Acosta, who frequently clashed with Trump in his first term, is leaving CNN after being stripped of his morning show and offered a midnight program in its place.
Jim Acosta shared during his morning broadcast on Tuesday, Jan. 28, that he would not be returning to the CNN desk after 18 years with the organization, saying that after 'careful consideration' and 'weighing alternative time slots CNN offered,
Jim Acosta is leaving his longtime home of CNN. The anchor’s decision to depart the cable news network comes five days after it was reported that The Situation Room, Wolf Blitzer’s long-running evening program,
Wolf Blitzer could soon be joining CNN's daytime programming lineup. The veteran anchor, who has lead the early evening news program "The Situation Room" since 2001, may make the move to mid-to-late mornings, according to Oliver Darcy's Status newsletter.
A Republican congressman’s refusal to directly reveal whether he supports President Donald Trump’s blanket pardons of Jan. 6 attackers – including some of the most violent offenders – didn’t sit well with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer Tuesday night.
CNN made several changes to its lineup, including giving anchor Jake Tapper a new time slot and removing Jim Acosta from his morning show.
The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer currently airs from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. on weekdays. Blitzer has been hosting the program since 2005 in that time slot. He’s been with the network since 1990, previously working as a military affairs reporter and White House correspondent.
Celebrity Jeopardy! can be an illustrious showcase for stars to unveil their wealth of knowledge, as was the case for Michael McKean, Patton Oswalt, and Ike Barinholtz, who shined strong enough to be able to participate in the main series' Tournament of Champions in 2024.
Acosta is the first big name to exit CNN in the changes being implemented by CEO Mark Thompson. Thompson last week also told staff that the company intends to lay off a couple hundred employees in a pivot to digital, with a new streaming service in the works.
CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer is reportedly moving to a morning time slot to make room for new talent, amid a larger shakeup at the embattled network. Blitzer, the long-tenured host of The Situation Room at 6 p.
The new lineup was unveiled just hours after CNN CEO Mark Thompson outlined job cuts and a digital-first strategy for the venerable cable news channel.
After hosting an early evening news broadcast on CNN for 20 years, veteran journalist Wolf Blitzer may be getting a brand new time slot. The network is eyeing a potential move for The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer that would see it air during mid-to-late mornings instead of at 6 p.