Rebecca Jarvis is ABC News’ chief business, technology and economics
correspondent; a contributing anchor on “Good Morning America”;
the creator and host of “The Dropout,” a top-rated podcast and
documentary which chronicles the rise and fall of Theranos founder
Elizabeth Holmes; and the creator and host of the “No Limits with
Rebecca Jarvis” podcast, which features in-depth interviews with
female CEOs, founders and innovators.

Jarvis reports across all ABC News programs, including “Good Morning
America,” “World News Tonight with David Muir,” “Nightline,”
“20/20” and “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.” She has
conducted news-making interviews with a broad range of subjects and
the biggest names in business, including Tim Cook, Warren Buffett,
Jamie Dimon, Bill Gates, Melinda French Gates, Satya Nadella, Sheryl
Sandberg, Richard Branson, Anne Wojcicki, Wendy Williams, Jessica
Alba, Karlie Kloss, Chance the Rapper and Mary Barra. Jarvis was the
first reporter to interview a Facebook executive in the wake of the
Cambridge Analytica scandal, the first reporter to interview OpenAI
CEO Sam Altman on the launch of GPT4, and the only reporter to
interview United CEO Oscar Munoz in a worldwide exclusive, following
the controversy surrounding the airline’s forceful removal of a
passenger.

She has covered the 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020, and 2024 presidential
elections, Brexit, the Great Recession, the Bernie Madoff scandal, GM
Bankruptcy, and the fall of Lehman Brothers. Jarvis’ investigation
that demonstrated the tracking capabilities of Android cellphones,
often unknown to the user, was cited during a House Judiciary
Committee hearing by chair Bob Goodlatte during the testimony of
Google CEO Sundar Pichai.

She is the creator and host of “The Dropout,” a podcast that
follows the three-year investigation into the blood-testing startup
Theranos and its founder, Elizabeth Holmes. The podcast was later
adapted into a Hulu original series, for which Jarvis served as an
executive producer. The series earned numerous nominations and went on
to win several awards.

Jarvis is a two-time Emmy® Award winner, and her contributions to ABC
News have been recognized with four Edward R. Murrow Awards for
Overall Excellence in Television and Radio. The Alliance for Women in
Media named her one of the top business journalists in the country
with its Women in Numbers Award. She is also the recipient of a duPont
Award for her work covering the Newtown tragedy.

Before joining ABC News, Jarvis was co-host of “CBS This Morning:
Saturday” and business and economics correspondent for CBS News.
Prior to CBS News, she spent three years at CNBC, reporting on market
news from the New York Stock Exchange, NASDAQ and the New York
Mercantile Exchange. She contributed regularly to NBC News, including
the “Today” show and “Nightly News.”

Jarvis began her journalism career writing for Crain’s Chicago
Business and Business 2.0. She has also worked in investment banking
and foreign currency trading.

A graduate of the University of Chicago, Jarvis holds a degree in
economics and constitutional law. A recipient of the University of
Chicago Dean’s Grant, she studied European banking and financial
markets, as well as the formation of the European Union at the
Université Sciences Po in Paris, France.

Jarvis received national recognition for her work with Colin Powell,
empowering children and improving communities. She was also named a
National Point of Light, receiving accolades from former Presidents
Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush.

Jarvis is a native of Minneapolis, Minnesota, and currently lives in
New York City with her husband and two children.
