Does anyone here watch network news more than 5 minutes at the outset
of broadcasts ?  I mean, everything else is human interest nothings  and
who needs it ?  Yet the networks wonder why they continue to loose  viewers 
?
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The Daily Beast
 
 
Collapse at CBS News
by Rebecca Dana
August 31, 2010 

 
With a new round of layoffs expected this fall, CBS News is being  trimmed 
to the bone. Rebecca Dana on the dramatic drop in ratings, strange  
BlackBerry blackouts, and eager suitors for anchor Katie Couric.  
On Monday, Katie Couric begins her fifth, and quite possibly final, year of 
 hard labor as anchor of the CBS Evening News. 
However she chooses to mark the occasion, it will no  doubt be more 
_subdued than the tears_ (http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/12870221/) , _dancing_ 
(http://gawker.com/5410874/katie-courics-forbidden-dance-of-gin/gallery/) , and 
_$10 million promotional campaign_ 
(http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article619949.ece) 
  that attended her debut on Sept. 5, 
2006. 
Four years and a reported $60 million later, Couric now sits atop a news  
division that is in many ways unrecognizable as the one-time home of Walter  
Cronkite—or even the deep-pocketed, star-struck company that lured Couric to 
 Cronkite’s vacant chair with promises of wealth, fame, and a place in  
history. 
In the intervening years, Couric has achieved all  those things. She’s 
accumulated prizes for her work and thrown herself into _tweeting_ 
(http://twitter.com/katiecouric) , _blogging_ 
(http://www.cbsnews.com/8300-500803_162-500803.html?tag=contentMain;contentBody)
 , and anchoring special  broadcasts on 
CBSNews.com. It hasn’t always been a smooth road. After a strong  start, 
the CBS Evening News ratings dropped dramatically in the early  years of her 
tenure, culminating in talks between her agent and CBS executives  about the 
anchor leaving before the end of _her contract_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/11/business/media/11couric.html) . But Couric 
rebounded  during the 2008 
presidential campaign, securing her place at the network and in  history 
books with a series of triumphant interviews with vice presidential  candidate 
Sarah Palin. In 2008 and 2009, the CBS Evening News won the  Edward R. 
Murrow award for best newscast. 
But even as Couric and her team racked up plaudits, CBS News has withered.  
Layoffs and cutbacks, the most recent in February, have trimmed the 
division  close to the bone, and according to senior staffers, another round is 
coming  this fall. The network’s two premier daily broadcasts, Couric’s 
Evening  News and the CBS Early Show, are recording particularly dismal  
ratings 
this summer. 
“These are tough times for everyone,” Couric said in a statement provided  
through her spokesman, “but I for one am proud to be working with so many  
talented, dedicated people who continue to work hard to maintain the highest 
 journalistic standards that have always been associated with CBS News.” 
In the last two weeks, the CBS Evening News  has drawn just 4.89 million 
viewers on average, the lowest ratings recorded in  the 20 years _Nielsen 
Media Research_ 
(http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/evening_news_ratings/for_2nd_straight_week_cbs_evening_news_ties_lowest_viewership_ever_172302.asp)
  
has been  keeping track. During the first of those two weeks, Couric traveled 
to  Afghanistan and landed an exclusive interview with Gen. David Petraeus, 
among  others. The CBS Early Show has logged around 2.2 million viewers on  
average this summer, less than half the ratings of NBC’s Today. 
One person described the atmosphere inside the network as “sepulchral.” 
The entire news business has contracted in recent years, as viewers and  
readers have fled, depending on their age, either to the Internet or to  
retirement homes. Advertising dried up in the recession, devastating both local 
 
