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CNN

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(Redirected fromCNN Travel)
American news channel
This article is about the channel. For other uses, seeCNN (disambiguation).

Television channel
CNN
CountryUnited States
Broadcast area
  • United States
  • Canada
  • Japan
  • India
  • Caribbean islands
  • Worldwide (via CNN International)
HeadquartersMidtown, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
New York City, New York, U.S.
Programming
Language(s)English
Picture format1080i (HDTV)
(downscaled toletterboxed480i for theSDTV feed)
Ownership
Owner
ParentCNN Worldwide
Key people
Sister channels
History
LaunchedJune 1, 1980; 44 years ago (1980-06-01)
Founder
Links
Websitecnn.com
Availability
Streaming media
Online streamCNN Live (pay-TV subscribers only)
Affiliated Streaming ServiceMax
Service(s)Hulu + Live TV,Sling TV,YouTube TV

Cable News Network (CNN) is a multinationalnews organization operating, most notably, awebsite and aTV channel headquartered inAtlanta. Founded in 1980 by Americanmedia proprietorTed Turner andReese Schonfeld as a 24-hourcable news channel, and presentlyowned by theManhattan-based media conglomerateWarner Bros. Discovery (WBD),[2] CNN was the first television channel to provide24-hour news coverage and the first all-news television channel in theUnited States.[3][4][5][6][7]

As of December 2023, CNN had 68,974,000 television households as subscribers in the US. According toNielsen,[8] down from 80 million in March 2021.[9] In June 2021, CNN ranked third in viewership among cable news networks, behindFox News andMSNBC, averaging 580,000 viewers throughout the day, down 49% from a year earlier, amid sharp declines in viewers across all cable news networks.[10] While CNN ranked 14th among all basic cable networks in 2019,[11][12] then jumped to 7th during a major surge for the three largest cable news networks (completing a rankings streak of Fox News at number 5 andMSNBC at number 6 for that year),[13] it settled back to number 11 in 2021[14] and had further declined to number 21 in 2022.[15]

Globally, CNN programming has aired throughCNN International, seen by viewers in over 212 countries and territories.[16] Since May 2019, however, the American domestic version has absorbed international news coverage in order to reduce programming costs. The American version, sometimes referred to as CNN (US), is also available in Canada, and some islands in the Caribbean. CNN also licenses its brand and content to other channels, such asCNN-News18 in India. In Japan it broadcastsCNNj which started in 2003, with simultaneous translation in Japanese.[17]

History

Main article:History of CNN

The Cable News Network launched at 5:00 p.m.Eastern Time on June 1, 1980. After an introduction byTed Turner, the husband and wife team ofDavid Walker andLois Hart anchored the channel's first newscast.[18]Burt Reinhardt, the executive vice president of CNN, hired most of the channel's first 200 employees, including the network's firstnews anchor, formerABC NewsCapitol Hill senior correspondentBernard Shaw.[19][20]

Since its debut, CNN has expanded its reach to several cable and satellite television providers, websites, and specialized closed-circuit channels (such asCNN Airport). The company has 42 bureaus (12 domestic, 31 international),[21] more than 900 affiliated local stations (which also receive news and features content via the video newswire service CNN Newsource),[22] and several regional and foreign-language networks around the world.[23] The channel's success made a bona-fide mogul of founder Ted Turner and set the stage for conglomerateTime Warner's (later WarnerMedia which merged withDiscovery Inc. formingWarner Bros. Discovery) eventual acquisition of theTurner Broadcasting System in 1996.[24][25]

Programming

See also:List of programs broadcast by CNN

Current schedule

This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(January 2025)

CNN's current weekday schedule consists mostly of rolling news programming during daytime hours, followed by in-depth news and information programs with a focus on political news and discussion during the evening and primetime hours. The network's morning programming consists ofEarly Start, an early-morning news program now hosted byKasie Hunt at 5–6 a.m. ET. This is followed byCNN This Morning, the network'smorning show, hosted byPoppy Harlow andPhil Mattingly, at 6–9 a.m. ET.[26] Since April 2023,CNN News Central has served as the network's rolling news block on weekdays, with its morning edition from 9 a.m. to noon ET anchored byJohn Berman,Kate Bolduan, andSara Sidner, and its afternoon edition from 1–4 p.m. ET anchored byBrianna Keilar and Boris Sanchez.[27][28] In the noon hour isInside Politics, hosted byDana Bash.[29]

