Posts with tag Bob Schieffer
Posted Jul 18th 2008 5:26PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: News, TCA Press Tour, Reality-Free

After the executive session, it was CBS News' turn to face the critics and talk about their election coverage. Via satellite from their New York studios was
CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric,
Face the Nation moderator Bob Schieffer, senior political correspondent Jeff Greenfield, and CBS News and Sports president Sean McManus.
Right away, a reporter brought up Katie Couric's job status. "I'm glad you got right to it," Couric joked. "I thought [the speculation] had died down considerably." She said she "can't control what media writers write. We live in an echo chamber," with media reporters more fascinated by her status than the general public is. "The attention befuddles me," she continued. She's concentrating on doing "the best job I can."
Continue reading As far as Katie Couric knows, she's staying - TCA Report
Posted Jun 16th 2008 12:01PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: News, Industry, OpEd, Watercooler Talk, Reality-Free

I'm sure a lot of you were scratching your heads over the weekend, wondering how
Tim Russert's passing merited the all-encompassing, presidential-like coverage it got, especially on his home network of NBC. He's only a reporter, right? Why the wall-to-wall coverage? Well, first of all, it seems that by all accounts, Russert was one of the most well-liked people in the news business, so the outpouring might have been a function of people mourning a friend who was taken from them too soon. But, I have another, more off-beat theory as to why NBC did a broadcast version of sitting shiva for Russert: it was because they have no idea how to replace him.
Think about it: he wasn't only the longtime moderator of
Meet The Press, where he took the venerable show and rejiggered its format, making him the face of the show. He was also NBC News' Washington bureau chief and the main political voice for the network. "It's going to take four or five people to replace Tim," CBS' Bob Schieffer told
The New York Times.
For now, though, the immediate question is who will replace him on
Meet The Press.
Speculation is already underway.Continue reading Who's replacing Tim Russert?
Posted May 27th 2008 12:43PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: News, Industry, Celebrities, Reality-Free

For once the info coming from CBS News is not about whether
Katie Couric's job is in jeopardy.
Face the Nation host Bob Schieffer has decided not to retire after all; he's staying with CBS News indefinitely.
The veteran newsman, who'll be 72 this year, had announced his retirement. He was going to leave the Black Rock as of the January presidential inauguration. Now he's decided to postpone the rocking chair. According to
TV Week, the network didn't have to twist his arm; the deal was easily and simply done. All Schieffer had to do was get his wife Pat's approval and he was able to tell CBS News and Sports President Sean McManus asked him not to step down as planned with the inauguration of a new president that he would remain.
Continue reading Bob Schieffer sticking with CBS News a little bit longer
Posted Apr 22nd 2008 11:41AM by Jonathan Toomey
Filed under: News, Industry, Cancellations
If you're sick of hearing about Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, then this should come as welcome news. According to TV Newser, the North Carolina Democratic Party has canceled a scheduled debate between the two remaining candidates. It was set to air on CBS. Katie Couric and Bob Schieffer were scheduled to moderate. It would have probably earned decent ratings, too, since CBS planned to air the hour long debate following an episode of 60 Minutes.
According to the NCDP website, the debate was canceled due to "time constraints and logistical issues." I suppose that makes sense. Both Clinton and Obama are running around like crazy in an effort to secure last minute votes during the final Democratic primaries. Pennsylvania's is today.
Continue reading CBS Democratic presidential debate canceled
Posted Feb 22nd 2008 2:04PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: News, Industry
I'd just like to say that there are a lot of TV sites on the web, but TV Squad is "The Best TV Site That Has Ever Existed Or Will Ever Exist On This Planet Or Any Other." And that's official, by the way.
Now that I've announced that, there seems to be a little battle going on with the cable news channels and even the regular networks when it comes to coverage of this year's Presidential election. CNN reminds us every three and a half minutes that they are "The Best Political Team On Television," almost as much as they remind us that "we're in The Situation Room"), and now CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric has jokingly named her team of Jeff Greenfield and Bob Schieffer "The Best Political Team In The Galaxy." They liked that, especially Greenfield, who used to be the political expert over on CNN.
Continue reading Who has the "Best Political Team On Television?"
Posted Sep 22nd 2007 8:06AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: News, Celebrities
Much has been said about Katie Couric and her year behind the anchor's desk on The CBS Evening News (some of it by Couric herself in a controversial New York interview). But now a journalist is going to interview Couric and she's going to talk about everything that's going on with her and with the news biz in general.
Veteran newsman Marvin Kalb is going to interview Couric as part of the Kalb Report Series, which is produced by George Washington University, Harvard's Joan Shorenstein Center, and The National Press Club. The interview will take place live on stage next Tuesday at The National Press Club, in front of students and members of the NPC.
Continue reading Katie Couric to talk about everything on Tuesday
Posted Sep 5th 2007 8:06AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: News, Celebrities

