Everyone has small beginnings and so it is with Brooke Baldwin. She began her career at a small station called WVIR-TV in Virginia but soon became the morning anchor at WOWK-TV. Later, she worked as a lead reporter for a station in Washington, D.C.
Baldwin joined CNN’s The Rick List in 2008, in which she later took Rick’s place when he was fired. She is currently hosting CNN Newsroom with Brooke Baldwin, which runs from 2 to 4 pm ET. Baldwin won a Silver World Medal for Best Investigative Report for her documentary entitled To Catch a Killer. She has also covered a lot of important events including President Obama’s second inauguration in 2013.
Jim Rome – $30m
Jim Rome is a sports radio talk show host who started his career as an intern at KTMS station in Santa Barbara. He later became a traffic-update reporter. He then moved to XTRA Sports as a part-timer, but since he was so good, he was given his own radio show called The Jim Rome Show or The Jungle. For a couple of years, he also hosted sports television shows such as The FX Sports Show on FX, Talk2 on ESPN2, and The Last Word on Fox Sports Net.
In 2003, he was hired to host Rome is Burning on ESPN, which aired until 2011 when he joined the CBS network. He hosted Rome as well as a monthly TV sport and entertainment talk show on Showtime called Jim Rome on Showtime. Rome has been named as one of the most influential talk radio personalities according to Talkers Magazine.
Lester Holt – $4.5m
Lester Holt worked for CBS for 19 years as a reporter, international correspondent, and anchor. He joined MSNBC in 2000 and became a substitute anchor for NBC Nightly News and Today. But after Brian Williams’ demotion, Holt became the permanent anchor on the program. This made him the first African-American solo anchor for a network nightly newscast.
Holt is currently the host of NBC’s Dateline. He was also the moderator for the first Presidential debate in 2016, and he was lauded for his excellence and credibility as he fact-checked false statements by both candidates. President Donald Trump told him that his moderation was “very fair.”
Leslie Stahl – $1.8m
Lesley Stahl has been connected with CBS since 1972 and is the correspondent for 60 Minutes since 1991. She began her TV broadcasting career at Boston’s Channel 5, WHDH-TV, as an on-air reporter and producer. Two years after joining CBS, she became a correspondent, and her name gained more attention after she covered Watergate. She then became the White House correspondent during the presidencies of Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and George H.W. Bush.
Stahl hosted Face the Nation between September 1983 and May 1991. She also anchored 48 Hours Investigates from 2002 to 2004. She is an author of two books, Reporting Live and Becoming Grandma: The Joys and Science of the New Grandparenting.
Tom Brokaw – $8m
During the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s, Tom Brokaw was one of the “Big Three” news anchors in the U.S along with Dan Rather at CBS News and Peter Jennings at ABC News. They all hosted flagship nightly news programs for over 20 years—22 for Brokaw. He was the anchor and managing editor of the NBC Nightly News since 1982 until his retirement in 2004.
Brokaw is the only person to host all three major NBC new programs: NBC Nightly News, Meet the Press, and The Today Show. He now works on documentaries and is also a Special Correspondent for NBC News. He has also written a number of books about American history and society in the 20th century.