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- <text id=92TT0383>
- <title>
- Feb. 17, 1992: Prime Time Lively
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 17, 1992 Vanishing Ozone
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 85
- Prime Time Lively
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Magazine news shows are among the networks' hottest drawing
- cards. But are they more show than news?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--With reporting by Georgia Harbison/New York
- </p>
- <p> A group of TV executives from Eastern Europe confessed at
- a CNN conference last month that the newly freed TV channels in
- their countries have left viewers bored. The problem: too much
- news and not enough entertainment. Just another case where the
- former Soviet empire has a lot of catching up to do with the
- West. In the jaded U.S., viewers are bored with entertainment
- and can't seem to get enough news.
- </p>
- <p> At least, they can't get enough of the networks'
- prime-time news programs. CBS's venerable 60 Minutes, the
- closest thing to a perpetual-motion machine yet developed by
- network TV, is riding higher than ever as the most watched show
- on television. ABC's PrimeTime Live, after a rocky shakedown
- period, has emerged as a solid ratings success, while its older
- sibling, 20/20, is still going strong after 13 seasons. Back at
- CBS, 48 Hours (which departs from the newsmagazine format by
- focusing on one subject for an hour in cinema-verite fashion)
- has become a sleeper hit and has even generated a spin-off:
- Street Stories, which did well enough in four outings last month
- to win a renewal through the summer.
- </p>
- <p> These shows are increasingly the forum of choice for
- headlinemakers. Democratic presidential contender Bill Clinton
- and his wife Hillary went on 60 Minutes to respond to charges
- of marital infidelity--breaking their plans to appear on other
- news interview shows in order to ensure a bigger audience.
- Patricia Bowman, the woman who accused William Kennedy Smith of
- rape, shed her anonymity with Diane Sawyer on PrimeTime Live.
- Anita Hill appeared last week on 60 Minutes for her first TV
- interview since the Clarence Thomas hearings.
- </p>
- <p> The boom shows no signs of slackening. NBC, the one
- network conspicuously left off the prime-time news bandwagon,
- will try again in late March with a new show, Dateline NBC,
- co-anchored by Jane Pauley and Stone Phillips. And ABC is
- currently assembling the staff for yet another news hour, which
- will compete head-to-head with 60 Minutes on Sunday nights,
- perhaps as early as this summer.
- </p>
- <p> From the networks' standpoint, the shows make economic
- sense: they cost only half as much to produce as entertainment
- programs, and a successful one can run virtually forever.
- Viewers, for their part, may be turning to news out of
- exasperation with the sameness of network entertainment fare.
- Andrew Heyward, executive producer of 48 Hours, theorizes that
- short newsmagazine segments suit the habits of zap-happy
- viewers. "Unlike a drama show," he says, "you don't have to
- watch the whole hour to get something out of it." PrimeTime Live
- executive producer Richard Kaplan contends that people are
- "hungry for information," possibly because of the hard economic
- times. "Maybe there's a correlation between people's interest
- in what's going on and their own economic situation," he says.
- </p>
- <p> But if viewers are starved for news, the prime-time fare
- provides a limited diet. Competing for an audience against shows
- like L.A. Law and Quantum Leap, these programs face demands
- that the nightly newscasts do not. A prime-time newsmagazine
- has no obligation to cover the "important" news; its goal is
- simply to win enough viewers to survive. Thus, these shows
- gravitate toward the same crowd-pleasing subjects: sex, crime,
- consumer rip-offs, health news, human-interest weepers.
- Important but more remote issues--the budget deficit,
- education policy, the workings of Congress--are either ignored
- or reduced to small-scale "people" stories. Only 60 Minutes pays
- much attention to foreign news.
- </p>
- <p> More important for these shows is the "great get": that
- exclusive interview with the tabloid-press star of the week,
- from Marla Maples to Mike Tyson (rest assured, he'll turn up on
- one show or another once his rape trial is over). These shows
- compete fiercely for such interviews--not just with one
- another but also with the daytime talk shows and syndicated
- magazine shows like A Current Affair. The journalistic result,
- however, is often skimpy. Ed Bradley's 60 Minutes interview with
- Anita Hill, for example, was surprisingly bland; he probed
- little into her personal life, and she said little that was new.
- </p>
- <p> The producers of these shows deny any tilt toward tabloid
- subjects. "These are not sensational stories; these are stories
- in the headlines," says Victor Neufeld, executive producer of
- 20/20. Heyward admits there are some topics that the prime-time
- shows have a hard time doing. "But that's one reason the
- networks still need documentary units," he says. "There are some
- subjects that need to be done, damn the ratings, full speed
- ahead."
- </p>
- <p> The rise of the magazine shows, of course, is a major
- reason why the full-length network documentary has all but
- disappeared. Yet their formats are flexible enough to
- accommodate the big stories on occasion. PrimeTime Live gave a
- full hour in December to a Ted Koppel report on Gorbachev's
- final hours in power, and 48 Hours last week ran a highly rated
- special report on the Kennedy assassination. It may not be the
- budget deficit, but it's a long jump from Quantum Leap.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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