Friday, August 6, 2010

Your Views on the News, August 6, 2010

Lots to read, digest and discuss in this article from the September issue of Vanity Fair.

The Gray Lady of Cable News
Many think Jon Klein, president of CNN/U.S., has lost the cable-news war to Fox. But CNN has racked up record profits by being bland.
Article for Vanity Fair by Michael Wolff•Illustration by John Cuneo

Jon Klein is an extremely affable broadcast-news executive, a chinos-and-Docksiders 52-year-old whom almost everybody in the TV-news business likes and believes is not only responsible for CNN’s ignominious ratings decline—it has lost in every prime-time slot for most of the last five years—but also for the collapse of broadcast journalism itself.

Among the inside-baseball television-news diaspora—network-news alums who have lost their jobs and been scattered as the television-news industry has been flattened—Klein and his stewardship of the network rise to a level not just of confounding mismanagement but of moral void in which the best lack all conviction and the worst are full of passionate intensity. In this example of the existential crisis of modern life, not only is CNN being beaten year after year by Fox, but it’s precisely its well-intentioned earnestness that is responsible for the rise of ideological television.

“CNN’s inability to evolve has given the game to Fox and us,” says MSNBC president Phil Griffin.



And now, because of the network’s failure—the dismal ratings of Campbell Brown at eight, the pushing out of Larry King after 25 years, and the rumored departures of Anderson Cooper and John King—Klein is getting a once-in-a-generation opportunity to remake prime time. I’m sure I can’t accurately, or fulsomely enough, describe the guffawing and head smacking and sheer incredulity that his first decision in this effort—to hire disgraced former New York governor Eliot Spitzer as one of the two eight P.M. anchors—has provoked among the diaspora. In fact, the question of why Eliot Spitzer was hired is just cream on top of the far more hotly debated one: Why hasn’t Jon Klein been fired?

But Klein, who has the title president of CNN/U.S., may not be the person most responsible for the collapse of CNN. And, in fact, CNN may not have collapsed at all—last year was its most profitable (half a billion dollars’ worth of profit); the current quarter will be more profitable still.

CNN, unlike virtually every other news organization, has not laid off anybody—it keeps hiring—and is expanding its field resources and network of bureaus around the world. It’s the last of the old-fashioned television-news operations—likely the world’s biggest. Not for nothing is it the place most people go when big news happens, when the world shudders. “The founding idea of CNN is Event. ‘Getting a signal out of there [wherever the event is] is our triumph,’” interprets Richard Wald, a longtime network-news executive now at the Columbia Journalism School, “no matter that Event is no longer the primary interest of viewers.”

While event-driven reporting, shortly after the event occurs, invariably becomes repetitive and dull, not least of all because everybody else is reporting it, at CNN they are not ready to admit that dull is wrong. If CNN be dull, then news is dull—so be it.

Jon Klein is a generational figure in the news business—a business precisely described and stratified by when you came into it. He went into network news in 1982, long before cable news was anybody’s interest or worry. He rose at CBS to run 60 Minutes and 48 Hours. In 1999 he bolted to launch the FeedRoom, an Internet-news start-up—a kind of YouTube before its time. After the collapse of the dot-com world, he became, in 2004, an ideal candidate for CNN—an old television hand with new-media experience.

Pay no attention that he was hired to run the nation’s leading cable news network but had no cable experience: by 2004 all other cable news had become, in the mind of CNN, non-news and even anti-news. CNN, which Ted Turner had quixotically launched in 1980 as something altogether different from network news—inexpensive, round-the-clock, edgy, focused on events and not personalities—had become worthy and distinguished news. It had come full circle to see itself just as network news once saw itself: voice-of-God news.

And what CNN had done to network news—made it look old, irrelevant, pompous—Fox News, within a few years of its launch, in 1996, was doing to CNN. Fox was re-inventing the language, tone, look, and pace of news—and doing this as conservative news. So, at least in the mind of CNN, to be interesting was to be conservative. Dull meant fair-minded, objective, balanced.

