NEW YORK - August 2, 2010 - Richard Lui has been named MSNBC anchor, based in New York City. Lui will anchor MSNBC dayside and starts with the network on August 30. The announcement was made today by MSNBC President Phil Griffin.
"I've been watching Richard for years and he's a strong reporter and a passionate storyteller," said Griffin. "He'll be a great addition to our talented team."
Richard Lui joins MSNBC from CNN Headline News, where he anchored the 10 a.m. hour of "Morning Express." He also led the network's morning political coverage, reporting daily on "Morning Express with Robin Meade." Since 2005, Lui anchored and reported on all CNN English-language networks including CNN US, CNN International, and HLN. He was the first to ever anchor separate shows on all three CNN Worldwide networks on the same day. Lui reported for CNN's Southern Region, and was a founding anchor of CNN.com Live, the first online news network with full, live programming.
In his five years at CNN Worldwide, Lui anchored live coverage of breaking stories such as the 2009 Gaza-Israel War, Virginia Tech Massacre, 2006 Hezbollah-Israel War, Mumbai train terrorist bombings, and Enron verdicts. Lui’s most recent fieldwork was in the Gulf during the first week of the BP oil spill. Lui reported live at the outset of this disaster on all three CNN networks and CNN.com, and was able to incorporate his five years of experience working in the oil spill clean-up industry into his stories.
Lui has also focused his reporting on child trafficking. In March 2010, he reported from Ghana on children being sold to fishermen to work on boats. Lui also went undercover to report on underage sex slaves held in Indonesian brothels. His recent reporting in West Africa covered the social and economic effects of brain drain and the discovery of offshore oil, especially relevant given the recent Gulf disaster.
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