm

  • News
    Ken Tucker

    CNBC’s Republican Debate Was One Big Squawk Box

    It’s never a good idea for the party host to hog all the hors d’oeuvres and monopolize the conversation, but that’s what CNBC did, in its lip-smacking, crumb-spillingly self-satisfied Republican debate on Wednesday night. The network’s debate started late — the better to have its anchor team jabber over each other — and then proceeded to ask so many questions phrased to provoke squabbling that the first big hand of the night went to Ted Cruz for castigating the moderators for “trying to get peo

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