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TVNewser archive
Monday, July 26
WRAP: A Summary Of Today, July 26If you only read one TVNewser post today, read this one. All of today's broadcast news in 64 words:1: CableNewser becomes TVNewser; 2: The Kerry camp tried to restrict two broadcast interviews; 3: The media outnumber Dem delegates by 3 to 1; 4: A Q&A with Mark Lukasiewicz; 5: ABC News Now premiered; 6: Rick Kaplan is in Boston; 7: NBC begins newscasts for cell phones; 8: FNC preferred O'Reilly to Gore's speech; and 9: The cablers' convention coverage varied greatly. On NewsNight, Aaron Brown summarized the day in three sentences: "All that's preceeded tonight, all of the primaries, all of the fundraising, selecting the VP, everything it was all the appetizer. The main course went on the table today. This campaign is on." Conventions: Different Approaches On CableCNN placed viewers directly in the middle of the convention, and focused on the stories and soap operas inside the Fleet Center. If the broadcast was eligible for an Academy Award, CNN's floor platform would deserve Best Supporting Actor. At times, it seemed the anchors were awash in a sea of democracy. Some segments were better than others, but overall it made for great television.FNC stuck with its "Murderers' Row in its usual batting positions," as TVWeek put it this week. Their coverage, anchored from a well-positioned skybox, wasn't as intimate or compelling as CNN's, but it offered its bread and butter of interviews and debates with a red white and blue backdrop. MSNBC harnessed its diverse team of pundits. They took turns sitting across from marathoner Chris Matthews at Faneuil Hall, chatting about the political topic du jour. The crowd surrounding the Hardball set were electric, but the coverage seemed pretty far removed from the convention itself. Kudos for finally killing the crawl during Bill Clinton's speech! Convention Coverage: Broadcast Coverage Tidbits> NBC's Tom Brokaw and ABC's Peter Jennings anchored live from the convention floor. Dan Rather looked dull from his skybox by comparison.> On CNN, CBS podium correspondent John Roberts was visibly stretching, yawning, clapping his hands together and preparing for a live report. > Tom Brokaw put the event in context: "While America is at war, the economy is stumbling along, the nation is deeply divided along partisan lines..." > Frankly, I am surprised the broadcast nets aired the 9/11 tribute. It was beautiful, yes; but wouldn't the public have been better served if the Big Three had aired excerpts of Gore and Carter's speeches? FNC Ignores Gore, Carter Speeches"Is FNC really covering the convention?," an e-mailer asks. CNN and MSNBC paused for the National Anthem, while O'Reilly kept on talking. CNN and MSNBC aired Al Gore's speech, while O'Reilly bloviated. CNN and MSNBC aired Jimmy Carter's whole speech, while FNC aired four minutes, then broke away to interview Bill Bennett. Half a dozen e-mailers quickly predicted that FNC wouldn't ignore the Republican convention."Bill O'Reilly made a point of saying that the Al Gore speech would NOT be carried during his show," Newshounds says. "True to his word, it was not...All the people without cable will never hear [Gore's] important message because it will be reduced to out of context soundbites and partisan attacks." But H&C has interviewed Howard Dean and other liberals. "They seem to have no problems getting key Democratic guests," another e-mailer notes... > Update: 10:07pm: FOX aired a tape of Gore's speech at the start of the 10pm hour, as a 9/11 tribute aired on the broadcast nets... // 10:29pm: FNC is also airing Hillary's speech live and uninterrupted. > Update #2: "There's only one [network] with the audacity to keep on blathering during the playing of The Star-Spangled Banner... Fox!," Keith Olbermann blogs. "Couldn't Bill O'Reilly and Dick Morris just pretend for a moment that they don't think themselves bigger than the national anthem?" Convention Coverage Tidbits: From 8 to 11pm> Judy Woodruff: "This is not your father's Democratic party."> Peter Jennings said his coverage would "go with the flow." > Bill O'Reilly promised a "No Propaganda Zone" on the Factor. > The CNN placards were back behind MSNBC's live shot position this evening. > "The first two hours of the convention showed pretty well why the networks don't want to cover more of the convention," this on-site blogger says. > Vanessa and Alexandra Kerry talked to Larry King on the convention floor. (Larry called them "two beautiful ladies.") > Joe Scarborough, previewing Clinton's speech: "Elvis is in the arena" > As Reverend David Alston spoke around 10:15pm, it was difficult to hear the CNN anchors on the floor. > CNN's Tucker Carlson said the convention has been boring so far: "I'm all for disarray and chaos, but we haven't seen it here yet." > CBS and ABC ended their coverage less than two minutes after Clinton wrapped up. > Willie Brown described tonight's conclusion as "vintage Bill Clinton." "I thought he did a really really really good job," Mara Liasson said on FNC. Tom Brokaw called Clinton a "great modern political performer." Tim Russert agreed and said the speech was "very clever." > Send your impressions to tvnewser@mediabistro.com. ABC News Now: "A Brand New Adventure""ABC News Now" has 55% coverage across the country, a press release said today. Here is a chart of the local affiliates. "Welcome to a brand new adventure for ABC News," Peter Jennings said at noon, as Jimi Hendrix played in the background. Sam Donaldson related this moment to Alexander Graham Bell's invention of the telephone. Roger Simmons has a first-day review, along with screen grabs and video clips. I'm watching it right now via AOL...What To Watch: Affleck, Dean, Heinz Kerry> Larry King will interview Ben Affleck at midnight ET> Teresa Heinz Kerry will appear on NewsNight (11pm) > Howard