So much controversy about Katie Couric taking over
The CBS Evening News. And now
here it is a year later (she started on September 5, 2006), so I have to ask: how do you think she's doing?
I'll admit I had my doubts and might have even expressed them here, but in reality, I think she's doing fine. She can't do anything about the ratings, and the show was in third place long before Couric took over. As Bill Maher said when he was asked at the time how Couric was going to do, "I think she'll read the teleprompter fine." And she's done a fine job. Sure, there were some odd growing pains, like addressing the audience by saying "Hi everyone," the "Picture of the Week" and "First Person" segments that were dropped, and it looked a while there like they were going to end each episode by showing her legs, but the show has gotten a lot better.
Continue reading Happy Anniversary Katie!
Posted Jun 25th 2007 3:42PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: News, Programming, Ratings
All this talk about how Katie Couric is single-handedly destroying network news (supposedly) overlooks one fact: she's actually losing less viewers than Brian Williams over on NBC.
Couric lost 287,000 viewers over the first 39 weeks of her show compared to what the show did last year, and during that same time, Williams lost 533,000. He's now in second place behind ABC and Charles Gibson.
Of course, it doesn't mean that everyone who is leaving NBC or CBS is going over to ABC and Gibson. I think it's an indication of what's going on with network news in general (and NBC in particular).
Posted Mar 9th 2007 2:41PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: CBS, News, OpEd, Celebrities
Joel told you yesterday about Rick Kaplan being brought on to replace Rome Hartman as the executive producer of The CBS Evening News. Kaplan is (supposedly) being brought on to replace some of the lighter touches that Katie Couric has brought to the anchor role with some harder news and a different angle (I think the first thing he should do is to just tell her to stop saying "hi, everyone" when she opens the show).
But I'm wondering, will a new producer really help? Nothing against Kaplan (or Couric), but aren't viewers choices when it comes to the network news based on other things besides a new producer (or a new set or new theme music or a new logo)? Sure, he can make wide, sweeping changes, and maybe they'll help the quality of the show (even if they don't help the ratings), but aren't viewers set in their ways? They like Brian Williams. They like Charles Gibson, and these two will battle for the #1 slot. The CBS Evening News has been third for a long, long time, and maybe that's just where it will be, getting 6-7 million viewers a night.
I hope they didn't think the star power of Couric was going to bring the show to #1 quickly, if ever.
Posted Jan 4th 2007 6:30PM by Anna Johns
Filed under: ABC, NBC, CBS, News, TV Royalty, Festivus, Talk Show
(Part 4 of 5)Katie.
Meredith.
Rosie.
They all made big news and big career moves that changed the face of some very popular programs. This whole domino effect started in April, when Katie Couric announced the
"worst kept secret in television" that she was going to replace Bob Schieffer as the sole anchor of the
CBS Evening News. She spent her summer conducting town hall meetings with regular folk to find out what they want in a national newscast. And her first broadcast made worldwide news because she debuted
Vanity Fair's photographs of the elusive daughter of Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise. The excitement over Katie lasted for about a week.
Continue reading Top TV Stories of 2006: The Diva Shuffle
Posted Jan 4th 2007 8:01AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: ABC, NBC, CBS, News
I watch a lot of television, but one thing I'd hate to do is to actually keep track of what stories are talked about the most on the three networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) every night during their newscasts. Luckily, The Tyndall Report does it for me.
What were the three news stories that got the most coverage during the past year? Obviously, the war in Iraq was the No.1 story, followed by Israeli-Hezbollah fighting and the Hurrincane Katrina aftermath. The report lists the top 20 stories of 2006 (and I was very happy to see that Britney Spears' crotch is nowhere to be found on the list).
The report also lists the reporters that had the most airtime. The top three were NBC's David Gregory, ABC's Martha Raddatz and CBS' Jim Axelrod. I thought Lara Logan would be higher on the list, because I always watch her on CBS. The way her hair cascades down and her accent makes me shiver I think she's a first-rate journalist.
Posted Dec 13th 2006 7:23PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: CBS, News, Industry, OpEd