CNN's late afternoon and early evening lineup consists ofThe Lead with Jake Tapper at 4–5 p.m. ET andThe Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer at 5–7 p.m. ET. The network's evening and prime time lineup shifts towards more in-depth programming, includingErin Burnett OutFront at 7 p.m. ET,[30]Anderson Cooper 360° at 8 p.m. ET, andThe Source withKaitlan Collins at 9 p.m. ET. The 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. hours are filled byCNN Newsnight withAbby Phillip andLaura Coates Live respectively.[26][31][32][33][34] From November 2023, the Wednesday edition ofNewsnight has been replaced withKing Charles, a limited-run late-night talk show helmed byGayle King andCharles Barkley.[35]

The network's weekend morning programming begins withCNN Newsroom (simulcast fromCNN International) at 4–6 a.m. ET every Saturday and 3–6 a.m. ET every Sunday.CNN Newsroom also airs throughout the day between noon and 8 p.m. ET with hostsFredricka Whitfield andJim Acosta. Each weekend day from 6 a.m. ET, until 8 a.m. ET Saturday and 9 a.m. ET Sunday are the weekend editions ofCNN This Morning, hosted byAmara Walker andVictor Blackwell. On Saturdays,First of All with Victor Blackwell airs at 8 a.m. ET, followed bySmerconish withMichael Smerconish at 9 a.m. ET,TheChris Wallace Show at 10 a.m. ET andThe Amanpour Hour withChristine Amanpour at 11 a.m. ET.[36] The Sunday morning lineup consists primarily ofpolitical talk shows, starting withState of the Union co-hosted byJake Tapper andDana Bash at 9 a.m. ET followed by the international affairs programFareed Zakaria GPS at 10 a.m. ET andInside Politics withManu Raju at 11 a.m. ET.[37]

Weekend primetime, starting at 9 p.m. ET on Saturday and 8 p.m. ET on Sunday, is dedicated mostly tofactual programming, such asdocumentary specials andminiseries likeThe Whole Story with Anderson Cooper. Documentary-stylereality series, such asAnthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown andUnited Shades of America, and acquired documentary films presented under the bannerCNN Films may also air during weekend primetime. The documentary anthology seriesHow It Really Happened relocated fromHLN to air its eighth season.

Past programming

For the 2014–15 season, after cancelingPiers Morgan Tonight (which, itself, replaced the long-runningLarry King Live), CNN experimented with running factual and reality-style programming during the 9:00 p.m. ET hour, such asJohn Walsh'sThe Hunt,This Is Life with Lisa Ling, andMike Rowe'sSomebody's Gotta Do It. Then-presidentJeff Zucker explained that this new lineup was intended to shift CNN away from a reliance onpundit-oriented programs, and attract younger demographics to the network. Zucker stated that the 9:00 p.m. hour could be pre-empted during major news events for expanded coverage. These changes coincided with the introduction of a new imaging campaign for the network, featuring the slogan "Go there".[38][39][40] In May 2014, CNN premieredThe Sixties, a documentary miniseries produced byTom Hanks, andGary Goetzman which chronicled the United States in the 1960s. Owing to its success, CNN commissioned follow-ups focusing on other decades.[41][42][43][44]Anderson Cooper 360° was expanded to run two hours long, from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.[45]

By 2019, CNN had produced at least 35 original series. Alongside the Hanks/Goetzman franchise (including the 2018 spin-off1968), CNN has aired other documentary miniseries relating to news and US policies, such asThe Bush Years, andAmerican Dynasties: TheKennedys—which saw the highest ratings of any CNN original series premiere to-date, with 1.7-million viewers.Parts Unknown concluded after the 2018suicide of its hostAnthony Bourdain; CNN announced several new miniseries and docuseries for 2019, includingAmerican Style (a miniseries produced by the digital media companyVox Media),[46]The Redemption Project withVan Jones,Chasing Life withSanjay Gupta,Tricky Dick (a miniseries chroniclingRichard Nixon),The Movies (a spin-off of the Hanks/Goetzman decades miniseries), andOnce in a Great City: Detroit 1962–64.[47][48]

With the takeover of CNN byChris Licht and Warner Bros. Discovery, it was announced in October 2022 that CNN would cut back on acquisitions and commissions from third-parties as a cost-cutting measure, but Licht stressed that "longform content remains an important pillar of our programming", while the network announced a slate for 2023 that would include commissions such asGiuliani: What Happened to America's Mayor?,United States of Scandal, andThe 2010s.[49][50] In May 2024, CNN ordered aAmerican version of the long-running British news comedypanel showHave I Got News for You.[51]

On-air presentation

CNN began broadcasting in thehigh-definition1080i resolution format in September 2007.[52] This format is now standard for CNN and is available on all major cable and satellite providers.

