Category Archives: Katie Couric

Requiem for a Network

Barbarians at the Gate: Odoacer takes the number one slot, prime time and otherwise

1976 marked the fifteen hundredth anniversary of the fall of the Roman Empire.

It passed pretty much unnoticed.

1976 had been the 200th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independent, and that got some pretty good play in the press. The Sack of Rome by Odoacer in 476AD did not receive much play or fanfare, which is kind of too bad, because we don’t get to celebrate the 1500th anniversary of too much, let alone the collapse of the number one Empire (at least until Britain) in the Western World.

It is only now that historians can start to take a look at what led to the fall of Rome, a fairly significant event in our past (as it precipitated a thousand years of the Dark Ages, for starters).

I am not going to draw an analogy here between the United States and Rome (though there are many) but rather between (very loosely), the fall of Rome and the fall of Network News, (another predominant Empire in the throes of collapse).

Modern historiography can give many reasons for the fall of Rome, from the Christianization of the Barbarians to overextension to lead in the drinking water. All agree, however, that Rome was not overthrown by outside forces so much as the seeds for its own destruction were carried within the very structure of the Empire itself. Here, I think, is the parallel to TV News.

Many years ago (at the start of time), television news was populated by the best and the brightest of a generation. Murrow’s Boys, (as they were called), came from the wire services. They were first and foremost journalists. They got on TV almost by accident. It was the sheer quality of their reporting and writing, their thinking in fact (think Eric Sevareid, if you can remember him), that produced the ‘trust’ that the network news was known for.

The ‘show’ was secondary.

Somewhere along the line, the networks (and local) lost the thread.

The ‘show’ became everything; the content of lesser consequence.

Anchors became all hair and teeth.

The ‘show’ was all about graphics and music and live remotes from people standing in the dark or in front of courthouse buildings.

The consequence of all this was a debasement of the quality of the content.

Worse still, as television news embraced Hollywood concepts – the ‘show’, it also embraced Hollywood salaries (for the Star). Anchors, both network and even local, began to move with an entourage of support teams – hair, lights, stylists, makeup, writers, hand holders.

I am told that every word that Peter Jennings ever uttered on screen (and perhaps off) was written by a team consisting of Schulder, Blatt and Stein.

As the ‘star’ concept was ratcheted up, so too were the salaries. We know Ms. Couric’s but that is only the tip of the iceberg in this business.

Well, those multi million dollar salaries have to come from somewhere (even in local, those salaries have to come from somewhere), and where they come from is the budget for the newsroom. They are paid in journalists and crew and equipment. When it comes time to slash the budget, the anchor (ironically) is the last to get tossed overboard. (which is ironic, because they are more often than not the ones who do the least work in the place).

CBS News is now at one of those places where, because they are in so much trouble, (ratings keep dropping to new lows each week), they could.. they could… take a really radical step. They could trash the whole unworkable system and create a very interesting digital newsroom where they could (could) hire the best journalists in the world today (look at places like Huffington Post for starters), and kick ass. With their budgets the could do it in a heartbeat!

But they won’t.

Like their pals 1500 years ago, they will be content to fiddle while CBS burns.

One Down… Two to Go

And that’s the way it is….

CBS News apparently is about to outsource part of its newsgathering operation to CNN, or so says The New York Times.

This is hardly surprising. For far too long network news operations have been fat.

CBS News had a lot of time to restructure; to take advantage of what the new technologies offered. Beet-tv reported today that Reuters News is covering Iraq with 35 videojournalists. CBS News, apparently has opted for no coverage of Iraq.

The fate of CBS News is hardly surprising. Following in the ignoble footsteps of other American corporations like Kodak, who preferred to go down clinging to the past rather than embrace new and scary technologies. Their loss, and ours.

Perhaps the last gasp of a defunct and completely out of touch management was Katie Couric’s pornographic $15 million a year salary – to work 22 minutes a night reading what someone else had written. The sheer stupidity of this, the sheer short-sightedness of it now becomes obvious to everyone. For Couric’s reported $15 million, CBS could have (could have) hired and fielded an astonishing 150 Videojournalists worldwide, paying them a quite honorable $100,000 a year to report for CBS News. CBS News could have (could have) placed itself on the cutting edge of the digital news revolution.

Instead they opted to become the dinosaur poster child of the end of old media.

Goodbye Tiffany Network.

You blew it.

Couric v. Halberstam

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David Halberstam – Journalist

I am about 1/3 of the way through David Halberstam’s last book, The Coldest Winter, a history of the Korean War. Continue reading

And now… the ‘news’….


News you can use……
We have lived in the Soviet Union of television journalism for so long that we have actually come to believe that the ‘controlled’ system is ‘better’ than a messy system where anyone can produce anything they like. Continue reading

The Peasants Are Revolting!

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…. storming the CBS Building…..

The printing press unleashed a revolution unforseen by Gutenberg.

The ‘people’ were suddenly in control of information.

And those who had until then complete power over information did not like this at all.

The Cheese and the Worms by the Italian historian Carlo Ginzburg gives us an analysis of the impact of literacy on Medieval Europe. Menocchio, a peasant has learned how to read on his own. He is the first in his small village to do so. And he immediately starts to ask unpleasant questions. Continue reading

The Road to Recovery

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We can kick this thing… we can…..

As anyone who has ever attended an AA meeting will tell you, the road to recovery begins with honesty

Before you can get ‘better’ you have to be honest about the problem. You have to have the courage to stand up before the group and say, “my name is Lindsay and I am an alcoholic”. That is step 1. Continue reading

Anchors Away

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That works out to…. $144,000.00 per hour… Hooray!!!

The Guardian, (and Jeff Jarvis) are reporting today that Mark Thompson, the Director General of the BBC told a committee of Parliament that he foresaw the end of ‘anchors’ in the near future.

This is no bad thing.

The whole concept of ‘anchor’ is a complete waste of time and money. Continue reading

Burn It To The Ground

thanks Jeff Jarvis!