Skip to content

Network: Shepard Smith joins CNBC for weeknight news program

NEW YORK — Shepard Smith, who abruptly quit Fox News Channel last October amid the ascendancy of opinionated programming, will bring a nightly newscast to CNBC this fall.
capm301-130_2017_203507

NEW YORK — Shepard Smith, who abruptly quit Fox News Channel last October amid the ascendancy of opinionated programming, will bring a nightly newscast to CNBC this fall.

CNBC announced Wednesday that Smith will anchor a one-hour weeknight newscast at 7 p.m. Eastern, the time slot he held for many years at Fox before being shifted to the afternoon.

His show is expected to start in September.

“I know I found a great home for my newcast,” Smith said in a news release. He was not made available for an interview on Wednesday.

CNBC Chairman Mark Hoffman said “The News with Shepard Smith” will feature “fact-based storytelling.”

“We’re thrilled that Shep, who’s built a career on an honest fight to find and report the facts, will continue his pursuit of the truth at CNBC," Hoffman said. “We aim to deliver a nightly program that, in some small way, looks for the signal in all the noise,."

Smith never explicitly said why he walked out on Fox a few months after signing a contract extension, but left enough signals along the way. He had been at Fox since the network's inception in 1996.

His show often bluntly debunked statements made by Trump and his supporters, including opinion hosts on his own network. Shortly before leaving, he had called it repugnant when Tucker Carlson brought on an analyst specifically to refute something said on Smith's show.

“Even in our currently polarized nation, it's my hope that the facts will win the day, that the truth will always matter, that journalism and journalists will thrive,” he said when signing off Fox.

Between impeachment, the pandemic and racial unrest, Fox News, MSNBC and CNN have thrived this year, often the three most popular cable networks. CNBC has rejected the Nielsen company's ratings, believing they underestimate the network's business-oriented audience in daytime.

In prime time, the three news networks are more about opinion than news, with Fox the favourite of President Donald Trump's supporters, MSNBC and CNN more popular with the president's political opponents.

Smith, whose non-compete contract with Fox ended at the beginning of the month, was an attractive talent that drew interest throughout the industry. In CNBC he found a clean slate, a network not identified with a political viewpoint.

CNBC's prime time lineup currently features reality-based programming like “Shark Tank,” “The Profit” and “Jay Leno's Garage.”

There were published reports earlier this spring that NBC management was considering establishing a political talk lineup in prime time for CNBC, conservative but more moderate than Fox News.

Smith's signing seems an indication that the opinionated talk lineup is less likely.

David Bauder, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks