So, MSNBC can do the right thing sometimes after all. snicker snicker
MSNBC Takes Incendiary Hosts From Anchor Seat
By BRIAN STELTER
MSNBC tried a bold experiment this year by putting two politically incendiary hosts, Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews, in the anchor chair to lead the cable news channelâs coverage of the election.
That experiment appears to be over.
After months of accusations of political bias and simmering animosity between MSNBC and its parent network NBC, the channel decided over the weekend that the NBC News correspondent and MSNBC host David Gregory would anchor news coverage of the coming debates and election night. Mr. Olbermann and Mr. Matthews will remain as analysts during the coverage.
The change â” which comes in the home stretch of the long election cycle â” is a direct result of tensions associated with the channelâs perceived shift to the political left.
âThe most disappointing shift is to see the partisan attitude move from prime time into whatâs supposed to be straight news programming,â said Davidson Goldin, formerly the editorial director of MSNBC and a co-founder of the reputation management firm DolceGoldin.
Executives at the channelâs parent company, NBC Universal, had high hopes for MSNBCâs coverage of the political conventions. Instead, the coverage frequently descended into on-air squabbles between the anchors, embarrassing some workers at NBCâs news division, and quite possibly alienating viewers. Although MSNBC nearly doubled its total audience compared with the 2004 conventions, its competitive position did not improve, as it remained in last place among the broadcast and cable news networks. In prime time, the channel averaged 2.2 million viewers during the Democratic convention and 1.7 million viewers during the Republican convention.
The success of the Fox News Channel in the past decade along with the growth of political blogs have convinced many media companies that provocative commentary attracts viewers and lures Web browsers more than straight news delivered dispassionately.
âIn a rapidly changing media environment, this is the great philosophical debate,â Phil Griffin, the president of MSNBC, said in a telephone interview Saturday. Fighting the ratings game, he added, âthe bottom line is that weâre experiencing incredible success.â
But as the past two weeks have shown, that success has a downside. When the vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin lamented media bias during her speech, attendees of the Republican convention loudly chanted âNBC.â
In interviews, 10 current and former staff members said that long-simmering tensions between MSNBC and NBC reached a boiling point during the conventions. âMSNBC is behaving like a heroin addict,â one senior staff member observed. âTheyâre living from fix to fix and swearing theyâll go into rehab the next week.â
The employee, like others, spoke on condition of anonymity because the network does not permit it people to speak to the media without authorization. (The New York Times and NBC News have a content-sharing arrangement exclusively for political coverage.)
Mr. Olbermann, a 49-year-old former sportscaster, has become the face of the more aggressive MSNBC, and the lightning rod for much of the criticism. His program âCountdown,â now a liberal institution, was created by Mr. Olbermann in 2003 but it found its voice in his gnawing dissent regarding the Bush administration, often in the form of âspecial commentâ segments.
As Mr. Olbermann raised his voice, his ratings rose as well, and he now reaches more than one million viewers a night, a higher television rating than any other show in the troubled 12-year history of the network. As a result, his identity largely defines MSNBC. âThey have banked the entirety of the network on Keith Olbermann,â one employee said.
In January, Mr. Olbermann and Mr. Matthews, the host of âHardball,â began co-anchoring primary night coverage, drawing an audience that enjoyed the pairâs âSportsCenterâ-style show. While some critics argued that the assignment was akin to having the Fox News commentator Bill OâReilly anchor on election night â” something that has never happened â” MSNBC insisted that Mr. Olbermann knew the difference between news and commentary.
But in the past two weeks, that line has been blurred. On the final night of the Republican convention, after MSNBC televised the partyâs video âtribute to the victims of 9/11,â including graphic footage of the World Trade Center attacks, Mr. Olbermann abruptly took off his journalistic hat.
âIâm sorry, itâs necessary to say this,â he began. After saying that the video had exploited the memories of the dead, he directly apologized to viewers who were offended. Then, sounding like a network executive, he said it was âprobably not appropriate to be shown.â
In an interview on Sunday, Mr. Olbermann said that moment â” and the perception that he is ânot utterly neutralâ â” restarted months-old conversations about his role on political nights.
created by SillyWabbit on Sep 08, 2008 at 08:43:19 am
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