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Harris Faulkner 2021: Top 10 Interesting Facts About That You Should Know Right Now!

Harris Faulkner has won many Emmy awards for his work as a news anchor. Faulkner is presently the host of two daily midday shows: The Faulkner Focus (weekdays, 11AM-12PM/ET) and Outnumbered (weekdays, 12-1PM/ET). Faulkner joined FOX News Channel (FNC) in 2005 and formerly hosted Outnumbered Overtime with Harris Faulkner, which has consistently ranked first in its time slot since its debut in 2017.

Author:Emily Sanchez
Reviewer:James Pierce
Jan 31, 2022161K Shares2.2M Views
Harris Faulkner has won many Emmy awards for his work as a news anchor. Faulkner is presently the host of two daily midday shows: The Faulkner Focus (weekdays, 11AM-12PM/ET) and Outnumbered (weekdays, 12-1PM/ET). Faulkner joined FOX News Channel (FNC) in 2005 and formerly hosted Outnumbered Overtime with Harris Faulkner, which has consistently ranked first in its time slot since its debut in 2017.

Harris Faulkner’s Biography

Harris Faulkner has won many Emmy awards for his work as a news anchor. Faulkner is presently the host of two daily midday shows: The Faulkner Focus (weekdays, 11AM-12PM/ET) and Outnumbered (weekdays, 12-1PM/ET). Faulkner joined FOX News Channel (FNC) in 2005 and formerly hosted Outnumbered Overtime with Harris Faulkner, which has consistently ranked first in its time slot since its debut in 2017.
At Cannes Lions, Harris Faulkner, a six-time Emmy Award winner and FOX News anchor, joined to talk about her breakout year, what parenting looks like when progressing your career, and how we can hold people accountable on the country's most pressing issues.
Her meteoric ascension is more than a figure. Faulkner shaped her fate; she didn't just happen to be born into it. She is not only the first Black woman to host a daily cable news program; she is also an incredible newsroom leader who continues to surprise people with her candor and genuineness. This interview gave us a look into her life.

What People Don't Realize About Fox News Anchor Harris Faulkner

Harris Faulkner’s Early Life

Faulkner was born on October 13, 1965, in Atlanta, Georgia, at Fort McPherson.
Her father, retired Lieutenant Colonel Bob Harris, was stationed at the facility and had served three tours in Vietnam as a United States Army officer and Army Aviator. As a child, Faulkner resided in a variety of locations, including Stuttgart, West Germany.
Faulkner received a B.A. in mass communications from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Harris Faulkner’s Career

Harris Faulkner takes a selfie with Kayleigh McEnany and Emily Compagno on the set of Outnumbered
Harris Faulkner takes a selfie with Kayleigh McEnany and Emily Compagno on the set of Outnumbered
Faulkner began her career as a freelance business journalist at LA Weekly, where she earned $50 each story. Faulkner began her television career as an intern at KCOP-TV in Los Angeles, where she performed minor duties, before moving to Greenville, North Carolina, to work as a reporter and anchor at WNCT-TV.
Faulkner worked as an evening anchor for WDAF-TV in Kansas City from 1992 to 2000. Faulkner was harassed and stalked in Kansas City by an old acquaintance who had followed her from North Carolina.
Faulkner's next assignment was as part of an evening anchor team at KSTP-TV in Minneapolis–Saint Paul. In July 2004, she resigned from the station. In 2005, Faulkner joined Fox News. She worked as a correspondent for A Current Affair from its relaunch in 2005 until its discontinuation in October of that year.
From 2011 through 2017, Faulkner hosted her first solo network broadcast, Fox Report Weekend. In addition to anchoring coverage of the 2018 Midterm Elections, Faulkner has filled in for Shepard Smith Shepard Smith Reporting and Martha MacCallum The Story. Prior to Gutfeld's departure from the show, she made numerous guest appearances on the night satire show Red Eye with Greg Gutfeld.
Faulkner joined the daily Fox News show Outnumbered as one of the co-hosts in April 2014. She became the host of Outnumbered Overtime in 2017, which is more of a hard news show than a debate show. Her latest show, The Faulkner Focus, premiered in early 2021.

