Maria Bartiromo
Maria Bartiromo | |
---|---|
news anchor | |
Years active | 1988–present |
Employer | Fox Corporation |
Spouse |
Jonathan Steinberg (m. 1999) |
Relatives | Saul Steinberg (father-in-law) |
Website | bartiromo |
This article is part of a series on |
Conservatism in the United States |
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Maria Sara Bartiromo (born September 11, 1967) is an American conservative journalist and author who has also worked as a financial reporter and news anchor.
Bartiromo worked at
In 2013, she left CNBC to host shows for Fox.[3] During the presidency of Donald Trump, she became an advocate for the Trump administration, giving him frequent unchallenging interviews and amplifying his conspiracy theories.[4][5] She is one of three Fox Corporation program hosts named in a $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit by Smartmatic relating to unproven conspiracy theories used in attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election.[6][7][8][9] As of April 2023, the lawsuit was in the discovery phase.[10] Bartiromo was among the hosts named in the Dominion Voting Systems v. Fox News Network defamation lawsuit for broadcasting false statements about the plaintiff company's voting machines that Fox News settled for $787.5 million and required Fox News to acknowledge that the broadcast statements were false.[11][12][13]
Early life and education
Bartiromo was born to
Bartiromo attended
Bartiromo started college at C. W. Post before transferring to New York University.[17] During her college years, she worked at the same betting parlor where her mother worked.[23] She graduated from NYU's Washington Square Campus in 1989[24] with a Bachelor of Arts in journalism and economics.[1]
While at NYU she became involved with radio, interning on Barry Farber's show on WMCA 570.[25][26] Farber was impressed by her willingness and capability in doing behind-the-scenes tasks associated with the role.[27][26] Following that, she interned at CNN.[18]
Career
CNN
After her internship, which began in 1988 or 1989, Bartiromo spent five years as an executive producer and assignment editor with CNN Business.[28] Her supervisor at CNN was Lou Dobbs, who later became a colleague at Fox Business.[18][14] She also worked as a production assistant for Stuart Varney there.[29]
CNBC
Live from the stock exchange floor
In 1993, Bartiromo was hired by executive
Bartiromo was the anchor and managing editor of the CNBC business interview show
"Money Honey"
Over the years, writers for multiple media outlets have commented on her good looks and likened her appearance to that of the Italian actress Sophia Loren.[30][27][15][32][4] It is a comparison that Bartiromo has acknowledged and welcomed as a compliment.[33]
Bartiromo was nicknamed the "Money Honey" in the mid-to-late 1990s, a moniker that she had conflicted feelings about lest it diminish her credibility as a financial journalist.[27][30][28][34] In January 2007, Bartiromo filed trademark applications to use the term "Money Honey" as a brand name for a line of children's products, including toys, puzzles and coloring books, to teach kids about money.[35][36] By some accounts she later let the trademarks expire.[34]
Continued prominence
In 2006–07 there was controversy over Bartiromo possibly being too close socially to some of the executives she was covering, which included overseas trips with some such sources.[26][27][17] In part, that was part and parcel of her role to add "pizazz and drama".[27] As The New York Times wrote, "in her years as CNBC's most recognizable face, [she] has lent to the reporting of once gray business news a veneer of gloss and celebrity." But the Times noted that: "Typically, Ms. Bartiromo's interviewing style can be probing, aggressive and, her special access notwithstanding, she can make even some of her best sources sweat a bit on camera. "[27] CNBC defended her on the matter, saying that the trips in question were properly approved and that "her journalistic integrity was never compromised",[26] and Bartiromo retained the confidence of NBC upper management.[17]
Following the
Bartiromo signed a new five-year contract with CNBC in late 2008 (equivalent to $5,559,000 in 2023).[39] Her salary there was around $4 million a year.[17] Former colleague Dylan Ratigan has said that Bartiromo "is a generational icon for financial television. Full stop. "[17]
Fox Business and Fox News
Early years and ratings
On November 18, 2013, it was announced that Bartiromo was leaving CNBC to join Fox Business (FBN).[40] According to the Drudge Report, her deal with Fox Business called for her to anchor a daily market hours program and to have a role on Fox News as well.[40] Her first show with Fox Business was Opening Bell with Maria Bartiromo. She expanded the subject domains she covered to include not just the stock market but also larger questions of public policy and the overall economy.[41]
Since her time with the Fox Business channel, the ratings for her show began to surge when she became an important news source for Trump supporters.[42]
Presidential debate host
The developments of the 2016 Republican presidential nomination race benefited her ratings, as she developed an on-air relationship with Trump.[42]
In regard to the
During the 2016 general election, she commented on the differing ways that Wall Street would react to either candidate winning.
