With time, I managed to respect him as a journalist until his true nature
surfaced in a magnanimous way with his ARROGANCE and his superficial
attitude of indifference and invulnerabililty
Can anyone save the Today show?
By Carmel Lobello | The Week – 5 hrs ago
That's the multi-million dollar question facing NBC
In recent months, NBC's Today show — long touted as "America's First Family" — has been exposed, for better or worse, as America's First Dysfunctional Family. And as rumors of teasing, tension, and backstabbing behind the scenes have surfaced, the show has ceded its 18-year run as America's number one morning show.
Matt Lauer is at the center of the drama. Once the darling of morning TV, loved for his ability to glide seamlessly between hard news interviews and lighthearted banter, he's now being painted as a bully. Since Ann Curry's teary on-air departure in June 2012, after only one year of co-hosting, rumors about Lauer's part in her ousting have bubbled up, culminating in headlines like "The real Today show is run by the unpopular bully Matt Lauer."
The unusually dramatic and public departure of Curry, who replaced Meredith Vieira and was eventually replaced by Savannah Guthrie, has undeniably left a stain on the show. Today had been on a ratings winning streak against top rival Good Morning America since 1995 — a run that ended around the time of Curry's exit. And now, the ratings are still drooping. "On particularly bad days,Good Morning America beat Today by a million viewers," says Brian Stelter in an epic New York Times story on the show. That ratings slump has cost NBC millions upon millions of advertising dollars.
Morning shows are network TV's cash cow. As Stelter puts it, "While the Internet has upended the nightly news, and on-demand services like Netflix continue to disrupt prime time, the morning shows remain one place in the TV industry where the business model still really works, at least for now. Thanks to its five million daily viewers and four hours of irrepressible cheer, Today earns NBC $500 million in annual revenue." That's particularly critical for NBC, which is languishing among its network competitors.
As Lauer's reputation crumbles and his contract nears its end (the deal expires next year), some fear his new co-host, Savannah Guthrie, doesn't have the cache to carry the show back to number one, especially as Curry's fans — a passionate bunch — refuse to embrace Guthrie.
So who can save this dysfunctional family? It's a multi-million dollar question, one for which no one seems to know the answer. That said, these five names continue to float around...
Ryan Seacrest
Seacrest has certainly been building his morning show credentials. NBC already tapped him to cover the Olympic Games in London last summer, which seemed to mark a transition away from red carpet coverage for E! and toward more serious coverage for the network. The notoriously hard worker could bring a fresh edge — and plenty of viewers from a decade of hosting American Idol.
Willie Geist
Josh Elliot
Anderson Cooper
Megyn Kelly
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