On-camera-ready filter
AI prioritizes experts with documented broadcast appearances, media training, and the ability to do a live remote feed (studio kit, lighting, reliable connection).
AI-matched TV guests for news segments, panel shows, and broadcast interviews. 70,000+ verified profiles. No bureau commissions, ever.
TV bookings live and die by speed and on-camera readiness. SpeakUp matches producers with experts whose media training, availability window, and segment topic fit the slot — typically shortlisted within hours.
AI prioritizes experts with documented broadcast appearances, media training, and the ability to do a live remote feed (studio kit, lighting, reliable connection).
Add the studio time slot and time zone. AI surfaces experts whose availability covers it — critical for live and same-day taping.
No bureau intermediary. Message the expert directly to confirm topic angles, technical setup, and travel — all inside SpeakUp.
Step 1
Describe your event, format, audience, and budget. Takes about 60 seconds.
Step 2
70,000+ verified profiles ranked by relevance, format experience, and availability.
Step 3
Message matches in-app, negotiate terms, and confirm — no bureau in between.
A curated sample of verified speakers in this format. Browse the full shortlist after posting your event request.
Geopolitics analyst & frequent cable-news commentator
Economist & financial-news regular
Cybersecurity analyst & breach commentator
Public-health physician & broadcast contributor
AI policy researcher & explainer-segment regular
Climate scientist & weather-coverage explainer
TV expert guesting is a different craft from conference speaking or podcasting. Producers screen on three things — can you answer in 90 seconds, do you have broadcast-quality audio and lighting, and can you be in chair at 6 minutes notice. The audience and editorial deadline run shorter than any other speaker format; the best TV guests train for it like an athlete trains for a 100-metre dash.
Strong TV experts deliver a complete thought in 60–90 seconds without filler. They lead with a clear position, anchor it with a specific number or name, and close with a memorable line. Academic hedging ("it is complicated…") or jargon-heavy answers will not be invited back. Watch a candidate’s past clips: if their answers are mostly under 90 seconds and quotable, they are TV-ready.
Producers prioritise experts with reliable home-studio setup — daylight or ring-light lighting, a wired-quality microphone (not laptop built-in), a neutral non-busy background, and stable wired internet. Experts with poor audio or visibly distracting backgrounds get cut for the next available expert with cleaner production.
TV bookings happen on news-cycle time — sometimes 2-hour notice for a breaking-story segment. Top experts maintain a known availability window, respond to producer requests within 30 minutes during their on-call hours, and proactively flag when they will be off-air. Reliability over months turns one-off guests into recurring booked names.
Use this checklist when reviewing AI-matched profiles. The strongest shortlists rank candidates on substance — not just visibility.
Criterion 1
Confirm broadcast-ready home setup before pitching the producer: lighting, mic, wired ethernet, neutral background, backup power.
Criterion 2
Tag your profile with specific topical specialty (Federal Reserve policy, ransomware response, vaccine policy) — vague tags get skipped.
Criterion 3
List a known on-call availability window (e.g. weekday 6am-3pm ET) so producers know when to reach you.
Criterion 4
Maintain a public clip reel of 3-5 recent broadcast appearances — fastest credibility signal to a new producer.
Criterion 5
Practice the 90-second answer with named specifics; producers will cut answers over 2 minutes regardless of content quality.
Criterion 6
Add a one-line topical hook to your profile every 1-2 weeks tied to current news; this is what surfaces you in fresh searches.
Criterion 7
For recurring slots, build a relationship with one producer at the network rather than spreading thin across many — recurring asks land via trust.
TV guest expert appearances follow the inverted-fee model — most segments are unpaid because broadcast networks treat paid commentary as a conflict-of-interest risk to editorial integrity. The value exchange is audience exposure, not fee. Compensated minor-guest slots exist on some shows. Regular contributors who appear on a recurring schedule typically hold a paid retainer arrangement with the network, negotiated individually. Major-talkshow celebrity-guest payments are rare and confidential. Most working TV expert guests on SpeakUp accept unpaid segments and use the resulting clips for their own marketing — building a recurring relationship with producers is the longer-term goal, not per-segment cash.
| Tier | United States (USD) | United Kingdom (GBP) | UAE (AED) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard cable / broadcast news guest | $0 | £0 | AED 0 |
| Compensated minor-guest / smaller-show segment | $50–$500 | £40–£400 | AED 180–AED 1,800 |
| Recurring on-air contributor retainer (monthly) | $500–$5,000+ | £400–£4,000+ | AED 1,800–AED 18,000+ |
Pricing reflects 2024 broadcast industry practice. Major US networks (CNN / Fox / MSNBC / network news divisions) confirm no-pay-for-guests policy publicly. Retainer ranges for recurring contributors derive from industry reporting by Pressland, Medium / News-to-Table, and Quora panellist disclosures. Most TV expert guests on SpeakUp accept unpaid segments — the value is exposure and clip rights.
The mix of industries that book this format on SpeakUp — useful for benchmarking your event brief against peers in the same space.
Cable and network news desks book expert guests for explainer segments, breaking-story commentary, and morning / primetime feature interviews.
Streaming-first news (YouTube channels, Bloomberg TV+, Cheddar, NewsNation) source expert guests with looser scheduling but similar editorial standards.
Vertical-focused TV (CNBC, Fox Business, BBC World News, Al Jazeera English) hire domain experts for financial, geopolitical, and policy segments.
Documentary production companies and streaming-platform long-form series source expert interview subjects for explainer pieces — typically modest honoraria.
Local news affiliates source experts for community-impact stories — public health, local economic trends, public safety — usually unpaid.
International broadcasters (BBC, Sky, France 24, NHK, Al Arabiya) hire English-language experts for global-audience segments and panels.
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Post a request in 60 seconds. AI matches in hours. No commissions.