Archive for September 7, 2010

Rooting Against Spitzer?

Posted in CNN on September 7, 2010 by icn2

That’s what Marketwatch’s Jon Friedman is doing apparently. ICN hasn’t weighed in on this issue yet. I’m waiting to see what the show actually does first…

Next month, Spitzer will be unleashed on the viewing public every night at 8 p.m. Starting Oct. 4, he’ll be co-hosting “Parker/Spitzer” on CNN with Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Kathleen Parker. Watch CNN video promo for Parker/Spitzer.

I have been mystified why TV is encouraging — or, even, enabling — Spitzer’s attempt at a comeback. If he wanted to resume his post-scandal life quietly, I couldn’t have cared less.

But it also offends me as a journalist that he will be allowed to sit in an anchor’s chair on CNN — a highly coveted job.

It smacks of yet another stunt by a network desperate to create some excitement. Spitzer hasn’t earned the right to have this kind of forum. Call me old-fashioned, but I took my vote seriously. He betrayed my trust and that of the other Empire State folks who voted for and believed in him.

Cenk Uygur Profile…

Posted in MSNBC on September 7, 2010 by icn2

The LA Times’ James Rainey profiles Young Turk Cenk Uygur. This normally wouldn’t make ICN except there’s these telegraphing paragraphs which indicates MSNBC’s unofficially official participation in the article…

Uygur has been working for a decade or more to get to his current heady place. “The Young Turks” online revenue hit the equivalent of $1 million a year in July, according to Uygur. A new “TYT Sports” channel is due to launch Wednesday. And recent ratings show that the 40-year-old host outdrew MSNBC’s Dylan Ratigan on the five days he replaced the daytime host in July and August. (While Ratigan averaged 276,000 viewers in August, Uygur drew an average of 293,000.)

Cable executives hope fill-in hosts can at best hold on to the audiences they inherit. But MSNBC insiders said they believe Uygur did so well because many of those who watch his three-hour weekday Web program, (3 to 6 p.m. PDT) or clips on his YouTube channel jumped to MSNBC when Ratigan was out.

And this one…

MSNBC President Phil Griffin called Uygur “part of our family” and expects him to get “more and more” air time, though he declined to specify in what time slots.

Read between the lines and you get the impression Uygur is destined for an MSNBC program. But the questions are when and at what time? If Uygur is turning in those kinds of numbers as a fill-in it will put the heat on everyone else who isn’t. Given Ed Schultz’s recent self-inflicted wounds, he should be the most worried. Don’t expect Uygur to take another dayside hour away from news though. With Martin Bashir destined for 3pm ET, dayside is not going to get touched. No way would MSNBC put Uygur on before Bashir. But Hardball might be a target at 5pm but that would mean Matthews would have to do his 7pm show live all the time (they could opt run Matthews tape delayed at 7pm but I don’t think that would be feasible long term). And, of course the fact that Uygur out performed Ratigan in his own hour combined with the fact that someone leaked out that Uygur outperformed Ratigan in his own hour, puts pressure on Ratigan to deliver stronger numbers.

In Depth: Geraldo Rivera Re-writes History

Posted in FNC, In Depth on September 7, 2010 by icn2

I wasn’t going to talk about this but it keeps coming up on FNC so I have to step in here and clear the air with a bit of a fact check. There’s been a lot of write ups on Geraldo Rivera’s 40 years in TV. Rivera is controversial. Some like him. Some can’t stand him. But he has had a more diverse career than most reporters will ever hope to have. So it’s right for Rivera to get his victory lap. He deserves one.

That all said, there’s one particular aspect of the victory lap that sort of puts a damper on the festivities for me. It concerns the “line in the sand” incident; where Rivera was accused of giving away troop positions on the ground. That incident made Rivera’s highlight reel along with a lot of other stuff like Al Capone’s vault and the chair throwing incident on his 90s talk show. I suppose the “line in the sand” is noteworthy though I wouldn’t put it in my top 5 or even top 10 highlights of Rivera’s career (though his on FNC’s air meltdown about NBC being out to get him after there were reports he was being kicked out of Iraq was must watch TV). But whatever, they decided to include it. That’s their prerogative. It’s what happened after that which got to me.

Rivera tried to downplay the incident, like it was no big deal and then went on to highlight his devotion to the US troops and included a video clip of David Patraeus thanking Rivera for his support of the troops.

I was going to let that slide Saturday night, except Rivera brought it up again on FNC this afternoon with Megyn Kelly and Rivera expanded his defense to include an attack of MSNBC. So now I have to set the record straight that Rivera is trying to gloss over.

