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The Scoreboard: Thursday, May 24

25-54 demographic (Live +SD)

  • Total day: FNC: 295 | MSNBC: 130 | CNN: 81 | HLN: 72
  • Primetime: FNC: 367 | MSNBC: 216 | CNN: 118 | HLN: 72

5p: 6p: 7p: 8p: 9p: 10p: 11p: 12a:
FNC TheFive: Baier: Shep: O’Reilly: Hannity: Greta: O’Reilly: Hannity:
310 344 333 491 372 239 323 365
MSNBC Matthews: Sharpton: Matthews: EdShow: Maddow: O’Donnell: EdShow: Maddow:
110 147 161 166 290 193 160 131
CNN Blitzer: KingUSA: Burnett: Cooper: Morgan: Cooper: Burnett: Morgan:
87 78 59 74 131 147 94 89
HLN Special: Prime: VelezMitchell: Grace: DrDrew: Grace: Showbiz: DrDrew:
36 34 90 93 64 63 93 81

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MEDIABISTRO EVENTS

Use Social Media to Market Your Business

Launch a social media campaign that will build your brand and deliver results in our online Social Media Marketing Boot Camp starting June 7. Speakers include Abigail Cusick (Bravo Digital), Gregory Galant (Sawhorse Media), Alex Leo (Thomson Reuters Digital), Jim Tobin (Ignite Social Media), and many more. Read the reviews.

Liz Claman Joins ABC’s ‘This Week’ Roundtable

Liz Claman is the latest Fox anchor to make a guest appearance on ABC’s “This Week.” The Fox Business Network anchor will join the roundtable on Sunday. A few weeks ago, Greta Van Susteren went on the show. And perhaps the most prominent Fox News appearance on ABC’s “This Week” came a couple years ago, when Roger Ailes was a guest as Barbara Walters filled in as moderator.

Of all cross-network talent bookings, ABC and Fox News share the most. Bill O’Reilly appearing on “The View” or “Good Morning America,” can be as common as Walters or Diane Sawyer turning up on “The O’Reilly Factor”.

See, Roger Ailes Was Right About Jon Stewart

After regreting some of the things he said the other night during a speech at Ohio University, (like saying The New York Times was a “cesspool of bias” and calling Times reporters a “lying bunch of scum”), Fox News co-founder and chairman Roger Ailes has been proven right on one of his claims: that Jon Stewart is a self-described “socialist.”

Newsbusters dug up the video from “Larry King Live” in 2000:

Has Cable News Peaked?

Reuters columnist Jack Shafer argues that the audience for cable news has peaked:

The consensus view put the onus on the Web: Now when big news breaks, the polled pundits agreed, the curious go to the Web (often via their mobile device) instead of cable news. Outside the Beltway‘s Doug Mataconis speculated that the potential audience for overtly liberal (MSNBC) and overtly conservative (Fox) TV news had maxed out.

Other possible reasons for the cable news slump is that the three channels (plus CNN’s subsidiary channel, HLN), approached maximum carriage on large cable systems years ago. Upwards of 90 percent of U.S. households already subscribe to cable or satellite TV, and most carry the news channels, so there are very few eyeballs out there that would like to tune in to CNN, Fox News and MSNBC but can’t.

As we have written about before, and as Shafer notes, the cable news channels spend an inordinate amount of time covering banal political maneuvers (despite Howard Kurtz‘s erroneous argument). Politics is an inherently difficult field of news to cover objectively, as, with the exception of journalists, essentially everyone interested in the day-to-day political coverage is already engaged and extremely biased.

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‘CBS This Morning’ Celebrates 100 Shows

This morning was the 100th edition of “CBS This Morning,” the morning news program launched by CBS in January.

“We are at a point now where the operations of the show are a well-oiled machine, or at least getting there,” EP of “CBS This Morning” Chris Licht tells TVNewser. “Everyone is in a rhythm, they know what their job is, we have some stability, and now we are at the end of phase one of many phases, and now it is just every day looking to make it better.”

The anniversary was not the focus of the show, but it was given a brief mention at the end by anchors Erica Hill, Gayle King and Charlie Rose. On social media platforms, producers sparked conversation with viewers using the #100Mornings hashtag.