CNN, to the people who work there, and to the executives at its parent, Time Warner, represents the tradition of news based on investment in fact-finding, concern for the commonweal, and intelligent reporting and storytelling skills. Every point of ratings it gives up has come to represent a setback for that tradition. The current nadir of its prime-time schedule has pretty much meant the cultural victory of outrĂ© news. At CNN, they tend to see the odds as painfully overwhelming—there is just no way to compete with this new desire for opinion and for political identification. There’s almost a point of pride in not competing: last year, CNN ousted Lou Dobbs, the longtime anchor who had become too opinionated—even though he had the network’s highest-rated prime-time show. In 2003, the network got rid of Connie Chung, in spite of her high ratings, because she was too tabloid.

There is, at CNN, a lot of attention paid to its DNA—Dobbs and Chung were bad for or at odds with the DNA (one CNNer described them to me as bad for “the CNN feng shui”). But part of CNN’s troubles—if they are troubles—may actually be a confusion about its identity. Ted Turner’s CNN was a high-profile, commercial idea—not a traditional capital-J journalism idea. In a complicated piece of corporate triangulation, Time Warner agreed to buy the company in 1995. (Turner was locked up by his investors, including Time Warner, and had little choice but to sell Turner Broadcasting.) This not only imposed Time Warner’s layers of postal-system-like bureaucracy on CNN, but also combined the old Time Inc. news ethos—fusty, Ivy League, New York, Establishment—with CNN’s. CNN, under Time Warner—with Ted Turner steadily losing his fight for control and influence—arguably became more Time than CNN, suddenly part of a long tradition and imperative for respectability, often feeling as Old Guard and as fuddy-duddy as a newsmagazine. In 2001, Walter Isaacson, the editor of Time magazine—among the most traditional and archetypal figures in the organization—was made CNN’s chief, even though he had no background in television.

On the other hand, the fustiness that has contributed to its losing the prime-time war, and thereby, in the minds of the diaspora, ceding broadcast journalism to Fox, is exactly what it has come to sell so profitably.

Cable has two revenue sources: the fees cable systems pay to carry programming, and the fees advertisers pay to be on the programs. Cable fees average from 5 to 20 cents per subscriber per month, with CNN getting substantially more. CNN’s cable fees remain high in part because it is the respectable news network. A cable operator would be making a politically controversial statement if it carried just Fox and MSNBC. CNN now makes its money by charging cable operators a premium fee to avoid such controversy. Similarly, advertisers want to be on CNN because it is not Fox. To advertise on CNN associates you with respectability—while advertisers on Fox are associated with Bill O’Reilly. Even if you want the Fox audience, also making a CNN buy gives you cover. Dull, bland, worthy, consistent, has a market.

Except that the bottom may be falling out of the market. How long can the respectability strategy prevail without an audience?

In fact, at CNN there is a lot of argument about audience, most of which concludes, somewhat by magic, that its audience is actually larger than Fox’s. And it is—sort of, sometimes. When the news is big, it is. And often, in sheer numbers, it is, too—except that CNN’s audience leaves it almost as quickly as it turns to it, and Fox’s audience stays.

So the problem, as CNN and Time Warner see it, especially with prime time, is not so much audience as buzz.

“A lot of the feeling inside the company is that the problem is not CNN—the problem is CNN’s P.R.,” says someone familiar with the thinking of Time Warner’s C.E.O., Jeff Bewkes.

In Time Warner Kremlinology (both viciously internecine and carefully hands-off), notice is paid to Bewkes’s hiring of Gary Ginsberg—a liberal who’d previously been Murdoch’s head P.R. guy (with knowledge of the Fox strategy)—to run Time Warner’s P.R. strategy. The always tremulous tea leaves at Time Warner have Ginsberg being given a special CNN portfolio—a buzz-oversight mission.

Hence, suddenly, there is a hurry-up about prime time, which is any network’s main buzz motor. Campbell Brown’s own statement about her inability to attract a meaningful audience was a buzz kill. Then Anderson Cooper began suggesting he might leave, too—not taking the blame, as Brown had done for her ratings, but putting the blame on CNN for not delivering a powerful enough lead-in schedule. Then, in a long-rumored move, the network decided to throw in the towel on Larry King, who, despite his age and slipping ratings, has continued to be the mainstay of its prime time.

Jon Klein was ordered to make it all new.

