I’m tired of watching Sara Eisen turn Squawk on the Street into a platform for selective outrage and partisan framing. There’s a difference between tough journalism and constantly debating guests because their views don’t match yours. Too often, her interviews feel less like objective reporting and more like doing PR for the preferred political narrative — especially when the topic touches this administration or Israel. Meanwhile, Carl Quintanilla and David Faber continue to show what professionalism looks like; prepared, fair, composed, and objective. They challenge guests without hijacking the conversation. They let answers breathe, they respect the audience. That used to be the CNBC standard. Now we’re watching partiality operate in plain sight while being packaged as journalism. Call it what it is and bring back objectivity. Bring back discipline. Bring back objective journalism!
@SquawkCNBC@SquawkCNBC What a great week for Squawkbox! Awesome journalism, great interviews, and amazing energy. Crazy how the absence of one person can exponentially improve the quality of a program. I vote for Becky Quick, Andrew Sorkin, & Michael Santoli moving forward!