In December 2006, Mad Money host Jim Cramer used Pisani as an example of an easily manipulated reporter used by hedge fund managers to spread false statements about a company in order to illegally drive the stock price down.
He has been a guest on various national business programs including CNBC's Mad Money, Squawkbox and Power Lunch, as well as various Bloomberg news programs.
Bannan has an interest in stocks and bonds, and appeared on Jim Cramer's Mad Money television show on October 31, 2007.
Mad Men | Mad Max | money laundering | Eddie Money | Mad (magazine) | It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World | Mad | Mad About You | The Money Programme | Mark (money) | Dirty Sexy Money | Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps | Mad Money | Mad Caddies | JT Money | Hitman: Blood Money | Grant (money) | Smart Money | Money Mark | Money | Mike and the Mad Dog | Mad World | Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome | Mad Max 2 | Drummond Money-Coutts | Dreams That Money Can Buy | Cash Money Records | Zoot Money | Win Ben Stein's Money | The Money Pit |
In Mad Men season 1, episode 12 ("Nixon vs. Kennedy"), Peggy Olson reports to work, the morning after leaving a bacchanalian election night office party in progress, and finds the Sterling Cooper office space in shambles and her locker broken into and emptied of her spare blouse and $3 "mad money".
Prior to NBC's Today Show, Oppenheim co-created CNBC's Mad Money with Jim Cramer, was executive producer of Scarborough Country, and senior producer of Hardball with Chris Matthews.