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Which ‘The Morning Show’ Character Are You?

Ever wondered which character from Morning Show matches your vibe? Now is perfect time to find out! Take this quiz and see if you are a bold journalist like Alex, a driven producer like Bradley, a tough executive like Cory or a steadfast friend like Chip. So, what are you waiting for? Hit Start below and uncover your Morning Show spirit!

Welcome to Quiz: Which 'The Morning Show' Character Are You

Morning Show dives into lives of TV anchors and execs after a scandal shakes up their network. It explores power, ambition and loyalty in brutal world of morning TV. With a fantastic cast and gripping plot, this show has hooked viewers and gained praise since it hit screens in 2019. You will love it or not. Who knows?

Meet the characters from The Morning Show

Alex Levy

Alex is the kind of anchor who makes poise look effortless but you know it’s not — she’s been polishing that mask for years. Fiercely professional, quietly vulnerable, and somehow always three steps ahead of the dumpster fire no one else saw coming. She drinks tea like it’s armor, hoards little notebooks, and will stare you down with an exhausted kindness until you apologize even if you were right. Also, she’s weirdly sentimental about hotel soap bars? I swear she keeps them in a drawer.

Bradley Jackson

Bradley is pure, combustible honesty — like someone who came into the studio yelling truth at traffic and then became a national headache and a hero at the same time. She’s raw, ferocious, doesn’t care about PR choreography, and will interrupt a senator mid-sentence because her moral compass is literally louder than her sense of tact. She wears flannel but also has these surprisingly soft, intentional moments, like she’ll rescue a stray dog and then overanalyze it for three hours. Half a mess, half a miracle, and sometimes she forgets her keys in the same jacket for days.

Cory Ellison

Cory is chaos with a suit — charismatic, hyper-articulate, and very likely to quote a Tom Stoppard line at 2 a.m. He’s a brilliant operator, loves the theatre of power, and will casually reframe a catastrophe into a branding opportunity while wearing something unnecessary and fabulous. He collects weird pens and little trophies, talks too fast, and somehow has a soft spot for really bad pop music (don’t ask, he’ll defend it). Also he can be maddeningly sincere in between the manipulations; it’s confusing and sort of thrilling.

Charlie “Chip” Black

Chip is the exhausted producer who knows where every remote is, how to fix a coffee machine with a paperclip, and also why your ex is probably a disaster. He’s loyal, slightly bumbling, full of nervous energy, and prone to apologizing like it’s a hobby. He’ll scrawl detailed plans on napkins then lose them in his sock drawer but also somehow remembers everyone’s birthdays — inconsistent memory, consistent heart. Also, he has a secret love for terrible sitcom laugh tracks and will defend them at parties.

Hannah Shoenfeld

Hannah is razor-sharp, caffeinated, and secretly more sentimental than she lets on (there’s a photo in her desk drawer, you’d be surprised). She books chaos into a tidy spreadsheet and then mutters gently at the chaos until it behaves, which is both a talent and a curse. She’s fierce with a phone and kind of sinister with Excel; also she kills more houseplants than she admits but keeps buying more because optimism. Small, pointed jokes are her weapon of choice — and she will use them.

Yanko Flores

Yanko is quietly intense, the calm in the room who notices tiny details everyone else misses — like the way someone’s collar is wrong or the lighting makes them look exhausted. He’s creatively driven, low-key dramatic, and probably has a sketchbook with 47 faces in it, plus a guilty obsession with late-night infomercials. Stoic yet surprisingly playful, he’ll hand you a perfectly timed note and then disappear into the sound booth like a ghost. Also sometimes he hums show tunes when he thinks no one’s listening; don’t tell.

Mia Jordan

Mia is ambitious in a way that tastes like ambition and caramel — well-polished, strategic, and annoyingly effective. She plays politics like a chess grandmaster who also bakes cookies to get people on her side (literal or metaphorical cookies, maybe both). She’s steely but will crack into genuine laughter at the worst possible moment, and she keeps dozens of sticky notes for everything, including emotional contingencies. Slightly ruthless, often brilliant, and probable owner of three identical blazers.

Claire Conway

Claire is the network suit who looks like she stepped out of a boardroom magazine and into your nightmares—but in a good way? She’s composed, slightly chilly, and has the attention span of a cat when it comes to nonsense; say something useless and she’ll vanish. She’s principled about profit and occasionally about people, confusing everyone, including herself sometimes. Also collects tiny figurines of owls for reasons she’ll never explain, and yes she names them.

Daniel Henderson

Daniel is the veteran of the system — steady, weary, and the kind of mentor who will tell you to stop making the same dumb mistakes that he proudly made. He’s got the deep-voiced credibility, loves long-form interviews, and is weirdly into late-night jazz records. He’s stubbornly old-school but has a soft, baffling love for modern memes (he texts one every blue moon). Also he cries at commercials for laundry detergent and denies it immediately.

Jason Craig

Jason is the charismatic anchor-man glow: practiced smiles, pitch-perfect reads, and an ego that probably needs regular grooming. He’s charming, skilled, and capable of delivering empathy on cue — which is useful and slightly terrifying when you realize it’s performative sometimes. He drinks good whiskey, loves bad karaoke, and will wink at you like he’s keeping a secret you don’t want to know. Also, he’s genuinely generous in small ways and then does something passive-aggressive five minutes later; classic.

Mitch Kessler

Mitch is complicated in the way people who’ve crashed spectacularly always are — brilliant in conversation, devastating in his self-sabotage, and tinged with regret like old cologne. He’s witty, painfully nostalgic, and has a knack for making you feel seen right before he ruins everything. He claims to be done with the spotlight but narrates his own comeback in his head constantly (and probably on a crumpled napkin). Also, he reads poetry and swears he only smokes when camping — maybe.