Now CNN stands in vivid contrast to Fox not only in style of journalism, but also in style of management. Fox is the vision of one man: Roger Ailes. Even Rupert Murdoch—at least according to Ailes—can’t meddle with what Ailes does. CNN, on the other hand, sits in the middle of one of the world’s most labyrinthine enterprises, ever buffeted by changing bureaucratic fortunes. (CNN was taken over by Time Warner, then Time Warner was taken over by AOL, then Time Warner retook the company.)

After Bewkes in the complex line of command at CNN comes Phil Kent, in CNN’s original home of Atlanta. Kent runs all of Turner Broadcasting, which, in one of the anomalies of Time Warner bureaucracy, is still an autonomous unit of cable programming inside what is primarily a cable-programming company—so, in addition to news, he gets TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies, truTV and Peachtree TV, Cartoon Network, Boomerang, and Adult Swim. After Kent comes Jim Walton, who got the top CNN job after Isaacson quit, in 2004. A Turner lifer who came up through the sports division, Walton, also Atlanta-based, is responsible for all of CNN, which includes not just the network but the Headline News Network (HLN), the broadcasts you get in your hotel room overseas, and the Web site (CNN.com, with its 75 million unique visitors every month, is, in fact, the undisputed leader in Internet news, the fastest-growing part of the news business). There is a sense that buzzless Atlanta is something of a redoubt from the network itself. Atlanta is focused on the larger picture. Which, curiously, is another element that helps protect Jon Klein’s job. Up in New York, he takes the brunt of the blame for CNN’s not being cool—or, it sometimes appears, even competent—while the guys in Atlanta get the credit for making all the dough.
Jon Klein, in other words, answers to a lot of people, a corporate rather than television art: Klein is reported by various diaspora sources to excuse CNN’s prime-time performance by saying that his bosses wouldn’t let him hire MSNBC’s star Keith Olbermann when he wanted to, while, alternatively, in a diss to MSNBC and that ilk of programming, saying he refused to hire Olbermann when he could have. (Sometimes, in this story, it’s said to be MSNBC anchor and cable star Rachel Maddow, who briefly appeared on CNN, whom Klein pridefully declined to hire.) Klein, in other words, treads the fine CNN line of seeming to understand the low road of success, while, with great and sometimes painful fortitude, taking the high road.

Klein’s original idea for replacing Brown in the eight P.M. hour was to do a show with a panel of “investigators”—detectives, prosecutors, tough-guy journalists who would do … investigative journalism. Dramatic, but high-end. One of Klein’s ideas for the panel was Eliot Spitzer, who, albeit disgraced, had made his career as a muckraking attorney general. Spitzer, however, when contacted about this idea by CNN, said he couldn’t possibly investigate anyone without subpoena power. This might have suggested a level of arrogance greater than even that of the cable opinion jockeys. But after Jeff Bewkes had approved hiring the tainted former governor, after the temperature of the Time Warner board had been taken about such a dubious hire, and after the whole idea of the investigative series had been thrown out, Eliot Spitzer, a man who, on top of being one of the most disliked people in America, has no television experience, was given a show.

In a similar, hurry up and make a huge decision based on a pure crap-shoot move—and a desperate desire not to look like they are doing anything that the other successful cable news networks are doing—CNN, as this article closed, was on the verge of offering the British newspaper editor and reality-show bon vivant, Piers Morgan, Larry King’s job.

Spitzer will probably flop and Jon Klein will probably be fired. But not for a while. The powers that be at Time Warner and CNN are, despite their bad press and the implication that they are ruining rather than representing high standards of journalism, actually happy about how things are going. If news is a commodity, if CNN’s fundamental problem is that it spends most of its air time reporting what everybody already knows (and not spicing it up with point of view or going narrow and deep into a subject), then, well, why not just be the biggest producer of it in the world—that’s a business. CNN, which has just ended its contract with the A.P. newswire, now does what the A.P. does—if you’re a broadcaster, you can buy CNN’s news feed (you don’t have to get the news yourself). CNN continues to try to do a deal with one of the networks. In the past, there was almost a deal with NBC and with ABC—now they’re talking to CBS. The network could have its stars and they would mouth CNN’s news. Inevitably, this will happen, CNN believes. In the end, there will be only one provider of boring news—that’s CNN’s hope.

