On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 7:14 AM, Tom Wolper <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 12:46 AM, PGage <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > NBC, as has been their recent history, were dicks in this situation.
>
> They may not have a choice any more. I link below to a short blog post
> by Kevin Drum of Mother Jones about the way public people are fired
> today. His example is an LA museum curator, but it is relevant for
> Curry:
>
> "Question: is it even possible to fire a public figure any longer
> without having it first leaked on blogs and Twitter? It barely seems
> like it. I have a feeling that if you fire someone these days, you
> should be prepared to announce it pretty much instantly. If you don't,
> it will inevitably end up on the internet somewhere and you'll get
> dinged for "handling it badly." Might as well just announce it on your
> own Twitter feed instead."
>
>
> http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2012/06/21st-century-we-will-all-be-fired-twitter
>

I guess it depends on what you mean by instantly. The reports I referenced
suggested that Lauer had made it clear during his recent contract
renegotiation talks in March (eventually formalized in early April) that he
did not think Curry was working and wanted to make a change. That was three
months ago. I don't think it is too much to act for an employer to either
decide at that point to make the change (judging, rightly, that Lauer was
more important to them than Curry), offering Curry a relatively easy out
from her contract instead of a messy firing, or make the decision that
Curry was their girl, tell Lauer to suck it up, and then give her a real
chance to make it work.

The dickishness here to me is not their decision to fire her (I actually
think they made a mistake in picking her as cohost to begin with; as a very
casual observer I would have gone with Guthrie to replace Vierra, and let
Curry go to CNN up front). The dickishness is in their deciding to keep her
even after Matt was dumping on her, only to toss her over the bus as a
sacrificial lamb at the first real sign of ratings trouble (I know they had
signs of rating trouble before March, but they recently had some
symbolically important signs).

The link that ties the Conan situation to Curry is NBC's cultural inability
to make tough decisions (a culture apparently unaffected by recent
corporate changes). In latenight, they could not really commit to one host;
keeping them both around tempted them to give into dickishness when times
got a little tough. In terms of being dicks, they would have been better
off either going all in with Conan originally and wishing Leno the best in
whatever future endeavors he wanted to pursue; or going all in with Leno
and telling Conan he could either wait around until Leno decided to hang it
up, or wish him well on his future endeavors. Similarly with Curry, they
could have (should have, IMO) passed her by in the first place as co-host,
but no doubt were afraid she would burn them somehow at CNN (or wherever).

Now, that is just on the dick-scale; maybe just in terms of business both
decisions have been pretty good. When NBC made their original Conan deal
they thought Leno was going to either retire or be waning in popularity by
the time the transition rolled around. When it turned out Leno was both
interested in continuing and still popular, NBC engaged in a complicated
series of moves the result of which kept the guy with the proven track
record in harness. In the morning, they have found a way to get a more
popular female co-host while keeping a potentially effective rival away
from their competition.

-- 
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