Veteran journalist Connie Chung has anchored for numerous networks like NBC, CBS, ABC, CNN, and MSNBC. She was born to a Chinese diplomat, and Chung went on to attend the University of Maryland, where she studied journalism. Chung then worked her way up at Washington’s WTTG-TV, eventually becoming a reporter for the station.
Chung went on to win an Emmy as well as a Peabody award after interviewing President Richard Nixon during the rise of the Watergate scandal. Chung is worth an estimated $15 million.
Liz Cho - $3 million
Liz Cho has earned a reputation for working as one of the co-anchors for Eyewitness News. She has covered several original news stories over the past few decades, including significant political events.
Before her job on Eyewitness News, Liz anchored for ABC News, Good Morning America, World News Tonight, and Nightline. She graduated from Boston University, majoring in journalism and history.
Poppy Harlow - $2 million
Knowledge certainly is power for CNN's Poppy Harlow. After years of working in front of the camera, she has endured criticism from the public, but she still manages to keep up with an ever-accelerating news cycle, and she doesn't plan on slowing down anytime soon.
Born in 1982, the 37-year-old commands a reported $2 million annual salary. And with a net worth of $6 million, the married mother of two has learned to take it all in stride.
Dana Bash - $6 million
Dana Bash is an American journalist, anchorwoman, and political correspondent. She is best known for being featured on CNN. She graduated from George Washington University with a degree in political communication.
Her father served as a producer for ABC News and was the senior broadcaster producer of the television series Good Morning America.
Lesley Stahl - $40 million
As one of America's most honored and experienced broadcast journalists, her career has been marked by political revelations, investigations, as well as award-winning foreign reporting, a job that won her the Lifetime Achievement Emmy in 2003 for overall excellence in reporting.
She began her 30th season on 60 Minutes in September 2019, having joined the broadcast as a correspondent in March 1991. Lesley is also the author of two best-selling books: "Reporting Live," about her work as a White House Correspondent, and more recently, "Becoming Grandma."