The CNN Election Express bus, used for broadcasts

CNN's political coverage in HD was first given mobility by the introduction of the CNN Election Express bus in October 2007. The Election Express vehicle, capable of five simultaneous HD feeds, was used for the channel's CNN-YouTube presidential debates and for presidential candidate interviews.[53]

In December 2008, CNN introduced a comprehensive redesign of its on-air appearance, which replaced an existing style that had been used since 2004. On-air graphics took a rounded, flat look in a predominantly black, white, and red color scheme, and the introduction of a new box next to the CNN logo for displaying show logos and segment-specific graphics, rather than as a large banner above the lower third. The redesign also replaced the scrolling ticker with a static "flipper", which could either display a feed of news headlines (both manually inserted and taken from theRSS feeds of CNN.com), or "topical" details related to a story.[54][55]

CNN's next major redesign was introduced on January 10, 2011, replacing the dark, flat appearance of the 2008 look with a glossier, blue-and-white color scheme, moving the secondary logo box to the opposite end of the screen, and framing its graphics for the16:9 aspect ratio (which is downscaled to aletterboxed format for standard definition feeds).[55] On February 18, 2013, following Jeff Zucker's arrival as head of the network, the "flipper" was dropped and reverted to a scrolling ticker.[56]

On August 11, 2014, CNN introduced a new graphics package, dropping the glossy appearance for a flat, rectangular scheme incorporating red, white, and black colors, and theGotham typeface. The ticker alternated between general headlines and financial news fromCNN Business, and the secondary logo box was replaced with a smaller box below the CNN bug, which displayed either the title,hashtag, orTwitter handle for the show being aired or its anchor.[57] In April 2016, CNN began to introduce a new corporate typeface, known as "CNN Sans", across all of its platforms. Inspired byHelvetica Neue and commissioned after consultations with Troika Design Group, the font family consists of 30 different versions with varying weights and widths to facilitate use across print, television, and digital mediums.[58] CNN International would also adopt these graphics, but with the CNN logo bug having a white on red color scheme to differentiate it from the domestic network.[59]

In August 2016, CNN announced the launch of CNN Aerial Imagery and Reporting (CNN AIR), a drone-based news collecting operation to integrate aerial imagery and reporting across all CNN branches and platforms, along with Turner Broadcasting and Time Warner entities.[60]

On June 1, 2023, CNN refreshed its graphics to mark the 43rd anniversary of its launch, using gradients androunded corners, thinner fonts, and a modified layout that moved the show title to a secondary tab on the lower third next to the segment title, and replaced the ticker with a static "flipper" for the first time since 2013, among other changes.[59] Amid poor internal reception to the redesign and the firing of Chris Licht as head of CNN, elements of the prior graphics began to be reinstated later that month, including the bolder typography previously used for lower third headlines.[61][62] Further changes were made on August 14, 2023, with the return of the scrolling ticker and the show title box to make it closer resemble the 2014–23 graphics, but maintaining most of the other visual changes.[63]

On June 27, 2024, CNN hosted the first presidential debate for former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden. CNN claimed that more people watched the CNN Presidential Debate than any other CNN program in history.[64]

Staff

Main article:List of CNN personnel

On July 27, 2012, CNN presidentJim Walton announced he was resigning after 30 years at the network. Walton remained with CNN until the end of that year.[65] In January 2013, formerNBCUniversal President Jeff Zucker replaced Walton.[66]

On January 29, 2013, longtime political analystsJames Carville andMary Matalin, and fellow political contributorErick Erickson were let go by CNN.[67]