Indeed, the other reason Jon Klein still has his job is that his bosses might not really want him to fix CNN even if he could. (Another variation on this, by a Klein supporter: “If Jon Klein can’t fix CNN, it can’t be fixed.”) Fixing CNN means taking sides in the great news wars—making a stand which you have to have the balls for, and which could get you killed (or fired). CNN is a coward’s play—but not necessarily a losing one. It just isn’t interesting or new or worth getting up for. So another reason Jon Klein is safe for the moment: would anyone really want his job?

Michael Wolff is a Vanity Fair contributing editor.





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37 comments:

  1. Two interesting points here: Respectability is not worth the price to advertisers if there's no audience, and Anderson Cooper blames those before him, in the primeline up for his poor ratings.
    Question: Bill O'Reilly has the highest ratings in Cable News. He's first in the primeline up. How come he's first, if the rest on Fox are lower than he? I say put Cooper at 8PM and let's see who he blames then.
    And the next point, just stands to reason. Respectability will NOT always equal profit. It's beginning to erode as we speak.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Lead ins do matter it helps Hannity and Greta
    big time.CNN needs to get it's act together and
    really try and fix the problems they have, which
    is bad shows. Everybody knows Jon Klein has
    ruined CNN. The question is what is taking the
    CNN brass too long to realize this.CNN also
    needs to do something about TSR and do we
    really need to see any dayside anchor for 2 hrs.
    I am wondering if the Elliot Spitzer fiasco is a
    way to get Jon Klein out.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Try doing some in depth reports that really
    do tell people something they don't know
    and stop it with the overexposure of the
    pundits.CNN's forte has always been news
    and they are moving away from their strength.
    It is simple do some news and less chatter.
    There are no real news channels. CNN tries
    and act like it does news but they have tons
    of ideology all day long that is just way too
    boring and bad tv. For goodness sake CNN
    it is 2010 who cares about the talking heads.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Okay this is news. We all know that Jon Klein
    has mismanaged CNN. The question is who
    will CNN hire to replace him. The writing is
    on the wall.CNN needs to come up with ways
    to make the news more interesting and stop
    trying to sale personalities. I hate to say it but
    I think the Spitzer hire was the last straw for
    many CNN viewers and they are just turning
    away already. Let's face it, CNN does not have
    a plan or a vision. The word is CNN is not
    spending much on the Spitzer show and they
    know it is not going to work.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Try and go anchor free for the 8pm hour.
    Real journalism is fearless and knows no
    borders and is not bound by ideology or
    lies. All of the cable news channels just
    make up the news. It is not real it is fake
    and people are not that stupid.

    ReplyDelete
  6. CNN should hire Conor Knighton &
    Team Infomania. It is as close to the
    'Daily Show' as you can get and takes
    on all of the media like no one else.
    Look at the Vanguard reporters for
    Current as well.Marianna Van Zeller
    would be a great replacement for
    Christianne Amanpour. Vanguard is
    starting to get recognition and is
    up for awards and has one some.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I will know CNN is serious when they start
    hiring journalists and do something about
    annoying anchors.I think they should really
    think about getting a show with Kyra Phillips
    and some of her female anchors. Let's hope
    the rumors are not true and that CNN will
    not being going with 3 white males in prime
    time.

    ReplyDelete
  8. The last sentence in this article tells it all. "CNN's inability to evolve gives the game to us/MSNBC."
    Yes, viewers turn to CNN for Breaking News, and probably always will, but the viewership for breaking events, is getting smaller and smaller.
    As far as the lead ins go, who was there before Campbell Brown,... Paula Zahn and who was there before her?
    8pm was always a problem for CNN because no one can compete with O'Reilly.
    But the game has changed because MSNBC, brought in new talent like Olbermann and Maddow and now CNN is third. It has less to do with lead ins and more to do with the rough competition now being given from MSNBC. Klein underestimated his competition and now he wants to play "catch up," and he can't.
    PLEASE READ THE ARTICLE.

    ReplyDelete
  9. @ anonymous 8:13 THANK YOU!!!!
    It's obvious that people are posting comments and opinions without reading the article.

