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- <text id=90TT0526>
- <title>
- Feb. 26, 1990: Miscues In The Morning
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 26, 1990 Predator's Fall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 59
- Miscues in The Morning
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Deborah's down. Kathleen's out. And who is Paula Zahn?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--With reporting by William Tynan/New York
- </p>
- <p> Can't anybody here play this game? The rules for morning TV
- have changed little since they were invented by the Today show
- back in the 1950s. Put a perky, good-looking couple together on
- a homey set; mix in a potpourri of news, weather and feature
- segments; and keep it all going for two hours. Do it right, and
- you'll grab a sizable share of the audience that can't get
- through the pre-work hours without some TV chatter percolating
- in the background.
- </p>
- <p> Lately, though, the networks' morning-show managers have
- committed some mamiscues. Last fall the Today show turned what
- should have been an orderly transfer of power--from Jane
- Pauley to Deborah Norville--into a public-relations Chernobyl.
- Norville, cast as the usurper of Pauley's job, took over in
- January with viewers already against her. And they don't seem
- to have changed their minds: after nearly four years as the
- top-rated morning show, Today has slipped in the past six weeks
- to No. 2, behind ABC's Good Morning America. CBS, in the
- meantime, has dumped its morning co-anchor, Kathleen Sullivan--oddly, just when the program's third-place ratings were
- inching upward. Sullivan, whose last day was Friday, will be
- replaced by a relative unknown: Paula Zahn, who has been doing
- the newscasts on Good Morning America.
- </p>
- <p> One cannot ignore the whiff of a double standard here. After
- all, it was Bryant Gumbel who wrote the nasty memo about his
- co-workers at Today, but it was Pauley who had to watch her heir
- apparent being groomed on the couch next to her. Norville too
- was probably treated unfairly in the press. Would a man in the
- same position have been so rudely characterized as a conniving
- climber? And why, some may wonder, does Harry Smith, the
- competent but colorless male half of the CBS This Morning team,
- get to stay on while Sullivan is forced to dust off her resume?
- </p>
- <p> For better or worse, TV's women of the morning have a tough
- responsibility. To succeed in this league, they must not only
- be bright, attractive and versatile enough to talk comfortably
- with Hollywood celebrities, South African leaders and weathermen
- wearing Indian headdresses. They must also project a warm, cozy,
- familial glow. Pauley, with her big-sister perkiness, had it.
- So does Good Morning America's Joan Lunden, who is no newswoman
- but goes down as easy in the morning as mom's Cream of Wheat.
- Is it just a coincidence that both of them are also very public
- mothers?
- </p>
- <p> Sullivan, by contrast, was always too much the glamour girl,
- as well as prone to gaffes both on and off the air. (An open
- microphone once picked up her off-camera reference to CBS as the
- "Cheap Broadcasting System.") And Norville, even without the
- controversy that attended her rise, seems too brittle and pushy
- for her gentle morning duties. She comes across as the executive
- secretary whom everybody in the office hates dealing with.
- </p>
- <p> NBC executives insist that Today's ratings sag does not
- imply a rejection of Norville. "Whenever there's an anchor
- change on a broadcast, there's always a reaction," says Tom
- Capra, who took over as executive producer last month. "Part of
- the audience is happy, part of the audience is sad, and usually
- the ratings drop." CBS This Morning also has a new executive
- producer, who is expanding the show's feature and entertainment
- coverage; the hope is that a new co-anchor will lure viewers to
- sample the broadcast at a time when they might be shopping for
- alternatives.
- </p>
- <p> And how will the newest member of the morning female
- triumvirate do? Zahn, 33, reads the news with bright-eyed brio
- and overdramatic retards at the end of each story. ("At least
- five...have been reported...killed.") She has solid
- journalistic credentials--nine years in local reporting and
- anchor slots before joining ABC News in 1987--and soft brown
- hair. Oh, yes, and she has an eight-month-old daughter at home.
- Looks like she came to play.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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