Donald Trump presidency
After Trump became president in 2017, she became an advocate for the
In late November 2020, after
Promoter of "election fraud" falsehoods
According to media reporter Brian Stelter, Bartiromo's unsourced and poorly sourced on-air conversation with Sidney Powell on November 8, 2020 largely started the network's false and potentially defamatory claims about the election, which Trump lost -- Bartiromo did no fact checking, no push back, nor even ask for evidence, merely repeating "unhinged" and false claims.[63] Bartiromo was an outspoken proponent on her program of baseless allegations that rigged voting machines stole the election from Donald Trump. Hosts Lou Dobbs and Jeanine Pirro also promoted the falsehoods on their programs. Attorneys for Smartmatic, a voting machine company that had been baselessly accused of conspiring with competitor Dominion Voting Systems to rig the election, sent Fox News a letter in December 2020 threatening legal action and demanding retractions that "must be published on multiple occasions" so as to "match the attention and audience targeted with the original defamatory publications." The three programs each ran the same three-minute video segment refuting the baseless allegations days later, consisting of an election security expert being interviewed by an unseen and unidentified man, though none of the three hosts personally issued retractions.[64][65] In February 2021, Smartmatic filed a $2.7 billion defamation suit against Fox News, three of its hosts, including Bartiromo, and two network guests. A New York State Supreme Court judge ruled in March 2022 that the suit against Fox News could proceed, dismissing allegations against two individuals, though claims against Bartiromo were allowed to stand.[66]
In January 2021, after the
Ratings success
Five years after joining the fledgling network, both her shows and the channel itself was surpassing CNBC in audience size some of the time.
During the latter part of January 2021, at the outset of the
In February 2021, Smartmatic sued Fox Corporation, Fox News, Bartiromo, Dobbs, and Pirro, for defamation, seeking $2.7 billion in damages.[78] In response her lawyers moved to have the case against her dismissed, saying that she was just reporting on presidential claims during an historically controversial election and that Smartmatic was really trying to make up for poor business performance.[79] Dobbs (by then off the air at FBN) and Pirro filed separate but similar motions for dismissal.[80] In February 2023, the court refused to dismiss the suit.[81]
Books and other publications
Bartiromo is the author of several books. Her first was Use the News: How to Separate the Noise from the Investment Nuggets and Make Money in Any Economy (
Awards, honors and memberships
Bartiromo is the recipient of an Excellence in Broadcast Journalism Award (1997); a Lincoln Statue Award presented by the
In 2009, the Financial Times listed Bartiromo as one of "50 Faces That Shaped the Decade".[87] In 2011, she was the third journalist to be inducted into the Cable Hall of Fame.[1][88] In 2016, she was inducted into the Library of American Broadcasting.[87]
The Maria Bartiromo Broadcast Journalism Studio at Fontbonne Hall Academy, the high school she attended, is named after her.[22] She was the keynote speaker for Fontbonne's 80th anniversary gala in 2018.[22]
Bartiromo is on board of trustees of
She has been on the board of trustees for the
Personal life
In 1999, Bartiromo married Jonathan Steinberg,[93] chief executive officer of WisdomTree Investments and son of billionaire financier Saul Steinberg.[14][19][94] They first met in 1990, soon after her college graduation.[27] The ceremony was held at the home of the bridegroom and was officiated by a rabbi.[93]
The couple own a beach house in the hamlet of
In popular culture
Bartiromo appeared as herself in several films: Risk/Reward, a documentary about the lives of women on Wall Street (2003); the 2009 remake of The Taking of Pelham 123, an action film about armed men who hijack a New York City subway train; the sequel drama film Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010); the documentary Inside Job (2010); and the finance thriller, Arbitrage (2012).
See also
References
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External links
- Official website
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Maria Bartiromo at IMDb
- Maria Bartiromo video produced by Makers: Women Who Make America
- Maria Bartiromo profile – Library of American Broadcasting
- "25 Things You Don't Know About Me" (2018)
- Italian-Americans of New York and New Jersey entry