    ReplyDelete
  10. MSNBC grew once they found the right fit at
    9 with TRMS.CNN did fail to bring in new faces
    and a new on air look.I can't take the graphics
    & excessive tv monitor shooting on CNN.It's
    true that CNN has always had trouble at 8.
    It is as if CNN & MSNBC have switched places.
    Jon Klein made it easy for MSNBC to pass CNN.
    ICN points out some errors in the article. Lou
    Dobbs ratings were way down when he left.
    Yes, CNN must evolve but evolve into what.
    Fox gives their viewers what they want and
    the is a market for what they do. People
    are watching more of MSNBC because they
    came up with better shows and CNN needs
    to do something new and fresh and give
    viewers something they won't get from
    MSNBC or Fox.Do you know how many people
    think that CNN is turning into Fox. Guess what
    they don't like it. Does anyone really believe
    that if CNN puts opinionated hosts that
    people will suddenly watch the network
    more. Keep dreaming. CNN has been there
    and done that with Lou Dobbs and we all
    know that ended in disaster.CNN has to
    do something that will not make me turn
    away and right now they are not succeeding.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Jon Klein has yet to have a successful program.
    360 was already on when he got there. TSR is
    medicore but lately it is just not working and
    needs to really find ways to liven things up.The
    problem for CNN is that Jon Klein is really bad
    at coming up with shows. C'mon Rick's List.
    How is Rick Sanchez a fresh face. There was
    nothing wrong with CNN dayside and Klein goes
    to the solo anchor format to give Rick Sanchez
    a show.AM is in bad shape and somebody needs
    to fix John King USA. Let's remember it took
    10 years for MSNBC to get to where it is. I
    think Wolff is stating the obvious. Everyone
    knows Klein can't continue at CNN. The
    problem is the suits waited to long to try
    and fix things and now I think they are just
    trying to buy time until the can find someone
    to replace Klein. That is not going to be easy
    since Klein has really messed things up.

    ReplyDelete
  12. A 'Daily Show' program would help CNN for
    the hour or even something like 'Nightline'.
    It is ironic that a news program is giving
    Letterman and Leno a run for their money.
    'Infomania' is a blast .

    ReplyDelete
  13. CNN it is simple: Target Women for the 8 pm
    hour. Women are 52 % of the population and
    can no longer be ignored by big media. Rotate
    diverse groups of women who work for CNN,
    HLN, CNNI, CNN.com and all of the properties
    of Time Warner. Each night you open with a
    different song. For example, premiere night
    I'm Every Woman. Another night it can be
    Hollaback. There are thousands of songs about
    women, relationships etc. It would never get old
    because it would never be the same. Let me
    stress news and interesting topics.I doubt
    if O'Reilly or Countdown have a large number
    of female viewers.Go with 3 or 4 women and
    cover national news, global news. pop culture
    and the arits and music and women mags
    and even have music in the studio on Friday
    night. Also, introduce of to female reporters
    out covering the news all around the world
    and can talk about Afghanistan, Iraq or
    even sports. Every once in a while have the
    men on just for fun.

    ReplyDelete
  14. CNN must involve into a real time news channel
    and add new material every 15 minutes and
    let their reporters and photojournalists get out
    and find some news. Get away from soundbite
    driven news and mindless chatter. Show some
    journalistic guts and quite getting you news
    ideas from talk radio and political blogs.Use
    infographics for conveying information. I can
    go on the web and find hundreds of stories
    that CNN could use. Drop the crawl and show
    story headlines going in and out of the breaks.
    if you have video or photo to enhance the
    story, go ahead and use it and just have the
    simple banner like HLN with all of the info.
    For interviews please start inviting guests
    who offer insight and act like they have
    some sense and not interested in throwing
    verbal insults. The problem for CNN is that
    people don't trust the news to really tell
    them what is going on because cable news
    has turned everything into a circus. The
    person who will succeed Jon Klein must
    understand how to bring together old style
    and new style reporting, use the web as
    a great asset to track down stories. Youtube
    and Facebook are great assets. You have
    to make sure that what you see on Twitter
    is legit. Use Google most popular, CNN.com,
    Yahoo,AOL, etc. Cover all subjects from
    national to international, from books to
    photo essays,from interviews to print
    journalism, from science to technology
    from music to art. As many topics as possible
    and always keep in mind that television is
    a visual media. If you got video flaunt it.
    One of the biggest stories on the web all
    weekend long was about the Bermuda
    Triangle. Scientists think they have solved
    the mystery.I am still waiting to see this
    story on CNN. Get onboard with live
    streaming it is getting bigger and bigger.
    CNN is stuck in the 90's and is trying to
    shut out the modern world and it will not
    work. For goodness sake people it is 2010.
    CNN must pivot from politically centered
    news and do the news and give people a
    break from the craziness that is way to
    common for cable news. You have 24 hr
    cable news channels that just let a few
    people control the news of the day.
    Quit being a partner with the people who
    spread misinformation.CNN must find a
    distinct model that sets them out in the
    cable news village and makes them stand
    out. Earlier this year there was a story about
    a Penn St student who started his own news
    blog to take on the university newspaper.
    Guess who has the most popular blog.
    The student who gave them news in real
    times and they loved it as a great source
    for news.CNN must also understand that
    there is a growing thirst for community
    news about what is going on in you city
    or town. In many cities like Los Angeles
    there are these newspapers that tell about
    what is going on. Have your people step
    out into the cities where you have them
    based to find some original reports.