and national newspapers and television broadcasts. It hasn’t been pretty  
anywhere, but it’s been particularly rough for CBS. 
The Tiffany network began this latest period of attrition at a considerable 
 disadvantage. It has by far the weakest station group, meaning its news  
broadcasts reach the fewest number of potential viewers and commonly have the 
 lowest-rated local news lead-ins in the largest markets in the country. 
Couric  inherited a third-place broadcast when she joined the network, one 
recently  marred by her predecessor Dan Rather’s involvement in the problematic 
60  Minutes II report on President Bush’s service in the National Guard. 
CBS has not been alone in making brutal cuts.  First-place NBC News lost a 
chunk of its staff as part of the “NBC 2.0”  reorganization in 2006 and has 
implemented various other cost-saving measures  since, including an 
initiative to share newsgathering resources at the station  level with Fox. 
Second-place ABC News axed around 300 staffers, or upward of 20  percent of its 
news division, in _February of this year_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/23/abc-news-layoffs-expected_n_473778.html)
 . 
Around the same time, _CBS announced_ 
(http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2010/02/03/cbs-news-cuts-jobs/tab/article/)  a 
round of layoffs  that reduced the 
roughly 1,400-person staff by nearly 100. A host of smaller  snips came as 
well: The person who handled ordering business cards vanished, and  staffers 
haven’t been able to get them since. Cell phone services are blocked on  
company-provided BlackBerrys for many producers, who are now encouraged to  
communicate by text. The communication between CBS brass, including news  
division president Sean McManus, and their staff has all but vanished. 
“There’s no email,” said one producer. “There is no sense at all that you’
re  at a network.” 
A CBS News spokesman said in a statement: “The facts are that the  CBS News 
Division was just nominated for more Emmys than the other networks  
combined, that, in addition to the important news we air every day,  we 
continue to 
broadcast enormously popular number  1 programs like 60 Minutes, 48 Hours 
and Sunday  Morning, that Face the Nation is closer to first place than it  
has been in at least as many years as our records go back, that we have the  
fastest growing online presence in CBSNews.com, and that we have by  far the 
most critically acclaimed and successful radio news in the  industry.  Our 
audiences number in the tens of millions every  week. Those are the facts. 
Anything else is water cooler  gossip and empty speculation. We are evolving 
and we are thriving.” 
There is thriving and then there is surviving, though, and while CBS News 
may  be amassing awards, financially, the division is scraping by. One 
redress has  been layoffs; the latest round is expected to be smaller than the 
last, and the  most popular programs, including 60 Minutes and 48 Hours, are  
expected to get a pass. 
Another cost-saving plan, looming for years, has  focused on somehow 
merging _CBS News with CNN_ 
(http://blogs.forbes.com/bizblog/2010/07/12/new-layoffs-coming-to-cbs-news/?boxes=Homepagechannels%20target=#post_comments)
 . One 
source  called this “the inevitability that never happened.” Another, high 
up in the CBS  ranks, said it is extremely unlikely ever to, given enormous 
obstacles contained  within the network’s union and affiliate group 
contract. 
But whereas CBS is stuck with itself going forward, Couric isn’t stuck  
anywhere. A number of carefully stacked dominoes will determine her next move:  
whether Comcast chooses to keep her old producing partner Jeff Zucker, now  
president and CEO of NBC Universal, who might be in a position to reinstall 
her  in her old spot on Today, provided Meredith Vieira doesn’t extend her  
contract beyond a year. Or whether Piers Morgan hammers out a contract to 
take  over Larry King’s time slot at Time Warner’s CNN, which had long been 
considered  a good landing pad for Couric. And what CBS offers her in terms 
of daytime or  syndicated work, in place of or in addition to her role on 
the evening news. 
Back in May, Couric was honored for her career achievements by the Museum 
of  the Moving Image. All her potential suitors were there, and NBC in 
particular  came out in force, buying a table and filling it with network bigs, 
including  news president Steve Capus. The TV news business may have all but 
collapsed in  the years since Couric gambled on history, becoming the first 
solo female anchor  of a broadcast network newscast. But already, a familiar 
dynamic began to  emerge. 
On the red carpet at the St. Regis Hotel, Couric smiled for the cameras,  
first with Time Warner chief executive Jeff Bewkes, then with her old  Today 
partner Matt Lauer. In the pictures, it looks as if no time has  passed at 
all.

-- 
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