In February 2022, Zucker was asked to resign byJason Kilar, the chief executive of CNN's owner WarnerMedia, after Zucker's relationship with one of his lieutenants was discovered during the investigation into former CNN primetime hostChris Cuomo's efforts to control potentially damaging reporting regarding his brotherAndrew Cuomo, governor of New York.[68][69] Kilar announced that the interim co-heads would be executive vice presidents Michael Bass,Amy Entelis, andKen Jautz.[1] On February 26, 2022, it was announced thatChris Licht—known for his work at MSNBC and CBS—would be the next president of CNN; he was planned to be instated after the spin off and merger of WarnerMedia intoDiscovery Inc.[70] Licht started his tenure in May 2022, and his tenure ended in June 2023.[71][72]

A trio of EVPs, Entelis, Virginia Moseley and Eric Sherling, formed an interim management group, until October 2023, whenMark Thompson, formerly ofThe New York Times, became CEO.[73] In one of his first major moves, he kept the executive team under Chris Licht—the "Quad", composed of David Leavy,COO, and threeEVPs (Moseley for editorial, Entelis for talent, and Sherling for programming)— all in place, and expanded their responsibilities. Moseley became the network's first executive editor and would have both national and international news. Adding their ranks, Thompson made Alex MacCallum, who worked with Thompson at The New York Times, executive vice president of digital products. In highlighting these moves, Thompson emphasized existing staff would need to get used to change.[74][75]

In July 2024, CNN announced that it was cutting one hundred jobs, or about 3% of its total workforce. The company also announced that it was consolidating three newsrooms into one, namely, its US news gathering, international news gathering and digital news gathering operations.[76] CNN's global workforce, in July 2024, included roughly 3,500 people.[77]

Other platforms

Website

CNN launched its website, CNN.com (initially known asCNN Interactive), on August 30, 1995.[78] The site attracted growing interest over its first decade and is now one of the most popular news websites in the world. The widespread growth of blogs,social media anduser-generated content have influenced the site, and blogs, in particular, have focused CNN's previously scattershot online offerings, most noticeably in the development and launch ofCNN Pipeline in late 2005.[citation needed]

In April 2009, CNN.com ranked third place among online global news sites in unique users in the US, according to Nielsen/NetRatings; this is an increase of 11% over the previous year.[79]

CNN Pipeline was the name of a paid subscription service, its corresponding website, and a content delivery client that provided streams of live video from up to four sources (or "pipes"), on-demand access to CNN stories and reports, and optional pop-up "news alerts" to computer users. The installable client was available to users ofPCs runningMicrosoft Windows. There was also a browser-based "web client" that did not require installation. The service was discontinued in July 2007, and was replaced with a free streaming service.[80]

On April 18, 2008, CNN.com was targeted by Chinese hackers in retaliation for the channel's coverage on the2008 Tibetan unrest. CNN reported that they took preventive measures after news broke of the impending attack.[81][82]

The company was honored at the 2008Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards for development and implementation of an integrated and portable IP-based live, edit and store-and-forward digital news gathering (DNG) system.[83] The first use of what would later win CNN this award was in April 2001 when CNN correspondent Lisa Rose Weaver[84] covered, and was detained,[85] for the release of theUS Navy crew of a damaged electronic surveillance plane after theHainan Island incident. The technology consisted of a videophone produced by 7E Communications Ltd of London, UK.[86] This DNG workflow is used today by the network to receive material worldwide using anAppleMacBook Pro, variousprosumer and professional digital cameras, software from Streambox Inc., andBGAN terminals fromHughes Network Systems.[citation needed]

On October 24, 2009, CNN launched a new version of the CNN.com website; the revamped site included the addition of a new "sign up" option, in which users can create their own username and profile, and a new "CNN Pulse" (beta) feature, along with a new red color theme.[87] However, most of the news stories archived on the website were deleted.