    ReplyDelete
  15. ICN has an interesting item it seems as though
    the average age of CNN is 63 while FNC is 64.
    However, FNC has significantly higher numbers
    of viewers who are 65+ and 45+. CNN has to
    find a way to bring in more viewers by becoming
    more like CNN.com to television. I am thinking
    maybe the people running CNN.com need to
    replace Jon Klein. CNN can get as many as 30
    million viewers.I just want to find out what is
    going on. The web does a better job and is
    not annoying.

    ReplyDelete
  16. I read that Nielsen will start including online
    viewing into the ratings real soon and my
    question is what took so long.Newsflash :
    the PC will obsolete in 2 years. Thanks to
    mobile devices and the Ipad. CNN's strength
    is multiple platforms for people to just focus
    on the single medium of tv is not smart. There
    are countless mediums for CNN to make millions.

    ReplyDelete
  17. I really don't get why 360 is not live on Friday.
    Is this just for the summer or is this permanent.
    That is a huge mistake. Everybody knows the
    Nielsen changes are coming because they are
    admitting the process for determining ratings
    is outdated. That is exactly why 360 keeps
    saying record the show on your dvr and Rachel
    is touting Flo TV. We might actually get to a
    point when the ratings don't matter because
    it is pretty hard to track what shows 300
    million people are watching. Demographics
    are a problem for FNC as well as the web.
    It not just about the number of viewers but
    people look at the demographics for a full
    picture.CNN did underestimate MSNBC and
    now MSNBC is beefing up it's news to take
    CNN out. MSNBC grew in prime time when
    they went to solo interviews. Take a hint
    CNN. They know CNN giving Elliot Spitzer
    the lead show in prime time is only going
    to benefit them big time because CNN just
    told us they are not interested in news.

    ReplyDelete
  18. @5:13PM: Newsflash: The PC will not become obsolete so long as baby boomers keep watching Cable News. We don't like looking at teeny tiny, itsy bitsy things and many of us, past the age of 40, like AC, need reading glasses. So no, newsflash...it's not happening for a very long time, or until us 40+ folk are buried and gone.
    And for the record: Did you notice how screens on PC desk tops and labtops are getting larger not smaller as well as HD LCD TV's? People like LIVING LARGE.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Until CNN stops being afraid of the right
    they will continue to suffer in the ratings.
    Tonight on 360 Anderson Cooper repeated
    the falsehood that there is controversy about
    Michelle Obama going to Spain. Wrong !!
    This is only on talk radio and conservative
    blogs. Would you believe this was the lead
    story on 360 done as keeping them honest.
    C'mon 360 can't be that desperate for ratings.
    Maybe it would have worked with hisstorians
    or social secretaries for former 1st ladies
    but leave it to CNN to have the pundits on
    for the lead story.360 really should think
    about using the phrase keeping them
    honest while using pundits. That is blantant
    contradiction.

    ReplyDelete
  20. @6:04PM: Have to agree with everything you said. A Live 360 on Fridays is a must, with or without Cooper, but showing reruns is a disaster CNN can't afford. How stupid! Just check out the ratings on TVN for this past Friday.
    And yes, they abolutely underestimated MSNBC's reach and journalistic appeal.

