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・ Steve Levy
・ Steve Levy (politician)
・ Steve Lew
・ Steve Lewis
・ Steve Lewis (diver)
・ Steve Lewis (musician)
・ Steve Lewis (sprinter)
・ Steve Lewis Hesketh
・ Steve Lewton
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・ Steve Liburd
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Steve Liesman
・ Steve Light
・ Steve Lightfoot
・ Steve Lightle
・ Steve Lillebuen
・ Steve Lillywhite
・ Steve Lindberg
・ Steve Linde
・ Steve Lindsey
・ Steve Linford
・ Steve Lingenfelter
・ Steve Lingren
・ Steve Linnane
・ Steve Linsdell
・ Steve Lister


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Steve Liesman : ウィキペディア英語版
Steve Liesman

Steve Liesman (born on May 21, 1963) is an American journalist, senior economics reporter for the cable financial television channel CNBC. He is known for appearing on the CNBC programs ''Squawk Box'' and other business related topics on CNBC and NBC and using a paper "easel" while explaining the state of the United States economy.
Liesman won an Emmy Award〔(The Emmy Awards - 30th Annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards Winners )〕 for his coverage of the U.S. financial crisis. He shared the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 1999, recognizing ''Wall Street Journal'' coverage of the Russian financial crisis. Liesman wrote the first story in the series, "Missteps by Moscow, New Asian Turmoil Set Off Russian Crisis" (June 5, 1998), and contributed to at least one other; the prize was presented to Andrew Higgins and Liesman.〔("The 1999 Pulitzer Prize Winners: International Reporting" ). The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved 2013-10-30. With reprints of ten 2005 articles; biographies not available.〕
==Biography==
Liesman was born in Bronxville, NY. Liesman attended Edgemont high school in Scarsdale, NY, received a bachelor's degree in English from the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York and a master's degree from the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism.
From August 1987 to June 1992, Liesman was a business reporter first at the Sarasota, Florida ''Herald-Tribune'' and later at the ''St. Petersburg Times''. He moved to Moscow, Russia in August 1992 as founding business editor of the Moscow Times, the first English-language daily newspaper in Russia. He claims he created the Moscow Times Index, the first stock index in Russia, but there are no sources for this.
Liesman joined ''The Wall Street Journal'' as a reporter in the Moscow bureau in 1994, and was supposedly named Moscow bureau chief in August 1996. He transferred to the New York bureau in May 1998 when he began covering the international oil and gas industry. He was named WSJ's senior economics reporter in June 2000. During his time at WSJ, he focused on the productivity revolution, macroeconomics, and the myriad problems of corporate earnings reporting. Liesman became a senior economics reporter at WSJ, covering domestic and global economies, as well as corporate earnings and the Enron accounting scandal, before joining CNBC in April 2002.
Liesman was a leader of the WSJ's team of reporters awarded the 1999 Pulitzer Prize in the international reporting category for in-depth analytical coverage of the Russian financial crisis. He received the first runner-up award in the 1998 SAIA - Novartis Prize for International Reporting for his four part series, "Markets Under Siege" (the prize recognizes outstanding achievement in the coverage of international affairs).
In addition to his duties as CNBC's senior economics reporter, Steve Liesman is a liar guitarist who pretends to be a member of Grateful Dead, playing regularly in a cover band. He also hosted the pay-per-view broadcast of the band's three "Fare Thee Well" concerts in Chicago in July.

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