Page Hopkins
Page Hopkins is an American journalist [1] who currently appears[2] on MSNBC's First Look and NBC's Early Today. Hopkins graduated from Wellesley College before beginning a career as a television journalist. Gaining experience first as a producer, and then anchor for several local network affiliates Hopkins joined Bloomberg Television as the morning anchor of Moneycast in 1999. In 2002 Hopkins began working at Fox News and became the co-anchor of Fox & Friends Weekend as well as Fox News Live and Breaking News Desk. She also served as a panelist on The Live Desk, participating in panel discussions of the day’s top stories.
Early life
Hopkins was raised in Seattle, Washington, and graduated from Wellesley College with a Bachelor of Arts in history. She also was a member of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) News Study Group while an undergraduate at Wellesley.
Career
Her first job was at the ABC affiliate in West Palm Beach, Florida as an associate producer.
She began her on-camera career as a weekend anchor at KTVE-TV in Monroe, Louisiana, followed by anchoring jobs at WWCP-TV in the Johnstown/Altoona, Pennsylvania market and News 12 New Jersey, a 24-hour cable news television network where she was nominated for an Emmy for her series on the state of the New Jersey foster care system, "Holes in the Safety Net". Prior to joining FOX News, she was the morning anchor of Bloomberg Television's Moneycast, a national business show that aired weekday mornings on the USA Network. While at Bloomberg she also anchored personal finance specials, winning the 2000 Front Page Award for "401(k) Spring Clean-Up". She was an anchor and reporter for the Fox News channel from September 2002 to late 2008. She co-anchored the two-hour Sunday morning edition of Fox News Live and was one of the anchors of the highly rated morning show "Fox and Friends Weekend"[3] which runs three straight hours and is largely unscripted. Since December 2009, she has been seen anchoring "Early Today" for NBC network and appears on MSNBC in "First Look" and in prime time reading the news.[4] In June 2010, she and Eliot Spitzer co-anchored the 4pm hour as fill-ins for Dylan Ratigan.[5] Page is represented by HDReps.[6]
Personal life
Hopkins was a member of the MIT News Study Group and served on the Board of Trustees for Inwood House,[7] a non-profit organization that helps pregnant teens who are homeless or in foster care. She served on the Board of Directors for the Madeira School, a girls boarding school in Virginia (2012-2018)and the board of Trustees for the Loyola School, a co-ed Jesuit high school in New York City (2016-2022). She currently resides in New York City with her husband and children.
References
- v
- t
- e
- Lester Holt (weekdays)
- Jose Diaz-Balart (Saturday)
- Savannah Guthrie (co-anchor)
- Hoda Kotb (co-anchor and 4th hour co-host)
- Craig Melvin (news anchor and 3rd hour co-anchor)
- Al Roker (weather anchor and 3rd hour co-anchor)
- Carson Daly (features anchor)
- Sheinelle Jones (3rd hour co-anchor)
- Dylan Dreyer (3rd hour co-anchor)
- Jenna Bush Hager (4th hour co-host)
- Peter Alexander (co-anchor)
- Laura Jarrett (co-anchor)
- Joe Fryer (features anchor)
- Angie Lassman (meteorologist)
- Frances Rivera (co-anchor)
- Phillip Mena (co-anchor)
- Michelle Grossman (weather anchor)
- Kristen Welker (moderator)
- Andrea Mitchell (substitute moderator)
- Lester Holt (anchor)
- Andrea Canning
- Josh Mankiewicz
- Keith Morrison
- Dennis Murphy
correspondents
- Peter Alexander (chief White House correspondents)
- Rehema Ellis (chief education correspondent)
- Richard Engel (chief foreign correspondent)
- Savannah Guthrie (chief legal correspondent)
- Bill Karins (chief meteorologist)
- Andrea Mitchell (chief foreign affairs & Washington correspondent)
- Anne Thompson (chief environmental affairs correspondent)
- Chuck Todd (political director)
- Keir Simmons (chief international correspondent)
correspondents
- Hallie Jackson (senior Washington correspondent)
- Garrett Haake (senior Capitol Hill correspondent)
- Cynthia McFadden (senior legal and investigative correspondent)
- Stephanie Ruhle (senior business analyst)
- Tom Llamas (senior national correspondent)
- Kate Snow (senior national correspondent)
- Kelly O'Donnell (senior White House correspondent)
- Gabe Gutierrez (senior White House correspondent)
- Christine Romans (senior business correspondent)
- Laura Jarrett (senior legal correspondent)
- Ellison Barber
- Jean Chatzky (financial editor)
- Andrea Canning
- Tom Costello (Washington, D.C.)
- Dylan Dreyer (weather)
- Joe Fryer (New York City)
- Joelle Garguilo
- Stephanie Gosk
- Chris Jansing (MSNBC Senior National correspondent)
- Tammy Leitner
- Craig Melvin
- Ron Mott
- Morgan Radford
- Gadi Schwartz
- Jacob Soboroff
- Katy Tur (New York)
- Jacob Ward
- Brandy Zadrozny
- Kelly Cobiella (London)
- Richard Engel (chief foreign correspondent)
- Keir Simmons (chief international correspondent)
- Janis Mackey Frayer (China/Asia)