Posted on 03/22/2014 6:46:14 AM PDT by rickmichaels
You may have noticed a certain theme in recent coverage on the 24-hour news channels a certain missing airplane and speculation on where it might be. Malaysias Flight 370 has been the big story on cable news recently, but nowhere has it been bigger than on CNN. Despite the almost complete lack of information about what happened, CNN made it a semi-permanent story, pre-empting many shows for Flight 370 coveragemostly consisting of speculation, since there were hardly any facts to go on. By the time the networks Don Lemon was speculating that the plane might have disappeared into a black hole or was the victim of something supernatural, you might have been forgiven for wondering if some kind of craziness was in the air at CNN.
Well, if CNNs crazy, its crazy like a 24-hour fox. Because the tragedy of the lost jetliner has been a joyous occasion for the network, whose ratings have improved dramatically thanks to the story. Bill Carter of the New York Times notes that CNNs numbers have gone up so dramatically that theyve actually beaten Fox News a few times during prime time. Three times last week, Anderson Coopers 8 p.m. show beat out Foxs top star, Bill OReilly, among viewers aged 25 to 54, the demographic that advertisers pay a premium for on news channels. A senior CNN executive, who may or may not be CNN head Jeff Zucker (the source asked not to be identified, but Zucker is a familiar Carter source from back when he was running NBC), gleefully called it a tremendous story that is completely in our wheelhouse, and it seems to be virtually the only kind of story that can make people change the channel to CNN en masse.
CNNs ratings problems have long been a familiar story: continually crushed by the conservative juggernaut Fox News, its also sometimes lost ground to MSNBC and its crop of liberal pundits. CNN has gone through many shows and hosts trying to fix its viewership problems, and nothing has worked. Most recently, CNN canceled its prime-time interview show Piers Morgan Live, a disastrous attempt to make an American news star out of British host tainted by the UKs phone-hacking scandal. Nothing that has been tried so far by Zucker, or his predecessor, has been able to turn around CNNs serious disadvantage when it comes to nightly and daily pundit shows.
But when a big round-the-clock news story breaks, then CNN roars to life like the Godzilla of news. This may be the biggest ratings bump CNN has recently gotten from a major story, but it isnt the first. Last year, the network was widely mocked for its coverage of the Boston Marathon bombing, and particularly for its false assertion that a suspect had been taken into custody. But it didnt matter that CNN wasnt doing the most accurate reporting on the story: its ratings increased by 194 per cent during the coverage of the bombing, compared to a 48 per cent jump for Fox (though that still left Fox in the lead). On a slow news day, people wouldnt turn on CNN if you paid thembut if a real 24-hour story is happening, those same people all rush to see what CNN is saying.
What can account for this split personality on CNNs part, between the successful purveyor of big ongoing stories and the brutally unsuccessful network that operates on all the other days of the year? The clue might be in something veteran media analyst Brad Adgate said to Reuters last year: CNN, despite its ratings woes, is still a destination network for the light and casual news viewers. They have been around longer than anyone else. The people who follow something like the Flight 370 story may, in many cases, be people who dont usually watch 24-hour news. But when a story breaks that theyre interested in following all day and all night, CNN is still the place they instinctively go. It has the brand name left over from the Gulf War in the 90s; it has the resources for doing this kind of saturation coverage. CNN is the first network that comes to mind for this type of story.
But when there isnt a story this juicy, with this kind of crossover appeal to people who arent news junkies, then CNN is lost. Its on these other days that Fox News really shines. Fox News is built not around news stories but around punditry, and its selection of news often consists of taking an item that isnt that interesting in itself and funnelling it through the outrage of their pundits and panels. If its a slow news day, the rage on Fox News or the policy-wonk nerdiness on MSNBC will make it seem like something outrageous and important is always happening. CNN, with a poor track record hiring pundits and its desire to avoid a partisan slant in its punditry, is out in the cold when it comes to firing up the 365-day-a-year news addicts.
That means CNNs year-round ratings problem may never be solved, unless Zucker aggressively changes its approach and its lineup of news anchors. Failing that, the network can only hope and pray for something like Malaysia Flight 370 to last as long as possible. But everything ends. The appearance of some leads on possible debris from the plane has already begun to dampen CNNs coverage; now that it seems more like a conventional plane crash rather than a supernatural mystery, were already seeing the reporters devote slightly more time to Ukraine and other such unimportant matters. And when CNN has to bid a reluctant farewell to the plane story, itll go back to being the weak link in the 24-hour news chainuntil another crossover story breaks, and the sometimes viewers all come running back to CNN again.
A couple of nights ago, CNN devoted at least three consecutive hours to the story even though the only fresh news was about the inconclusive Chinese satellite pics.
The Koch brothers acting on orders from Daddy Bush and the Illuminati. (sarc)
FACTS! I WANT FA-....I MEAN INNUENDO....I WANT INNUENDO! - Milo (Bloom County)
Who can forget, “They’re eating babies in the Superdome, Geraldo!!!” “And crapping down their throats, Shep!”
Yeah, that.
Nothing is happening, there is no NEWS to report. Speculation is not news, it’s at best infotainment (wow, the dictionary has that word). NOBODY that is actually a NEWS organization should be covering it until the plane is found, the story has been over (pending ACTUAL findings) for almost 2 weeks. But it has been great TV for CNN, it’s helped them sell many eyeballs to advertisers.
Just about anything.
There is nothing new on the plane. If they want to give a five minute update with all the new speculation they would have 4 minutes to spare.
There are a lot of other things happening in the world. At least one of them which is actually going to have an effect on the country as a whole.
It is not the missing plane that is important. It is the story they are not reporting on that is important.
Obama must really be in trouble for the media to suck the air out of all other stories to cover this one missing plane story.
I can remember when Bill Clinton was on the ropes with one scandal after another and then the focus changed as there was a plane crash, and for weeks, all the news was on that one plane crash. Rope a dope worked for Clinton. Will it work for Obama.
Of course the reverse is also true. When the left when after Nixon, all three (and there were only three) networks would use the first five or ten minutes of their news program talking about Watergate. This continued until he was ran out of office.
I expect that CNN will cover this story bigtime 24/7 until the death of the battery in the Black Box [orange box FDR] — 15 more days to go.
As they approach the end of the 30 days they will have a countdown clock behind them to add to the drama titled Hours until the Death of the Black Box.
When the 30 days are up the clock will start again titled this time Hours since the Death of the Black Box.
Looks like CNN’s reporter will get to use her row boat again
It won’t last much longer.
Has BOR ever conceded he lost the ratings to another network? It seems every time I see his show he will be bragging about his ratings higher than the other networks combined in prime time. I saw this recently as last week when he was praising himself.
Yeah... But the chicks are hotter on FOX.
So what facts did CNN report light years before Fox? Reporting 500% more of nothing isn’t exactly better.
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