Mika Brzezinski

Presenter

Birthday May 2, 1967

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

Age 56 years old

Nationality United States

Height 165 cm

#8784 Most Popular

1967

Mika Emilie Leonia Brzezinski Scarborough (Brzezińska; born May 2, 1967) is an American talk show host, political commentator, and author who currently co-hosts MSNBC's weekday morning broadcast show Morning Joe.

She was formerly a CBS News correspondent, and was their principal "Ground Zero" reporter during the morning of the September 11 attacks.

1976

Her father was teaching at Columbia University when she was born; the family moved to McLean, Virginia, near Washington, D.C., in late 1976, when Zbigniew was named National Security Advisor by newly elected President Jimmy Carter.

1989

Brzezinski attended the Madeira School and then attended Georgetown University for two years before transferring to Williams College, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English in 1989.

1990

Brzezinski began her career in journalism as an assistant at ABC's World News This Morning in 1990.

A year later, she moved to Tribune-owned Fox affiliate WTIC-TV/WTIC-DT in Hartford, Connecticut.

There, she progressed from assignment and features editor to general assignments reporter.

1992

In 1992, she joined CBS affiliate WFSB-TV/WFSB-DT in Hartford and quickly progressed through the ranks to become its weekday morning anchor in 1995.

1997

In 1997, she left that role to join CBS News, where she served as a correspondent and as anchor for the overnight Up to the Minute news program.

2001

In 2001, Brzezinski began a short hiatus from CBS News, during which she worked for rival MSNBC on the weekday afternoon show, HomePage, with co-anchors Gina Gaston and Ashleigh Banfield.

Entertainment Weekly described the trio as "the Powerpuff Girls of journalism".

She returned to CBS News as a desk correspondent in September 2001, a move that thrust her into the limelight as a principal "Ground Zero" reporter for the September 11, 2001, attacks.

Brzezinski was broadcasting live from the scene when the South Tower collapsed.

In her last position at CBS News, Brzezinski served as a CBS News correspondent, substitute anchor, and segment anchor for breaking news segments and routine updates.

During this period she became an occasional contributor to CBS Sunday Morning and 60 Minutes.

2007

In 2007 she joined MSNBC as an occasional anchor, and was subsequently chosen as co-host of Morning Joe, alongside Joe Scarborough.

Mika Brzezinski is a visiting fellow at the Harvard Institute of Politics.

Her main political interest is in wage equality for women.

She is also the author of three books; two on her career as a journalist and one on food addiction.

Brzezinski is the daughter of diplomat and political scientist Zbigniew Brzezinski, who served as a counselor to President Lyndon B. Johnson and as the National Security Advisor to President Jimmy Carter.

Brzezinski was born in New York City, the daughter of Polish-born foreign policy expert and former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzeziński and Swiss-born sculptor Emilie Anna Benešová.

Her mother, of Czech descent, is a grandniece of Czechoslovakia's former president Edvard Beneš.

Brzezinski returned to MSNBC on January 26, 2007, doing the evening "Up to the Minute" news updates.

Then she worked primetime newsbreaks during the week.

She also filed occasional reports for NBC Nightly News and appeared as an occasional anchor on Weekend Today.

Brzezinski resigned from both shows on the eve of a renewal option, said Brzezinski, when Scarborough selected her to co-host on Morning Joe.

Since the program's inception, Brzezinski appeared as co-host and news reader on MSNBC's morning program Morning Joe, alongside Joe Scarborough and Willie Geist.

On June 26, 2007, near the beginning of Morning Joe, Brzezinski refused to read a report about Paris Hilton's release from jail.

One hour later during another news break segment, her producer Andy Jones again pushed the story as the lead, ranking it over Indiana's Republican Senator Richard Lugar's break with President Bush on the Iraq War, which Brzezinski considered more important.

After several sarcastic remarks from host Scarborough, she attempted to set the story's script on fire on the air, but was physically prevented from doing so by co-host Geist.

She then tore up the script, and one hour later, got up and ran another copy of the script through a paper shredder retrieved from Dan Abrams's office.

The incident was quickly popularized on the Internet, and in the days that followed, Brzezinski received large quantities of fan mail supporting her on-air protest as a commentary on the tension between "hard news" and "entertainment news".

2010

Similarly, on July 7, 2010, she objected on-air to pressure to report on Lindsay Lohan and Levi Johnston.

Eventually, Geist and Pat Buchanan reported the stories with the caption, then popularized, "News You Can't Use".

2011

Her brother, Mark Brzezinski, is an American diplomat, was the United States Ambassador to Sweden from 2011 to 2015 and from 2022 has been the United States Ambassador to Poland.

Her second brother is military expert Ian Brzezinski.

She is a first cousin of the author Matthew Brzezinski.

2016

Erik Wemple of The Washington Post criticized Brzezinski and co-host Scarborough for frequent phone interviews with Donald Trump during the 2016 Presidential campaign.

The 2016 Democratic National Committee email leak revealed that Debbie Wasserman Schultz, chairperson of the Democratic National Committee, had emailed Chuck Todd, the Political Director of NBC News and host of Meet the Press, to demand that he "stop" Brzezinski from criticizing the DNC's treatment of Bernie Sanders.

In December 2016, after Clinton had lost, Brzezinski suggested the Clinton campaign had tried to silence her by calling executives at NBC and telling them she "needed to be pulled off the air".