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- <text id=92TT2978>
- <title>
- Mar. 23, 1992: Miles in the Morning
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 23, 1992 Clinton vs. Tsongas
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 66
- Miles in the Morning
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Jeff Zucker, Today's 26-year-old wunderkind producer, turns the
- show into--surprise!--a happy family
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> When he became their boss, some wags at the Today show
- predictably dubbed him Miles Silverberg. Jeff Zucker, the
- 26-year-old wunderkind who was named Today's executive producer
- last December, just smiles at being compared to the frenetic,
- baby-faced producer on Murphy Brown. "I think Miles is more
- uptight than I am," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Uptight is hardly a word to apply to Zucker these days.
- Try upbeat. After three years of soap-opera travails and
- ratings woes, NBC's morning show has almost miraculously righted
- itself. Katie Couric, who became co-anchor a year ago, has
- managed to make people forget the short, unhappy tenure of
- Deborah Norville. Bryant Gumbel, the show's sometimes testy
- on-air leader for the past decade, is smiling more. And the
- audience is filing back into the auditorium. Though Good Morning
- America retains a narrow lead in the ratings, Today scored a
- weekly win last month for the first time in more than two years.
- </p>
- <p> That was quite a feat for TV's newest overachiever, who
- rose through the Today-show ranks in a scant three years. "He
- is creative, has wonderful news judgment and wants to win,"
- says NBC News president Michael Gartner. "And he happens to be
- 26." Couric also dismisses any notion that Zucker's youth poses
- a problem. "He's very intelligent, and he has a real respect
- for history--even if he wasn't around when it was made."
- </p>
- <p> Zucker--whose thinning hair and coolly confident manner
- make him seem at least, well, 30--has put his stamp on the
- Today show in ways both predictable and unpredictable. The
- sometimes stodgy program (Good Morning America still gets more
- of the young female viewers most prized by advertisers) has
- started to loosen up, booking hipper musical guests like Color
- Me Badd, Marc Cohn and Curtis Stigers. It has also been more
- aggressive on breaking news: the morning after Mike Tyson's rape
- conviction, for example, Today devoted much of its first
- half-hour to the trial, with prosecuting attorney Gregory
- Garrison among the guests.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Zucker, defying the MTV-generation stereotype, has not
- turned the show into Short Attention Span Theater. In fact, he
- is letting interview segments run longer--six to seven
- minutes, on average, compared with 4 1/2 to five minutes
- previously. "I think the audience would like more in-depth
- treatment of some issues," he says. "I hate cutting people off."
- His approach has had another, not incidental benefit: with
- longer segments the show runs one or two fewer pieces each day.
- That relieves some of the burden on the trimmed-down staff and
- saves money as well. "You have to accept the new realities of
- television," says Zucker.
- </p>
- <p> He learned those realities in an amazingly short time.
- After graduating in 1986 from Harvard, where he was editor of
- the Crimson, Zucker was contemplating law school when he was
- offered a job at NBC doing research for the 1988 Olympics. He
- spent the next two years compiling 4,000 pages of background
- information for the network's coverage of the Games.
- </p>
- <p> Once the Olympics were over, Zucker landed a producing job
- on Today. His arrival coincided almost precisely with the start
- of the morning show's much publicized problems. First was the
- infamous Gumbel memo, in which the anchor made disparaging
- remarks about some of his colleagues, notably weatherman Willard
- Scott. Then came the departure of longtime co-anchor Jane Pauley
- and her replacement by Norville, the brittle blond who
- alienated both viewers and staff members. Today slipped from No.
- 1 to second in the ratings; morale sank just as fast. "This
- place went through hell," says Zucker. "We can acknowledge it
- now because it's over."
- </p>
- <p> It's over largely because of Couric. Formerly the show's
- national correspondent, she filled in as co-anchor when Norville
- went on maternity leave in February 1991 and was given the job
- permanently a month later. Couric's unaffected, girl-next-door
- likability has helped calm down TV's most volatile family
- circle. Zucker takes care to parcel out praise evenly, defending
- the often abrasive Gumbel. "Bryant is very opinionated," he
- says. "That's his greatest strength, and it hurts him too. But
- you'd be hard-pressed to find a better interviewer on TV."
- Still, he admits, "Katie has reinvigorated the whole show--including Bryant."
- </p>
- <p> Not all Zucker's experiments have worked out. In one
- recent week the show tried a series of daily call-in segments
- on such topics as sex, dieting and jobs; they seemed unfocused
- and pointless. But the show's resurgence is causing concern at
- Good Morning America, where Joan Lunden and Charles Gibson offer
- more stable but increasingly bland competition. (CBS This
- Morning remains a not-quite-so-distant third in the ratings.)
- Weatherman Spencer Christian recently began joining them on the
- anchor couch, perhaps to simulate Today's "family" appeal. And
- when NBC ran TV ads several weeks ago touting Today's
- first-place finish, Gibson complained in print that the bragging
- was in "questionable taste." His comments made Zucker's day. "If
- we've got them riled about that," he says, "they're clearly
- nervous." All right, Miles, stay calm.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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