Harris Faulkner As A Motivational Speaker, Writer, And Philanthropist

Faulkner is a motivational speaker, writer, and philanthropist in addition to her career as a journalist. Faulkner is involved with the Green Beret Foundation, which provides medical, transition, and family support for those who have served in the United States Army Special Forces, and the Navy Seal Foundation, which provides immediate and ongoing support and assistance to the Naval Special Warfare community and its families, after growing up as a "military brat."
Faulkner also works with the Susan G. Komen Foundation, the Avon Foundation for Women, and the Triple Negative Breast Cancer Foundation to raise awareness and cash for breast cancer research.
For her humanitarian endeavors, Faulkner won the Amelia Earhart Pioneering Lifetime Achievement Award in 1998.
Faulkner earned a B.A. in Mass Communications from the University of California, Santa Barbara. She and her two daughters live in New Jersey with her husband, Tony Berlin.

Harris Faulkner’s Awards And Honors

Faulkner won four regional Emmy Awards while at ABC's Minneapolis station KSTP, including Best Anchor three years in a row (2002, 2003, and 2004) and for anchoring the news special "Eyewitness to War. For her humanitarian endeavors, she received the Amelia Earhart Pioneering Lifetime Achievement Award in 1998.

Harris Faulkner’s Works That Have Been Published

Mike Gallagher with Harris Faulkner holds Faulkner’s book, ‘9 Rules of Engagement’
Mike Gallagher with Harris Faulkner holds Faulkner’s book, ‘9 Rules of Engagement’
Faulkner, Harris (November 1, 1999). Breaking News: God Has A Plan - An Anchorwoman's Journey Through Faith. Leawood, Kansas: Leather's Publishing. ISBN 9781585970117.
Faulkner, Harris (June 5, 2018). 9 Rules of Engagement - A Military Brat's Guide to Life and Success. Harper Collins. ISBN 9780062697516.

Harris Faulkner’s Successful Journey

Faulkner has hosted a number of primetime programs on a variety of current events during her stint at the network. Faulkner anchored America Together with Harris Faulkner: The Shot, which debunked myths surrounding the COVID-19 vaccines, America Copes Together, which focused on the psychological effects of the pandemic on individuals, and America Learns Together, which highlighted the challenges of guiding students through a digital education, all during the coronavirus pandemic.
In March 2020, Faulkner co-moderated a two-hour virtual town hall with President Donald Trump and members of the White House coronavirus task team on the latest pandemic news and the administration's strategies to address the issue with Bill Hemmer. With 4.4 million viewers, the town hall set a new cable news record.
Faulkner presented Harris Faulkner: Police Emergency to Town Hall America in October 2019, which focused on recent incidents of terrorism and violence, as well as the police officer suicide epidemic. Faulkner resumed the subject in a one-hour program titled The Faulkner Focus: Police in America, which aired in April 2021.
Faulkner has interviewed a number of noteworthy personalities throughout her career, including Senator John McCain, President Donald Trump, Olympic gold medalist Gabby Douglas, and Cindy McCain, to name a few.
Faulkner has also covered numerous global news events, including the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, the Republican and Democratic National Conventions in 2016 and 2020, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Whitney Houston's death, the 2013 government shutdown, the AIDS crisis in South Africa, and Natalee Holloway's 2005 disappearance.
Following the assassination of George Floyd, Faulkner landed the first one-on-one cable news interview with President Donald Trump in June 2020. The interview, which was her second with the president, focused on the broad civic disturbance that followed Floyd's murder in police custody, as well as the administration's position on civil rights.
Following the interview, Faulkner continued the ongoing discourse about injustice in America in a primetime special titled Harris Faulkner Presents: The Fight for America, which received tremendous accolades from all sides of the aisle.
Faulkner was nominated to WORTH Magazine's "Groundbreakers" list, which celebrates 50 outstanding women worldwide for breaking barriers in their industries, following her breaking news coverage in 2020 and serving as the only Black woman to host two back-to-back cable news programs. Variety's New York Women's Impact Report honored Faulkner in May 2021.
In addition, Faulkner has been a key figure in FNC's election coverage. Faulkner moderated various voter panels during the 2020 presidential election cycle to complement the network's primetime election special.
Faulkner formerly worked as a correspondent for WNYW-(FOX TV's 5) A Current Affair and as a replacement host on CNN's Headline News' The Nancy Grace Show.
She began her career as a reporter and anchor for WNCT-TV (CBS 9) in Greenville, North Carolina, before moving to WDAF-TV (FOX 4) in Kansas City in 1992.
Faulkner began her career as an evening anchor at KSTP-TV (ABC 5) in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 2000, and she also hosted The Harris Faulkner Show on FM107 Radio.