In today's
Philadelphia Inquirer, three female media figures
talk to writer Gail Shister about the high expectations on Katie Couric, who is (altogether now) the first solo female weeknight anchor in network history. All three experts think that people are expecting Couric to turn things around quickly, mainly because of her historic ascension to the
CBS Evening News anchor chair. But things don't usually work that way.
One of the experts interviewed was Connie Chung, who knows about this issue more than most; she spent two largely tension-filled years of the mid-nineties co-anchoring the CBS news with Dan Rather. "All this takes an enormous amount of time," she told Shister. "TV viewing rarely changes dramatically, whereas programmers do. I think Katie's holding her own nicely." She goes on to say that experts should stop constantly judging Couric.
I tend to agree with Connie. Yes, Couric's ratings aren't good (in fact, the article states, the November ratings were slightly lower than they were when Bob Schieffer was anchor). But she should be given room to find her legs, no pun intended. She did a pretty nice job on Election Night, which bodes well for her ability to cover breaking stories down the road.
Posted Dec 11th 2006 12:24PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: CBS, News, Industry, Celebrities, Ratings
It's been widely reported that after a first week of getting fantastic ratings, the ratings have dropped for Katie Couric's CBS Evening News. This isn't really a big surprise. Of course curious people were going to tune into the show the first week, to see how Katie did, and then as the weeks went by the show would fall back into its third place slot behind The NBC Nightly News and ABC's World News.
So what's up with the commercials for Katie's show? After a montage of her work on the show, the announcer says "More people are watching The CBS Evening News." What does that mean? Isn't that an incomplete sentence? Maybe something like "More people are watching The CBS Evening News than ever before (that wouldn't be true - the ratings are down 2% from the same period last year - but at least there wouldn't be any confusion to the meaning)? The show's ratings are down, so I'm not quite sure what's going on there. Maybe they mean "More people are watching The CBS Evening News...
- "...than went to see the movie Gigli."
- "...while eating cheeseburgers in their underwear."
- "...and what we mean by "More" is the last name, the Mores. They live in Springfield, Illinois and watch the show every night."
Posted Oct 26th 2006 2:45PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Cable, News, TV Royalty, Celebrities
After newsman Dan Rather left was fired from was forced out of departed CBS after four decades plus, a lot of people had no idea what the hell he was going to do. But then came news that he had signed on to Mark Cuban's HDNet, and now comes word that Rather's show will start on November 14 at 8pm.
It will be a news show called Dan Rather Reports, with Rather as the anchor, and will feature three segments: the war, a focus on the middle class, and politics. In other words, it sounds a lot like other news shows, but I guess the secret is in how they'll do it.
And to answer the next question you have, no, he really hasn't seen what Katie Couric is doing in his new seat. He's been too busy.
Posted Oct 23rd 2006 2:42PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: CBS, News, OpEd
I have a love/hate relationship with that freeSpeech (yeah, that's the spelling CBS seems to like to use so I'll use it too) segment on The CBS Evening News. I think it's an interesting idea, but it has several things wrong with it. First, the topics are usually things that everyone can agree with and aren't really counter to anything. Then we had the revelation from Bill Maher that he wanted to do something controversial on religion, and they kinda balked. And lately I've been seeing freeSpeech segments with Bob Schieffer, who is a CBS newsman and the former host of the show. Huh? Are they not getting enough people who want to talk on TV? I doubt that. And just last week a freeSpeech segment featured Katie Couric interviewing Senator John McCain. Again, huh?
Still, it's a good idea. Tonight might be interesting: TV Newser is reporting that FOX News' Sean Hannity will be giving his viewpoint.
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