Bob Moon is Marketplace’s senior business correspondent and occasional fill-in host for Marketplace, Marketplace Morning Report and Marketplace Money. He previously served for five years as New York bureau chief.

Moon has reported from all 50 states and far-reaching international datelines. His career spans nearly four decades. Looking back, he has compared his broad experiences to movie character Forrest Gump’s uncanny knack of popping up at major historical events.

Before joining Marketplace in 2000, Moon spent two decades at The Associated Press, covering stories ranging from failed nuclear arms negotiations between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in Iceland, to global economic summits in Rome, Venice and Tokyo. As White House correspondent for The AP’s broadcast division, Moon witnessed Reagan’s famous “Tear down this wall!” speech. He covered national political campaigns over several decades, including George H. W. Bush’s “Read my lips, no new taxes!” convention speech in 1988, and Bill Clinton’s race to the White House in 1992.

Moon tracked the U.S. space program for over ten years, describing firsthand more than 50 shuttle launches and landings. His assignments have often taken him to the scenes of tragic events, including the Challenger explosion (he described the disastrous launch live and anchored six straight hours of special coverage); several weeks on the Texas prairie covering the FBI’s standoff with the armed Branch Davidian cult; the Columbine High School shooting rampage; the September 11th attack on the World Trade Center; and the mass evacuation of New Orleans residents to Houston after Hurricane Katrina (his  exclusive reporting of a remark by Barbara Bush, who suggested the evacuees were “better off,” sparked a widespread backlash).

Moon grew up in Southern California. He began his career at age 18 as a country music DJ in Cedar City, Utah, where the station owner asked him to cover local news as part of his duties. He went on to head radio news departments in Salt Lake City, and was lead evening anchor at WLEX-TV, the NBC affiliate in Lexington, Ky.

Features By Bob Moon

Pages

0

Rise of day trading fuels retail brokerages

Higher day trading volume seems to be helping retail brokerages like Charles Schwab and TD Ameritrade.
Posted In: Wall Street
12

Maine cranks up speed limit to 75 m.p.h.

Maine sets a new speed limit on a rural stretch of Interstate 95. Trucking companies worry about fuel efficiency, safety at higher speeds.
Posted In: Transportation
4

At 31, Chelsea Clinton joins a corporate board

The appointment by Barry Diller's Internet company highlights a move by corporations to bring in young outside directors. Who benefits more?
0

Martha Stewart rejoins her company's board

The queen of all things home, imprisoned for five months for insider trading related charges, had also been barred from serving as a director.
Posted In: Retail
1

Where does the term 'silver bullet' come from?

After Ben Bernanke and company took fresh aim this week at that menacing beast called the economy, one financial expert told us the Fed's arsenal...
Posted In: silver bullet
0

Health care workers keep strike short, for now

Thousands of nurses and other health care workers are staging a walkout today in protest over benefit cuts. Most will only picket for a day, hoping their message gets across.
Posted In: Health
0

Computer can reconstruct the movie in your mind

This final note, from the Marketplace "this just sounds way too weird" file. Researchers at the University of California at Berkeley sat some vo...
4

The extravagant costs of a Justice Department conference

This final note. If you're going to cut the fat in government, what better place to start than extravagant spending on food. The Justice Departm...
0

Why Europe needs the Fed's dollars

The European Central Bank may tap the Fed if private creditors, nervous about a potential debt crisis, refuse to lend dollars to European banks.
3

Europe's economic crisis has deep roots

The Obama administration is increasingly concerned about the debt crisis in the eurozone. But some of its roots stem from American shores.
Posted In: Banks

Pages