Fox launches 'anti-Wall St.' biz channel

Published: Oct. 15, 2007 at 8:29 AM

NEW YORK, Oct. 15 (UPI) -- Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. on Monday launched Fox Business Network in New York as a "Main Street" alternative to General Electric Co.'s CNBC business network.

"I throw $2 in every time I say something like 'basis point,'" correspondent and former hedge fund trader Cody Willard told viewers, explaining the channel's anti-jargon, anti-Wall Street position.

The cable channel, which expected to reach at least 30 million U.S. homes, took out a full-page color ad on the back page of the main section of Monday's The Wall Street Journal saying "Your Second Opinion Arrives Today."

For its part, CNBC took out a full-page black-and-white ad in the Journal's "Marketplace" section headlined "First in Business News" that called CNBC "America's Business Channel" and said the channel was "fast, accurate, actionable, unbiased."

NewsCorp. bought Dow Jones & Co.'s Journal for $5 billion in a deal announced Aug. 1 that is expected to be completed by December.

But the channel, based at News Corp.'s New York headquarters, cannot air any Wall Street Journal business reporters. A 15-year agreement between Dow Jones and CNBC keeps Journal business reporters from appearing on Fox Business until the contract ends in 2012.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
NBA: Utah 105, Chicago 86
More companies allowing cyber shopping
NHL: Vancouver 4, Los Angeles 1
UPI Sports Calendar for Friday, Nov. 27
Pain increases risk of falling in elderly
Last U.S. Pontiac rolls off the line
Bacteria in cigarettes may harm health
fark
Scottish brewery releases world's strongest beer, Tactical Nuclear Penguin, that's 32% alcohol....
Inspectors make an unannounced visit to Basildon University Hospital and discover 70 dead people,...
We have our first contestant in the Thanksgiving "Set Your House On Fire While Frying A Turkey"...
Man freed after spending 30 years in prison, receives settlement and a "sorry we locked you away...
Oxymoron headline: Swimmer drowns
Photoshop theme: Inappropriate celebrity product endorsements