    ReplyDelete
  21. @11:23PM: I agree with you. They lead with the story from the Drudge Report according to Roland Martin. They are afraid of the right and they will fail if this is the route they are taking.

    ReplyDelete
  22. I will no longer watch Anderson Cooper or
    CNN. Tonight on 360 Cooper attack Michelle
    Obama with comments from Obama critics
    and trying to use them as legitimate writers.
    I now watch Rachel Maddow. CNN is done.
    There is going to be a huge backlash. Anderson
    Cooper was once a journalist. I don't know
    what he is now but I know I don't like and will
    even watch the repeat of Countdown from now
    on.

    ReplyDelete
  23. The truth does not matter for 360. Anderson
    reported the rumors but no facts. the NYT
    & Chicago Sun Times reported the facts.

    Since when did the Secret Service become an
    entourage. She used her own money and did
    not waste taxpayer money. If Anderson actually
    respected the Obamas as much as he does the
    tea party and Sarah Palin people would not have
    a problem. For him to spread the lies is just
    down right irresponsible and it should cost
    him dearly.360 got the story wrong and that
    is that is the problem with CNN these days
    the truth does not matter.

    Apparently Rush Limbaugh determines the
    content of 360 and you wonder why MSNBC
    is kicking CNN's behind.

    ReplyDelete
  24. The 360 lead last night was a blunder. I turned
    away for 15 minutes and came back later. I was
    wondering how come the Tillman story was not
    the lead given the news that the Taliban is back
    in Afghanistan and 6 Americans having been
    killed there over the weekend. I have a feeling
    that Anderson has already lost his viewers to
    Rachel. You have to give her credit when it cones
    to cable news. Rachel uses the facts to make a
    point and it shows she has done her homework.
    If Rachel gets a fact wrong she apologizes and
    that means she stands out in cable news.
    Rachel aims for high standards and viewers
    appreciate that.I also thought he gave Palin
    a free pass it was clear she looked down
    her nose at the teacher as though she was
    a nobody.

    ReplyDelete
  25. The sales of PC's have been heading down for
    some time now and people feel the need to
    not have to carry around their phone, Ipod
    or laptop, Video looks pretty darn good on
    the Ipad . So all I need is the Ipad and a
    blackberry or Iphone. Just yesterday it was
    announced you can now download an app
    to watch tv on your Iphone or blackberry..
    Whether you like it or not tv everywhere is
    coming and lets not forget Hulu.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Apparently 360 does not get it. I think they took
    a look at Google and thought the fact they saw
    Google trends had Michelle Obama that it was
    a big story. Please understand CNN trends is
    what blogs and the web are talking about the
    searches is what the people care about the is
    a big difference. This happens way too often
    with 360 and is exactly why the ratings are
    down.Am I really supposed to be upset that
    Michelle Obama went to Spain. Listen to Perino
    Anderson the First Lady is off limits. We the
    media get a life.

    ReplyDelete
  27. @12:28PM: Yes, but if all that "stuff" goes to your TV....IT IS LARGE. Monitors are getting bigger and not smaller and 50% of the population does not want or have a blackberry, an iphone, an ipad and etc....and I own stock in Apple and Google so I ought to know. But keep on keeping on. The more you spend on all that "stuff" or is it apps, the more money I make. Oh by the way, I just bought RIM as well.

    ReplyDelete
  28. According to TVN, AC360, got a 530 in its totals for Monday. Better than Friday, but not much.
    AC may be getting bolder, but it is obvious, this is a turn off to some people. You can be bold without being nasty. AC must start to watch Rachel Maddow, for homework. Somehow, she's able to get her opinion across without showing her opponent that she is annoyed with them. After all, they may not be the host, but they are still a guest, and a guest, whether you agree with them or not, still deserves courtesy.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Former CNNer Thomas Roberts is awesome.
    He stood head and shoulders above Ali Velshi
    when there was breaking news.I even continued
    watching Chris Jansing. MSNBC is serious and
    CNN is just going from bad to worse. People
    expect Anderson to do news right off the bat.
    Rachel always leads with news and not the
    talking heads.It is almost like watching John
    King USA and 360 doesn't need to go in that
    direction at all.