Dean will chat with Hannity & Colmes (9pm) > FOX and CNN will be live until 1am. MSNBC 'After Hours' will air until 2am. > ABC's 'Nightline' spends a day with the Boston police department tonight (Press Release) Convention Circus: "The Best H.S. Reunion"> Paul Begala says the convention is like "the best high school reunion you can imagine" (CNN.com)> MSNBC's "Brokaw in Boston" premiered at 4pm. He interviewed the governors of Kansas and Pennsylvania. "This is what MSNBC was meant to be!, an e-mailer says... > "How will the network and cable coverage weave "Shove It" into tomorrow's Heinz Kerry speech?," National Journal wonders. > "Why is it that all the cable news coverage of the DNC is with Republican talking heads?," an e-mailer asks. "What are the chances that Dems will be on every channel for the RNC? Not so much." "NBC Mobile" Unveiled: Newscasts Via Cell PhoneBeginning today, NBC News and MSNBC anchors will host brief newscasts accessible via cell phone. The service, called NBC Mobile, was announced today by Bill Wheatley in an internal memo. The short newscasts will be produced specifically for the cellphone screen several times a day. In addition, a mixture of other reports and interviews will be offered. Sprint is the first distributor; others are expected to sign on in the months ahead. Here is a demonstration.Continue: Memo From Bill Wheatley Announcing NBC Mobile Convention Circus: Stewart/Brokaw; Porta-Potties> "Jon Stewart's been hanging with Brokaw," Andrea Mitchell blogs.> Getting to the media porta-potties: "You only have to go through two separate metal-detector checkpoints to get there, past the ABC News banner with a 10-foot-high picture of Peter Jennings." (Kurtz) > Bill Richardson is giving 45-50 interviews today (CNN.com) > Even Jay Leno is covering the convention... (P.R.) Convention Sightings: Rick Kaplan, Ron Reagan...> MSNBC prez Rick Kaplan seemed amused last night as several folks outside Faneuil Hall waved red CNN signs behind MSNBC's live shot. As Chris Matthews played 'Hardball,' Kaplan schmoozed with Willie Brown and David Nyhan, one observer says. Matthews signed several of the CNN placards after the show...> "Is Ron Reagan part of the convention ... or covering it?," ABC's Noted Now asks. "Trailed by a gaggle of reporters, [he] told AP's Will Lester: 'I'm working for MSNBC, I can't.'" > CNN's Eason Jordan was spotted leaving the Boston Marriott Copley Place with Mariane Pearl Sunday afternoon... > "Did you catch Tim Russert and Tom Brokaw sitting all cozy [near] John Kerry on Sunday night at [Fenway Park]?," an e-mailer asks... > Jimmy Carter at CNN's floor platform, for an interview with Judy Woodruff this afternoon. Convention Circus: Hairspray Horror; Skybox Shots> "Tom Brokaw has secured the first big exclusive network interview at the [convention], talking tonight with former President Bill Clinton," an NBC P.R. says.> Journalists at the Fleet Center are facing long lines, MSNBC.com says. One TV reporter was told she couldn't take her hairspray inside. "How can we do television without hairspray?," she complained... > National Journal has a detailed map of the media's convention facilities (PDF) > Greta has snapshots from her convention skybox. > CNN.com's convention blog is now online Michael Moore Attacks Network Execs"They like to wear flags on their lapels, but how many children of network news executives are in Iraq?," filmmaker Michael Moore asked today. "Nine hundred kids are dead because these f***ers haven't done their job." National Journal says his visit to the Fleet Center this morning caused a commotion. (Photo)> Update: 1:49pm: TNR has a story about it online. Moore said the American press "haven't been telling the truth for four years ... Why won't our journalists ask the hard questions?" > Update: 3:10pm: CNN.com's blog recounts Moore's spat with Bill Hemmer And Now, "ABC News Now"Most people haven't realized it yet, but this day is historic. ABC's digital broadcasting experiment has commenced. "ABC News Now" premiered at noon ET, with a ribbon-cutting by Peter Jennings. At 12:30, Bob Woodruff began the first of several "Speakers Corner" segments that will air during the convention. Later today, Peter Jennings anchors "Politics Live," Hari Sreenivasan talks to Michael Moore, and Tamala Edwards offers the "bloggers buzz." Here is the schedule grid, and an FAQ about the channel.Convention Circus: The Two Big StoriesThere are two big stories worth following at the conventions, CNN's Wolf Blitzer tells Jon Friedman: The "bounce" and the security. "Will John Kerry be able to use this convention to beat a Bush the way Bill Clinton used the convention in 1992 to beat a Bush?," Wolf asks. "Who knows what is going to happen here?"Convention Q&A: Mark Lukasiewicz, NBC NewsIn a Q&A with TVNewser, Mark Lukasiewicz, the executive producer of NBC News' political coverage, says that this week's coverage is a culmination of hard work:
Continue: Q&A: Mark Lukasiewicz, Executive Producer, NBC News The Ticker: > ...Since "Media Notes" is a boring title, I've renamed this collection of media items (Thanks AMC!)... |
| 10. How quickly the CNN control room will realize that their anchors can't hear a bloody thing on the floor when the going gets loud. 15. How many hours it took for the press to render all 20 portapotties unusable. 17. If self-respecting print reporters have tired of writing about bloggers with even fewer readers than they have. |
| "The [Kerry] campaign went so far as to try to limit the kind of questions Mr. Brokaw and Mr. Rather were to ask Mr. Kerry here on Wednesday afternoon. The staff wanted the questions to concern Mr. Kerry's expectations for the convention, nothing more, according to people at both networks. It was the sort of terms-setting that few have dared to ask of network anchors. The request was swiftly denied." |
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