Harris Faulkner’s Family

Harris Faulkner with Tony Berlin and their daughters Danika and Bella
Harris Faulkner with Tony Berlin and their daughters Danika and Bella
Faulkner married Tony Berlin, a former WCCO-TV reporter, in 2003, and the couple has two daughters.
Faulkner sued Hasbro for $5 million in September 2015, alleging that a plastic toy hamster in the company's Littlest Pet Shop range was an illegal use of her name and likeness. Hasbro agreed to resolve Faulkner's lawsuit in October 2016, and the toy hamster was no longer produced.

Harris Faulkner’ Regarding Motherhood

When asked what she wants her own legacy to be, she said, “If anybody would just say that I was a great mom, that's enough for me. And I mean that across every spectrum of my life because I'm raising these young women of color under-construction, my biracial daughters who are 12 and 14.
My definition of great motherhood is to inspire the next generation to want to do everything they can to make the world a better place, and to rise...that you can show love without being seen as weak.”
She said there is nothing overrated about survival and nothing overrated about being a boss or a leader. “If someone tells you not to be pushy, start pushing that person out of the way.”
She continued, “This generation of women has an expectation that is so different than mine did, and I’m in my 50s now. They legitimately believe they are bosses — that’s progress. ‘Alpha female’ has always been said with derogatory terms. Some of them start with a ‘B,’ and I don’t mean best.”

Harris Faulkner’s Influence Of Reputation

Harris Faulkner interviews Donald Trump at the White House
Harris Faulkner interviews Donald Trump at the White House
When she needs to report things that are tough for people to hear, Faulkner supports the power of reputation and the power of love. There was considerable debate behind her in the newsroom on the morning of the Sandy Hook mass massacre, just seconds before she went live.
“Do we go forth with the number of deaths?” They knew it was going to be hard to report it first. When Harris saw a hearse pull into the Sandy Hook parking lot on one of the studio’s screens, she knew something had to be said. She addressed her viewers softly, “You know why they’re showing up, let’s just take this moment together...a moment of silence.”
She gave the audience the time they needed to digest the awful, heartbreaking situation that had occurred during that pause. Her meeting with former President Donald Trump in 2020 dominated the news for weeks. National tensions were at an all-time high shortly after the George Floyd shooting.
“I don't normally put myself into the story. But as he talked about George Floyd and the death, he's like, ‘You know, I understand people are in the streets and they're angry, but...’ And I said, ‘Let me stop you right there.’”
In the interview, she went on to share with him, “When George Floyd called out on the last few breaths of his life for his mom —his Black mother — he called my name, Mr. President. He called my name. I’m mom first.”
For a brief while, Faulkner claimed, it was as if they were two persons sitting on a log, simply conversing, “because sometimes it calls for the humanity and the humanness of the moment to come forward. You don't have to interject and be bold with opinion or whatever, but you do need to let people see who you are.”
She felt pleased with herself at the end of the day because they had both completed their tasks. “This is why I said what I said. We got a better interview, because we both came at it from different perspectives.”

Harris Faulkner For Delivering News From Afar

“They don't give you a show with your name on it — the first in the network's history and across the board during daytime television to a woman of color over 50 — if you’re not working.”
Said Faulkner from her home studio, “I'm in my house right now, you probably see that because all you see all the lights that are on around me, but this is a whole set in here that that comes alive during the two shows that I do The Faulkner Focus and Outnumbered the talk show, which has been on the air for seven years. I've never done anything from my house before. I didn’t know what this was going to look like. So last March, I started to do pandemic specials; I did 11 from this space.”
She didn't pause for a second. Work from home means more to Faulkner than an acronym or a hashtag. “Look, I love going into the studio, I'll be back in there for three days this week. The other women on Outnumbered have not moved to New York. So we're kind of piecemealing when we can be in the studio together. But my feeling is if there's a day going forward that I want to dedicate to self-care or care of, particularly my family members, I should be able to communicate that to my boss and say, you know what? Friday I am going to work from home...I need to take care of this. I've proven I can win.”
Faulkner intends to contribute to the discussion on what comes next for women in the workplace in the future. Watch her midday shows on FOX, The Faulkner Focus (weekdays, 11AM-12PM/ET) and Outnumbered (weekdays, 12-1PM/ET), which she began during the pandemic.
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Emily Sanchez

Emily Sanchez

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James Pierce

James Pierce

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