    ReplyDelete
  30. I think we are about to find out just how low
    CNN will go, According to Mediaite CNN was
    5th in the demo last night. Considering Rick
    Sanchez has not understanding between
    corruption and ethics violations and you
    know why people are not watching. He had
    the nerve to say the White House was watching
    his show tonight. Rick nobody is watching.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Rick's List is doing worst than Campbell Brown
    and CNN is running repeats of Larry King. At
    this point I don't think Elliot Spitzer or Piers
    Morgan will make things better. It is only going
    to get worse for CNN.

    ReplyDelete
  32. @9:13PM: Had to laugh at your last line,"Rick, nobody is watching."
    Yes, it is sad but true. CNN is getting worse, not better. 360's total last nite was 530! If Fox can get millions, and MSNBC can pull a million on an Olberman repeat, what is wrong with CNN??
    Tonite, for example, 360 repeated the race experiment. "Which child is the bad child?" Which network is the worst network???

    ReplyDelete
  33. 360 needs to hit it out of the ballpark right from
    the start. The lead story matters. Last night was
    not bad but one segment would've been enough.
    The terror baby conspiracy just shows how crazy
    things are getting and Anderson did it right in
    the open by presenting facts. Recently there was
    a huge article on Digg and it mentioned the NYT
    was the biggest source of news for the website.
    Younger people go to legit news sources to find
    out what is going on and do not take the blogs
    as seriously as people who are 50 + who get
    news from the Huffington Post or Drudge.
    So right off the bat viewers know it is not
    true and who is behind it because they have
    been on FaceBook, Twittter, Google and Yahoo,
    CNN or Time, etc. I don't understand why
    CNN is running repeats for Larry King.Last
    night they were live but tonight it is the
    Elizabeth Edwards interview.Shaun Robinson
    was in for Joy the other night and she go
    higher numbers than Rick's List.CNN
    Rick's List getting less than 100 thousand
    in the demo right from the start is not
    good. I really don't understand why Kyra
    Phillips can't fill in for Larry. I know CNN
    had Tavis Smiley on but they might want
    to consider Jeff Johnson from BET who
    has a younger following for people who
    are interested in news.

    ReplyDelete
  34. If it is possible CNN needs to go for Bill
    Wolff to replace Jon Klein. I don't know
    if they would be able to get him but his
    stock is rising with TRMS. One thing that
    might help 360 would be fixing the blog.
    Every morning they should ask people
    what stories or news are you talking about
    and is there anything out there that 360
    might be overlooking. Originally the 360
    blog provided links to cool stuff on the
    web. Now there is nothing fresh first
    thing in the morning. The original 360
    blog was awesome. What happened?
    I am sure the staff of 360 can figure out
    what is real news and want is just the
    craziness from ideological blogs. They
    should really use the blog to reach out
    to viewers and set up some sort of news
    discussion for news junkies to exchange
    There was even a time when the staff
    reached out to viewers during the show.
    interesting things they come across.
    Does the blog have a producer or staff
    anymore ?

    ReplyDelete
  35. MSNBC : Martin Bashir
    Richard Lui
    Thomas Roberts
    Veronica de la Cruz



    CNN : Elliot Spitzer
    Piers Morgan



    One of these cable news channels is not
    like the other. Can you tell the difference?
    One is hiring journalists and the other is
    not.It is as plain as the nose on your face
    MSNBC cares about the news and CNN
    is downgrading.

    ReplyDelete
  36. It will be interesting to see the ratings for
    360 later today. More than 450 comments are
    on the blog from last night.It will be interesting
    to see if the ratings are higher than they have
    been in recent weeks.ICN has an item about
    the pundits. I think it is time for CNN to stop
    saying the pundits represent the people. They
    give their takes on things via their political
    affiliation and that is not the average person.
    The 360 blog needs a relaunch.

    ReplyDelete
  37. The 360 Blog needs to disappear all together. It just posts positive views from the same people all of the time. If you have anything negative to say or a mere quality control suggestion you are put in eternal moderation. It is not a blog. It is an advertisement and promotional tool. Just another reason not to watch CNN.

    ReplyDelete

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