“For a show like this to launch cleanly, every part of this building had to really reinvent themselves,” Licht says. “Because we did things differently, from the engineering department to the editing department, photography, everybody had to be on board with this, and there is no way we would have launched so cleanly had not everyone in the building really pulled together under Jeff [Fager] and David [Rhodes] and said ‘ok, we are going to make this work.’”

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Sunday Show Ratings: May 20

The Sunday show ratings see-saw continued unabated last week, with NBC’s “Meet the Press” reclaiming the top spot in both total and demo viewers. CBS’ “Face the Nation” was a close second in both categories.

ABC’s “This Week,” “Fox News Sunday” and “Al Punto” rounded our the top five.

All of the programs were down in both total and demo viewers compared to the same week a year ago.

Rebroadcasts of “Meet the Press” on MSNBC and NBC added 1.04M and 470,000, respectively.

“Face the Nation” is based on the first half-hour only, as the full contiguous hour airs in just 64% of the country.

The numbers for May 20:

Network Program Total Viewers A25-54
NBC
“Meet the Press” 2.70M 868K
CBS
“Face the Nation” 2.64M 717K
ABC “This Week” 2.02M 601K
FOX “Fox News Sunday” 929M 389K
Univision “Al Punto” 574K 254K

Erin Burnett Remembers Mark Haines

As we noted, CNBC anchors remembered their friend and colleague Mark Haines yesterday. Haines died unexpectedly a year ago.

On her CNN program, Erin Burnett, who spent more than five years next to Haines at the CNBC anchor desk, delivered a heartfelt remembrance of her former colleague:

The Morning Ticker: Regis, ‘Nightline,’ Owens

  • “Nightline” is poised to win the May sweep after winning the week of May 14. It’s the 8th straight week the ABC news show has topped Letterman and Leno in Total Viewers as well as A25-54 and A18-49 viewers.
  • Bill Owens, the executive editor of “60 Minutes,” will receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Towson University’s College of Fine Arts and Communication today.

HLN to Broadcast Daytime Emmy Awards

HLN made it official today, announcing it will broadcast the 39th annual daytime Emmy Awards next month. The daytime Emmys will be presented Saturday, June 23 at 8pmET, at The Beverly Hilton hotel.

“HLN is thrilled to work with NATAS to celebrate some of television’s best programs and performances,” said HLN SVP and general manager Scot Safon. “Every day we focus on the news and information people talk about, and that has included extensive coverage of the Daytime Emmys in the past. This year, we’re very excited to also be carrying the event itself.”

At next month’s event, Barbara Walters will present Bill Geddie, Executive Producer of “The View” and the “Barbara Walters Specials,” with the Daytime Lifetime Achievement Award.

Anderson Cooper is nominated as best talk show host, along with Dr. Oz, Rachel Ray, Regis Philbin and Kelly Ripa and the doctors from “The Doctors.” “Anderson” is also nominated in the Best Informative Talk Show category alongside “Dr. Oz” and “The Doctors.”

CBS has televised the broadcast the last two years. In 2009, the CW aired the show. And in prior years, the Daytime Emmys aired on ABC, CBS and NBC.

Coming Soon: NBCNews.com and a Politics-Centric MSNBC.com?

AdWeek‘s Mike Shields reports that NBCUniversal is in talks with Microsoft to buy the tech company’s stake in MSNBC.com.

Several sources with first-hand knowledge of the situation say that negotiations between the two companies have progressed to the stage where NBCU parent company Comcast is conducting its due diligence. They said that the partnership could be unwound by this summer.

A spokesperson confirmed to TVNewser that conversations were taking place between the two companies.

Microsoft sold a majority stake in the cable channel MSNBC to NBCU back in 2005, but it maintained control of the website, which is an enormously popular online destination.

The deal, if consummated, could result in two separate websites, NBCNews.com and a reworked MSNBC.com, according to an NBC News staffer.

Inside NBC, there has been talk of a new website for weeks. The site is believed to be NBCNews.com, which would serve as a news hub, as well as the online home for programs like “NBC Nightly News,” “Meet the Press” and “Rock Center.” MSNBC.com would probably serve as the home for the cable channel’s politically-focused programming and news.

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