Meet Liz

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Liz Pulliam Weston is the most-read personal finance columnist on the Internet, according to Nielsen//NetRatings. She's also an award-winning, nationally-syndicated personal finance columnist who can make the most complex money topics understandable to the average reader.

She is the author of "Easy Money: How to Simplify Your Finances and Get What You Want Out of Life," which Publishers' Weekly praised as a "practical, easy-to-understand guide to taking control of personal finances and establishing financial security."

Her first book, “Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future,” is the best-selling book on credit scoring and was recently published in a second edition (February 2007, Pearson Prentice Hall).

Her second book, "Deal with Your Debt: The Right Way to Manage Your Bills and Pay Off What You Owe," was published by Pearson Prentice Hall in 2005. She was a contributor to “The Experts’ Guide to the Baby Years” (2006, Clarkson Potter).

Liz's columns run twice a week on MSN Money, which reaches more than 12 million readers each month. Millions more read her question-and-answer column “Money Talk,” which appears in newspapers throughout the country, including the Los Angeles Times, the Cleveland Plain Dealer, the Palm Beach Post, the Portland Oregonian, the Newark Star-Ledger, Stars & Stripes and others.

Liz appears regularly on numerous television and radio programs, including NPR's “Talk of the Nation” and "All Things Considered", American Public Media's "Marketplace Money," and NBC's “Today Show. ” She was for several years a weekly commentator on CNBC's "Power Lunch."

She is also an engaging, dynamic speaker who is frequently asked to address professionals including financial planners and CPAs.

Weston started her career at the Seattle Times and then moved on to the Anchorage Daily News, where she was part of the writing team that won a Pulitzer Prize for Meritorious Public Service in 1989 for coverage of the alcoholism epidemic among native Alaskans. Her article on fetal alcohol syndrome led the coverage on Day 3 of the 10-day series.

Later, while at the Orange County Register, she was part of a three-member writing team that won a prestigious Gerald Loeb Award for coverage of the Comparator Systems penny stock scandal in 1997.

In 1998, she joined the business staff of the Los Angeles Times and began authoring “Money Talk.” Four years later, she left the Times to write for MSN.

Weston won a 2007 Clarion Award for her MSN series on financial benchmarks. Her MSN columns also have won four Certificates of Merit from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers.

Weston is a graduate of the certified financial planner training program at University of California, Irvine. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter.

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