Wolf Blitzer – $16 Million
Wolf Blitzer began his career as a widely recognized journalist in the 1970s, but it wasn’t until 1990 that he began covering for CNN. His career began with Reuters in Tel Aviv, Israel, and he went on to work for The Jerusalem Post as the Washington correspondent. Blitzer was best known for his coverage of the Egyptian-Israeli Peace Treaty and the detention and conviction of Jonathan Pollard. CNN eventually recruited him in 1990 to serve as a military affairs correspondent. Wolf Blitzer was named the network’s White House correspondent after just two years.

Wolf Blitzer $16 Million
Paula Faris – $3 Million
Paula Faris worked in the communications sector before becoming a broadcaster. She worked in Mills/James development as an operations manager and also in radio sales. She later got a job as a production assistant at WKEF/WRGT and would regularly anchor for the network. She started as a weekend sports anchor at WCPO-TV in 2002 and later became a weekday reporter. Faris’s big break came when she joined ABC News in 2012. She began her career on just two shows: World News Now and America This Morning. She was quickly promoted to a reporter for all ABC News programs located in New York.

Paula Faris $3 Million