Tim Russert's Death leaves two Voids at NBC
Posted on Mon, 16 Jun 2008 05:47:34 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Paul J. Gough
NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - NBC News' Andrea Mitchell and David Gregory are
two likely candidates to split "Meet the Press" duties after Friday's sudden
death of moderator and Washington bureau chief Tim Russert.
Mitchell is a veteran NBC News correspondent who has been covering the
presidential campaign and who is known as a tough interviewer. Gregory is chief
White House correspondent, a substitute host on "Today" and since this year has
had his own nightly show on MSNBC, "Race for the White House."
Both possess some of Russert's critical skills. But NBC News is considered to
have a deep political bench, and other candidates could still surface.
Nonetheless, Russert's passing has left a void at a crucial time for NBC News.
Not only did Russert take "Press" to the top ratings spot more than seven years
ago, but he also was the face of the network's political coverage, setting the
direction and the tone as bureau chief.
Top-level network jobs often take years to grow into and involve a tricky
transition period. (It took about 18 months for Brian Williams to take over the
anchor spot left by Tom Brokaw.) In this case, NBC doesn't have the luxury of
time, with the biggest political story of recent years -- the presidential
election -- playing out right now.
Mitchell has the experience and contacts to smooth the transition at "Press."
She has been a mainstay at NBC News for decades and already anchors an MSNBC
hour daily.
Gregory is a rising star known for sparring with White House press secretaries;
he could continue Russert's tradition of tough questioning on the Sunday
public-affairs program. He also has been seen within NBC as an eventual
replacement for Chris Matthews on "Hardball."
LEADERSHIP ROLE
"Everybody is going to want that seat on 'Meet the Press,' and they're going to
have a hard time at NBC trying to decide who possibly can take that place,"
ABC's Barbara Walters said Friday on CNN's "Larry King Live." "Not only that,
they have to have somebody to head the Washington bureau. This was not just a
job and name only. Tim did the hiring. He did the firing."
Finding a successor to lead the bureau could be even more challenging for the
Peacock than filling the "Press" spot. One in-house executive widely thought to
have the chops is Chuck Todd, who was handpicked by Russert to be NBC's
political director. Todd apparently is well liked at 30 Rock as well.
Russert's death also will rattle the normally staid world of the Sunday
public-affairs shows. Under Russert, "Press" began to beat ABC's "This Week" in
1998 and leapfrogged it for good in July 2000.
In its most recent week of regular ratings -- last week's was affected by
coverage of the French Open tennis tournament -- "Press" was solidly in the
lead, averaging 4.1 million viewers, well ahead of second-place "This Week" (2.6
million), CBS' "Face the Nation" (2.5 million) and "Fox News Sunday" (1.4
million), Nielsen Media Research said.
Also uncertain is the status of the interview program "The Tim Russert Show."
Russert spent one of his final hours taping the weekend show, but MSNBC instead
chose to air a primetime tribute. It isn't known whether the final show will
air.
"This is going to be a tough one for NBC," one TV journalist said. "There are a
lot of good reporters, a lot of good interviewers around, but Tim had become
something of an institution. He will not be easily replaced."
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
© Copyright 2008 Reuters.
Posted on Mon, 16 Jun 2008 05:47:34 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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