I will not deny Rivera’s devotion to the US troops and what they’ve done. I think journalists in general could learn a thing or two from watching Rivera’s work with the troops. But to say that the “line in the sand” was no big deal is an argument that exists in an alternate reality we do not live in. It was a big deal and anyone who wants to know more about just what happened and how seriously this was taken by CENTCOM, the DOD, and FNC, one should re-read David Carr’s New York Times article on the incident

Geraldo Rivera, the Fox News Channel correspondent who broadcast a report from Iraq on Sunday night that gave details of the position and plans of United States troops, is expected to be pulled from the country on Tuesday, military officials said yesterday.

The expected decision by Fox, a unit of the News Corporation, to remove Mr. Rivera from the battlefield, after intense pressure by the military to do so, followed a day of conflicting statements.

Yesterday morning, an official at Central Command headquarters in Camp Saliya, Qatar, said Mr. Rivera’s reporting had compromised ”operational security” and that he had been escorted back to Kuwait.

By the afternoon, Bryan G. Whitman, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for media relations, said the matter had not been settled.

”We have been in contact with the news organization,” Mr. Whitman said. ”They are taking it very seriously, and we will make the appropriate determination once we have been able to evaluate all the facts here.”

And it wasn’t just a line in the sand that was the issue here but time has dulled people’s memories apparently. Here’s another refresher courtesy of Carr…

”At one point, he actually revealed the time of an attack prior to its occurrence,” Lt. Mark Kitchens, a spokesman at Central Command, said yesterday morning. Lieutenant Kitchens added that Mr. Rivera had been escorted to Kuwait.

You mention Rivera’s name these days and most people aren’t going to think of “line in the sand” too much. Yet, it’s been front and center on FNC twice now in the past three days. Fine, if FNC and Rivera want to dredge up ancient history most people don’t care about, okay. But dredge it up properly. Don’t try to sugar coat it to make it more palatable.

Related: Odd that Rivera would bring up “line in the sand” in his highlight reel but not the “hallowed ground” incident in Afghanistan which even Roger Ailes labeled as a “rookie mistake” to Broadcasting & Cable…

We asked him to apologize for a rookie mistake. He got off the helicopter, had one source; it was a Northern Alliance source. He said this was a friendly-fire incident or something. He went to air with it, immediately. He should have checked it with another source. We apologize for jumping the gun. We thought it was a rookie mistake. Sorry.

Guess that one would be a little tougher to gloss over.

Press Releases: 09/07/10

Posted in Press Releases on September 7, 2010 by icn2

CNBC (1)

CNBC PRESENTS “MEETING OF THE MINDS: THE FUTURE OF LEADERSHIP” ON WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15TH AT 8PM ET

CNBC Assembles Some of America’s Greatest Leaders To Discuss Our Nation’s Future

Unprecedented One-Hour CNBC Special Event Hosted By Maria Bartiromo From The United States Military Academy At West Point

ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, N.J. – September 7, 2010 – Throughout its history, America has been defined by an unyielding drive for freedom, prosperity and opportunity. But we have only achieved these ideals through the hard-fought victories of our finest leaders¾leaders embodying the very same qualities that built this great country. Together, they reflect the true character of America¾the strength to soldier through our toughest trials in pursuit of a better future. And at this pivotal moment in our history, nothing is more crucial to ensuring America’s success than bold and brilliant leadership.

On Wednesday, September 15th at 8PM ET, CNBC presents “Meeting of the Minds: The Future of Leadership,” hosted by CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo. Broadcast from the United States Military Academy at West Point, our nation’s most enduring symbol of valor, and surrounded by our country’s next generation of leaders, CNBC, First in Business Worldwide, probes the questions that will guide their service to our nation: What makes an extraordinary leader? How do we honor the ideals that have made this country great? And how do we keep America thriving, no matter what lies ahead?
Read more »

CNN Rolls out Parker Spitzer Ad…

Posted in CNN on September 7, 2010 by icn2

CNN is going to call their new show Parker Spitzer. CNN.com has a promo video of Eliot Spitzer and Kathleen Parker “hashing” out the name of their new show…

FNC Examines World Trade Center Rebuilding…

Posted in FNC on September 7, 2010 by icn2

Mediaite’s Steve Krakauer writes about FNC doing a special series on the rebuilding of the World Trade Center complex that will continue until it’s finished…

We got an early look at a special series Fox News is starting today focusing on the various buildings going up at the former home of the World Trade Center – hosted by Shepard Smith and continuing until the project is completed.

“The Rise of Freedom,” begins tonight with a 12-minute look at the construction projects and stories behind those involved. It airs at 7pmET during Fox Report (and will be repeated and posted online), and the series will continue every Thursday during Fox Report – until the project is done. That could be awhile. “The first building is set to be done in 2013, and the memorial next year,” FNC SVP of News Michael Clemente tells Mediaite today. “I don’t think even Larry Silverstein knows how long it’s going to take to get [One World Trade Center] done. But we’ll be with them until the buildings are built and the sky is full again.”

Free for All: 09/07/10

Posted in Free For All on September 7, 2010 by icn2

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