Blogs

The topical news programJudy Woodruff's Inside Politics was the first CNN program to feature a round-up of blogs in 2005.[88] Blog coverage was expanded whenInside Politics was folded intoThe Situation Room (Inside Politics later returned to CNN in 2014, this time hosted by the network's chief national correspondent John King.[citation needed]). In 2006, CNN launched CNN Exchange andCNN iReport, initiatives designed to further introduce and centralize the impact of everything fromblogging tocitizen journalism within the CNN brand. CNN iReport which features user-submitted photos and video, has achieved considerable traction, with increasingly professional-looking reports filed by amateur journalists, many still in high school or college. The iReport gained more prominence when observers of theVirginia Tech shootings sent in first-hand photos of what was going on during the shootings.[89]

In April 2010, CNN announced via Twitter that it would launch a food blog called "Eatocracy", which will "cover all news related to food—from recalls to health issues to culture".[90] CNN had aninternet relay chat (IRC) network at chat.cnn.com. CNN placed a live chat withBenjamin Netanyahu on the network in 1998.[91]

CNNHealth consists of expert doctors answering viewers' questions online at CNN's "The Chart" blog website. Contributors includeSanjay Gupta (Chief Medical Correspondent),Charles Raison (Mental Health Expert),Otis Brawley (Conditions Expert), Melina Jampolis (Diet and Fitness Expert), Jennifer Shu (Living Well Expert), andElizabeth Cohen (Senior Medical Correspondent).[92]

Other digital offerings

In early 2008, CNN began maintaining a live streaming broadcast available to cable andsatellite subscribers who receive CNN at home (a precursor to theTV Everywhere services that would become popularized by cable and satellite providers beginning with Time Warner's incorporation of the medium).[93] CNN International is broadcast live, as part of theRealNetworks SuperPass subscription service outside the US. CNN also offers severalRSS feeds andpodcasts.

CNN also has multiple channels in the popular video-sharing siteYouTube, but those videos can only be viewed in the United States, a source of criticism among YouTube users worldwide.[citation needed] In 2014, CNN launched a radio version of their television programming onTuneIn Radio.[94]

On March 7, 2017, CNN announced the official launch of its virtual reality unit named CNNVR. It will produce 360 videos to itsAndroid andiOS apps within CNN Digital.[95][96] It is planning to cover major news events with the online, and digital news team inNew York City,Atlanta,London,Hong Kong,San Francisco,Dubai,Johannesburg,Tokyo, andBeijing.[97]

CNN Newsource offices at the CNN Center in Atlanta

CNN Newsource is asubscription-based affiliationvideo service that provides CNNcontent totelevision station affiliates with CNN, includingterrestrial stations and international stations. Newsource allows affiliates to download videos from CNN, as well as from other affiliates who upload their video to Newsource.

CNN also maintains awire service known as CNN Wire.[98]

CNN's digital storefront, which sells branded merchandise, household goods, and software, is operated byStackCommerce via partnership.

In 2021, CNN Digital had an average of 144-million unique visitors in the United States according toComscore, making it the most viewed digital news outlet, ahead ofThe New York Times, NBC News, Fox News,The Washington Post.[99]

CNN-10

The network also hosts CNN-10, a daily 10-minute video show visible at the CNN website or YouTube. It replaced the long-running show CNN Student News which had been aired since 1989.[100] It is aimed at a global audience of students, teachers, and adults, and was hosted by Carl Azuz.[101] In the fall of 2022, Carl Azuz was replaced byCoy Wire as the host of CNN 10,[102] after leaving CNN due to a "personal decision" according to a CNN spokesperson in a newsletter published on September 18, 2022.[103]

Beme

Main article:Beme (company)

On November 28, 2016, CNN announced the acquisition ofBeme for a reported$25 million.[104] On November 29, 2016, Matt Hackett, co-founder of Beme, announced via an email to its users that theBeme app would be shutting down on January 31, 2017.[105] Since the shutdown of the app, it was announced that CNN intended to use the current talent behind Beme to work on a separate start-up endeavor. Beme's current team will retain full creative control of the new project, which was slated to be released in the summer of 2017.[106] Beme have also brought on other internet stars such as the host ofVsauce 3, Jake Roper, as head of production, who features prominently in Beme co-founderCasey Neistat's vlogs.[107]Beme News has since begun uploading news related video onYouTube.[108]

Films

Main article:CNN Films

In October 2012, CNN formed a film division calledCNN Films to distribute and produce made-for-TV and featuredocumentaries. Its first acquisition was a documentary entitledGirl Rising, a documentary narrated byMeryl Streep that focused on the struggles of girls' education.[109]

Radio

In July 2014,Cumulus Media announced that it would end its partnership withABC News Radio, and enter into a new partnership with CNN to syndicate national and international news content for its stations throughWestwood One beginning in 2015, including access to a wire service, and digital content for its station websites.The service was unbranded, allowing individual stations to integrate the content with their news brands.[110] On July 9, 2020, citing "extraordinary circumstances in the current marketplace" and a need to prioritize the company's resources, Westwood One announced that the service would be discontinued on August 30.[111]

