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Here's who will anchor TV coverage of the 2016 election

The 2016 election has been a very unusual one for TV and digital news outlets, many of which became part of the story at some point in the campaign. That strangeness will continue on election night, as both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have planned their celebratory parties in Manhattan. In other words, right in the TV networks’ back yards. For many anchors, producers and network executives, that means they get to sleep in their own beds.

Below, the coverage plans for the major TV news outlets, as well as some video programming from key digital outlets.

Cable news channels:

Fox News’ coverage will once again be anchored by Megyn Kelly and Bret Baier from the network’s new $30 million studio starting at 6p.m./ET. Baier and Kelly will be joined by fellow Fox anchors Brit Hume, Chris Wallace, Dana Perino and Juan Williams as well as Fox News political contributors Tucker Carlson, Karl Rove and Charles Krauthammer. Fox’s Martha MacCallum will report on ex pool data and Bill Hemmer will man an electronic “Bill-board” map. Correspondents Carl Cameron and John Roberts will be at Trump election night headquarters while Jennifer Griffin and Mike Emanuel will be live from Clinton’s.

Wolf Blitzer, Jake Tapper, Dana Bash and Anderson Cooper will anchor CNN’s coverage, which will officially kick off at 4p.m./ET. Correspondent John King will once again report from the “CNN Magic Wall.” CNN political director David Chalian will cover exit polls, and executive editor of CNN Politics Mark Preston will be at the decision desk. Analyst Gloria Borger, former top Obama aide David Axelrod, and CNN reporter Nia-Malika Henderson, and CNN host Michael Smerconish will be at the anchor desk. In addition to its correspondents across the country international correspondents will provide reaction from Mexico and Russia.

MSNBC’s coverage will be anchored by Brian Williams, Rachel Maddow and Chris Matthews from 30 Rock and the NBC/MSNBC “Democracy Plaza” starting from 6p.m./ET.

C-SPAN will have live coverage all evening as well, with results, concession/victory speeches and viewer calls.

Broadcast TV networks:

NBC’s coverage of the election will be helmed by “NBC Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt, “Today” co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, and “Meet the Press” moderator Chuck Todd, joined by Tom Brokaw. They will be joined by Andrea Mitchell, reporting from Clinton campaign headquarters, and Katy Tur, reporting from Trump’s campaign headquarters. As with MSNBC, coverage will originate from Rockefeller Plaza, which will be renamed “Democracy Plaza” for the evening. For both MSNBC and NBC, Andrea Mitchell will anchor from Clinton’s election night headquarters while Katy Tur will be live from Trump’s.

CBS coverage will be led by “CBS Evening News” anchor Scott Pelley, “CBS This Morning” co-anchors Norah O’Donnell, Charlie Rose and Gayle King, “face the Nation” moderator John Dickerson, CBSN anchor Elaine Quijano, and Bob Schieffer. Major Garrett will report from Trump campaign headquarters, with Nancy Cordes reporting from the Clinton HQ.

“Good Morning America” co-host George Stephanopoulos, who worked in Bill Clinton’s White House before becoming a news anchor, will lead ABC’s coverage, joined by “ABC World News” anchor David Muir, “This Week” co-anchor Martha Raddatz, former “World News” anchors Charlie Gibson and Diane Sawyer, among others. “GMA”s Robin Roberts will report from the Clinton campaign headquarters, with Amy Robach reporting from Trump HQ. Michael Strahan will report outside ABC’s studio in Times Square, getting reactions from the crowd.

Shepard Smith will anchor coverage on the Fox broadcast network (if local affiliates choose to take the feed), joined by “Fox News Sunday” moderator Chris Wallace, and many other contributors shared with Fox News Channel, including Bill Hemmer, Martha MacCallum, Shannon Bream and Trace Gallagher.

On PBS, "PBS NewsHour" anchors Judy Woodruff and Gwen Ifill will lead coverage, which will also be streamed online.

Univision’s coverage will kick off at 7p.m./ET, anchored by Jorge Ramos and Maria ELena Salinas, along with correspondents Enrique Acevedo, Félix de Bedout, and Ilia Calderón. Univision anchors will report on the election and the Latino vote from 13 major U.S. cities.

Telemundo’s coverage will begin at 7p.m./ET with anchors José Díaz-Balart and María Celeste Arrarás leading coverage. The channel will also participate in NBC’s Democracy Plaza in New York City, where anchors Luis Carlos Vélez and Felicidad Aveleyra will report from a special studio.The network will also feature Hispanic celebrities, such as former Miss Universe Alicia Machado and soap star Kate Del Castillo.

Business Networks:

Fox Business Network coverage will be led by Neil Cavuto, joined by Lou Dobbs and Maria Bartiromo.

CNBC will have Carl Quintanilla and Kelly Evans anchoring, joined by John Harwood and Michelle Caruso-Cabrera.

Digital/Other:

MTV News will be covering the election night live on TV and online. On TV, the cable channel will have live break-ins all night from tis studio and from the Trump and Clinton headquarters, supplemented by a Youtube livestream, and Facebook Live broadcasts.

Washington Post: Starting at 7:00 p.m. ET. reporters Ed O’Keefe and Elise Viebeck will host a love show along with The Fix’s Chris Cillizza and other post reporters around the country.

Buzzfeed will have live video coverage all night on Twitter, originating from its New York City offices, and promising exclusive video from president Obama and the cast of Hamilton. Adrian Carrasquillo, Tracy Clayton, Eugene Yang and Hannah Jewell will host, joined by Ruby Cramer at Clinton headquarters, and McKay Coppins at Trump HQ, along with other correspondents across the globe.

Yahoo News coverage will be led by Katie Couric and political columnist Matt Bai, with reporters and analysts joining them throughout the night.

Ozy Media is partnering with Wired magazine for election coverage. Former MSNBC and CNN anchor Carlos Watson hosts.

Fusion’s coverage will start at 9p.m./ET with laughs. Host Romany Malco joined by a slew of comedians, including Russell Simmons, Bassem Yousseff, Cedric the Entertainer, Orny Adams and Aida Rodriguez. Then, anchor Alicia Menendez and Nando Vila will lead results coverage with cameos from Univision and Fusion anchor Jorge Ramos.