Morning Joe First Look
Morning Joe First Look | |
---|---|
Genre | News program |
Presented by | Alex Witt |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Location(s) | GE Building, 30 Rockefeller Center, New York City, New York |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company(s) | NBC News Productions |
Release | |
Original network | MSNBC |
Picture format |
480i (SDTV/letterboxed), 1080i (HDTV) |
Original release | 2004 – present |
Morning Joe First Look (formerly First Look) is an American morning news program airing on MSNBC. It is broadcast live Monday through Friday mornings at 5 a.m. Eastern Time, and competes with CNN's Early Start and Fox News Channel's Fox & Friends First. The program is currently co-anchored by Alex Witt, Ayman Mohyeldin, and Louis Burgdorf.
Format
Morning Joe First Look consists of many of the same segments and is produced by the same staff as NBC's early morning news program Way Too Early; some segments, such as a local weather cut-in and some feature stories, are either excluded or changed for the MSNBC broadcast, along with the anchor background (an early morning skycam shot of Manhattan on First Look, and sunrise scenes for Early Today) and graphical styling. There is a segment that is exclusive to the MSNBC newscast, a segment aired before the entertainment news summary at the end of the program, featuring excerpts from the monologue of the previous night/weeknight's episode of either The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon or Late Night with Seth Meyers, followed by the guest list of the upcoming episode. A replay of First Look aired at 5:30 a.m. ET before July 27, 2009, when Way Too Early with Willie Geist premiered.
MSNBC put the program on a short-term hiatus to test a 5 a.m. replay of both Countdown with Keith Olbermann and The Rachel Maddow Show at various times from February to April 2009;[1] First Look was restored onto the schedule after that.
Between November 2005, when CNN cancelled Daybreak[2] and January 2011, when CNN began simulcasting CNN International's World Business Today and World One, Early Today and Way Too Early (which formerly followed the program at 5:30 a.m. ET) were the only morning news programs amongst the American cable news channels with a pre-6 a.m. ET start time.
During the 2016 Summer Olympics on August 8, 2016, the program was retitled Morning Joe First Look with the latter show's logo blended into a new logo for First Look, but retained the same format, while some Way Too Early early features were blended into what is now the second half-hour of First Look; the latter program was discontinued.
On-air staff
As Morning Joe First Look is broadcast from the same studio at the GE Building in New York City as NBC's early morning news program Early Today, the same personalities are seen on both programs. Alex Witt presently serve as main anchor of the program. Louis Burgdorf began to serve as a co-anchor with the Morning Joe brand extension, and does most of his duties from the NBC News control room. NBC meteorologist Bill Karins provides the national and regional weather forecast segments.
Former on-air staff
- Anchors
- Natalie Morales (2004; now with Today)
- Amy Robach (2004; now with ABC News)
- Contessa Brewer (2004–2005; currently fill-in anchor at WNBC in New York City)
- Kristine Johnson (2005–2006; currently main anchor at WCBS-TV in New York City)
- Bill Fitzgerald (2006–2007)
- Milissa Rehberger (various quarters)
- Dan Kloeffler (2007–2009)
- Christina Brown (2007–2010)
- Lynn Berry (2010–2012)
- Mara Schiavocampo (2012–2013; now with ABC News)
- Veronica De La Cruz (2011–2014)
- Frances Rivera (2014–2015; currently co-host Early Today)
- Betty Nguyen (2014–2016; Early Today on NBC // First Look - on MSNBC)
- Meteorologists
- Sean McLaughlin (2004–2005; now at KPHO in Phoenix)
- Rosey Edeh (2004–2005; now appears on The Morning Show in Canada)
- Byron Miranda (2007)
International broadcasts
MSNBC and NBC News programs, including Morning Joe First Look, are shown for several hours a day on the 24-hour news network OSN News in MENA Region.
References
- ↑ Chris Arlens (21 March 2009). "MSNBC Shelves "First Look" For "Maddow" Re-Air". MediaBistro - TVNewser. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
- ↑ Brian Stelter (25 October 2005). "CNN Discontinues Daybreak; American Morning Expands To Four Hours Beginning Nov. 28; All Staffers Will Be Reassigned". MediaBistro - TVNewser. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
Preceded by The Rachel Maddow Show |
First Look 5:00AM–6:00AM |
Succeeded by Morning Joe |