The audio simulcast of CNN is distributed onEntercom'sRadio.com website and app.[112]

Other channels

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CNN en Español televised debate for the 2005 Chilean elections
Post-production editing offices in Atlanta

Over the years, CNN has launched spin-off networks in the United States and other countries. Channels that currently operate include:

Former channels

CNN has also launched television and online ventures that are no longer in operation, including:

Bureaus

CNN bureau locations
TheCNN Center in Atlanta
CNN in New York City
CNN in Los Angeles
CNN Center studios

CNN operates bureaus in the following cities as of February 2023[update]:[128]

United States

Worldwide

In parts of the world without a CNN bureau, reports from local affiliate stations will be used to file a story.[citation needed]

Controversies and criticisms

Main article:CNN controversies

CNN has been involved in various controversies, criticisms, and allegations since its inception in 1980. The channel is known for its dramatic live coverage ofbreaking news, some of which has drawncriticism as overlysensationalistic.

CNN claims to be "The Most Trusted Name in News",[130] but its efforts to benonpartisan have led to accusations offalse balance.[136] One study measured airtime of guests on major news networks between 2010 and 2021 and compared that to the guests' campaign donations. It found guests on CNN to have a liberal bias (a "campaign finance score" of −9.7, where 0 is equal airtime, compared to −14.1 for MSNBC and 49.8 for Fox News), which became more pronounced during theTrump administration. The same study found that some popular primetime news shows on CNN, such asAnderson Cooper 360 orCNN Tonight, are more left-leaning than popular MSNBC shows such asThe Rachel Maddow Show orThe 11th Hour with Brian Williams.[137][138]

In January 2020, CNN settled a multi-million dollardefamation lawsuit fromNick Sandmann, aCovington Catholic High School student involved in an encounter withOmaha tribe elder Nathan Phillips at theLincoln Memorial inWashington, D.C.[139][140]

When Chris Licht took over the network in 2022, he expressed an intention to have moreRepublicans on the air and cut down on opinion-related content.[137]

After being fired in December 2021, former hostChris Cuomo was reported to be seeking$125 million in damages, alleging a breach of agreement.[141] In April 2023, hostDon Lemon announced that he had been fired.[142]

Awards and honors

1998: CNN received theFour Freedoms Award for theFreedom of Speech.[143]

2017: CNN received thePrince Rainier III Special Prize at theMonte Carlo TV Festival for the documentary,Midway: A Plastic Island about sea pollution.[144][145]

2018: CNN received theOverseas Press Club of America David Kaplan Award for best TV or video spot news reporting from abroad for reporting on the fall ofISIS byNick Paton Walsh andArwa Damon.[146]

2018: CNN received theGeorge Polk Award ofLong Island University for Foreign Television Reporting for uncovering a hidden modern-day slave auction of African refugees in Libya. Reporting done byNima Elbagir and Raja Razek.[147][148]

2018: CNN's Nima Elbagir received the Courage in Journalism Award from theInternational Women's Media Foundation.[149]

2018: CNN won a network-record sixNews and Documentary Emmy Awards of theNational Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, for Outstanding Breaking News Coverage, Outstanding Continuing Coverage of a News Story in a Newscast, Outstanding Live Interview, Outstanding Hard News Feature Story in a Newscast, Outstanding News Special, Outstanding Science, Medical and Environmental Report.[150]

2019: TheUSC Annenberg School awarded CNN with aWalter Cronkite Award for its Parkland Town Hall event.[151]

2020: CNN's Ed Lavandera was awarded aPeabody Award for "The Hidden Workforce: Undocumented in America",[152] and CNN Films was awarded a Peabody for the documentary "Apollo 11".[152]

2021: CNN won aGeorge Polk Award ofLong Island University for Foreign Reporting for their reporting on thecoronavirus outbreak inWuhan, China, and later reporting under quarantine inBeijing.[153]

2021: CNN andClarissa Ward were named finalists for theDuPont-Columbia Award of theColumbia University Graduate School of Journalism for their "Russia's Secret Influence Campaigns" investigation.[154]

See also

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