Steve Chiotakis was a host of Marketplace Morning Report until January 2012

Chiotakis’ award-winning career began after finishing high school in the late 80s. He started at a country radio station in Birmingham, Alabama, moving around the state  progressing to public radio at WBHM. Chiotakis has experience serving as news anchor, reporter and news director. His reporting has been featured on CBS Radio, NBC, CBC, the BBC and NPR.

Chiotakis has been honored by The Public Radio News Directors, Incorporated more than a half dozen times with awards for feature reporting, writing and call-in show. In 2001, Chiotakis was a recipient of the prestigious national Edward R. Murrow Award for writing.

Features By Steve Chiotakis

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Can al-Qaida move forward without bin Laden?

Phillip Zelikow, executive director of the 9/11 Commission, explains the future of al-Qaida without its figurehead, and the U.S. investments in special operations.
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Was bin Laden's death worth the cost?

Michael O'Hanlon, senior fellow for the Brookings Institution, analyzes Osama bin Laden's death and the budgetary toll on the U.S.
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U.S. South hit hard by deadly tornadoes

Emergency aid is on the way to the South, which has been ravaged by massive storms and tornadoes. Morning Report host Steve Chiotakis is in his home state of Alabama and discusses the damage there.
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Japanese business culture prepares citizens for disaster

While much of Japan suffers from Friday's earthquake and tsunami, the business culture perseveres.
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TARP report card: didn't fix 'Too big to fail'

The $700-billion government bailout saved the U.S. from a depression, according to a congressional watchdog. But it also had a downside for our economy.
Posted In: Wall Street
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Foreign firms evacuate workers in Japan

As the nuclear situation intensifies at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, many companies face tough decisions around relocating employees and business abroad.
Posted In: Jobs
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Elevated radiation levels cause alarm in Tokyo

With reports of record radiation levels in Tokyo, the government is asking city residents to stay calm. But some are fleeing to safer locations.
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How would the U.S. fare in a 8.9 magnitude earthquake?

As the world watches the disaster in Japan unfold, Barry Scanlon, president of the emergency preparedness firm Witt Associates, explains how the U.S. would handle an earthquake similar to Japan's.
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Will the earthquake make it harder for Japan to borrow money?

Tom Byrne, senior vice president for Moody's in Singapore, explains how he calculates whether a natural disaster affects a country's credit rating.
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Japanese quake costs may top $170 billion

The BBC's Chris Hogg explains the global economic implications of the disaster in Japan.
Posted In: Oil, Retail

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