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- <text id=89TT0931>
- <title>
- Apr. 03, 1989: Star Wars At The Networks
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 03, 1989 The College Trap
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 70
- Star Wars at the Networks
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With a premium on news programming, the aim is charisma
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> Okay, TV-news fans, get out your scorebooks. A new round of
- star wars is in full swing at the network news divisions. CBS,
- in desperate need of a female power hitter, last week grabbed
- one of the league's best, Connie Chung, from NBC. She will fill
- a gap in the CBS lineup opened last month when Diane Sawyer
- left to join the burgeoning Murderers' Row at ABC. Meanwhile,
- NBC, looking to compensate for Chung's departure, found no
- superstars on the trading block but managed to land a solid
- .280 hitter, Mary Alice Williams, formerly of CNN. All three
- are expected to have high-profile starting berths by the summer.
- </p>
- <p> Their salaries are mind-boggling. Chung, who was making $1
- million at NBC, will reportedly get in the neighborhood of $1.5
- million a year at CBS, roughly the same as what Sawyer is said
- to be getting from ABC for leaving her post at CBS's top-rated
- magazine show, 60 Minutes. That puts both of them behind only
- Barbara Walters (more than $2 million) as the highest-paid
- women in TV news. Even Williams, coming from low-paying CNN,
- will ring up a respectable $500,000 or so annually at NBC. "We
- are watching a profound shift in the way networks function,"
- says Marvin Kalb, the former CBS and NBC correspondent who now
- teaches at Harvard. "It is similar to what is happening in
- professional baseball or basketball. Journalists are
- exchangeable commodities; the highest bidder wins."
- </p>
- <p> Stratospheric salaries for TV-news anchors are nothing new,
- of course. But last week's round of anchor shifts marked a new
- phase in the TV talent sweepstakes. In the past,
- high-visibility newscasters were wooed mainly for anchor spots
- on the morning and evening news shows. Now they are being
- groomed as prime-time stars. Shows are even being constructed
- around them, the way Hollywood studios in the '30s used to
- create vehicles for their contract stars. Chung has been
- promised the anchor job on a soon to be reconstituted version
- of West 57th, CBS's low-rated magazine show. Sawyer will
- co-anchor, with Sam Donaldson, a new prime-time news hour on
- ABC, scheduled to debut in August. Williams will be one of
- several co-anchors of a new NBC prime-time news offering,
- Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, also planned for a summer
- premiere.
- </p>
- <p> The moves reveal once again how thoroughly the network news
- divisions have bought into the Nielsen mind-set. Faced with
- shrinking audiences and rising costs, TV executives have
- discovered that news programming, which costs much less to
- produce than entertainment fare, can be a moneymaker in prime
- time. Yet once these shows enter the arena with Knots Landing
- and The Cosby Show, they must play by the same rules.
- </p>
- <p> That means stars -- and star salaries. Though high-priced
- talent raids have been attacked as a misguided extravagance at
- a time when network news budgets are being slashed, these new
- stars, for better or worse, usually justify their pay. Their
- presence can mean precious ratings points, and sometimes even
- the life or death of a show. Says Andrew Lack, executive
- producer of West 57th: ``These are very high-risk, high-profile
- jobs that go to people who can handle them. They are worth the
- fuss made over them."
- </p>
- <p> It is no accident that the latest objects of network
- bidding wars are attractive women. None, of course, are
- journalistic neophytes. Chung, 42, started her network career
- in CBS's Washington bureau in 1971, later became anchor for the
- CBS-owned station in Los Angeles and in 1983 moved to NBC, where
- she has done everything from early-morning newscasts to
- prime-time documentaries. Williams, 40, spent nine years as New
- York bureau chief for CNN; before that she was a reporter for
- New York's WNBC-TV. Sawyer, 43, has been with CBS since 1978,
- working as a Washington reporter and co-anchor of the cbs
- Morning News before joining 60 Minutes in 1984.
- </p>
- <p> The crucial quality, however, is on-camera charisma. Sawyer
- has it -- despite the fact she was always an unwieldy fifth
- wheel at 60 Minutes -- and she was pursued fervently by ABC's
- Arledge, who knows a star when he sees one. (It was Arledge who
- inaugurated the modern era of star journalism in 1976, when he
- lured Walters away from NBC for the then unheard-of sum of $1
- million a year.) The battle over Chung illustrates even more
- vividly how much clout TV news stars can wield when they have
- reached a certain level of audience recognition. CBS executives
- had been courting Chung off and on for years, but the sudden
- loss of Sawyer intensified their efforts. As inducement, the
- network offered her not only West 57th but also the CBS
- Sunday-evening anchor slot and fill-in duty for Rather on the
- cbs Evening News.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Chung asked NBC for a raise to $2 million a year
- and a solo anchor position on its upcoming prime-time news show.
- "The combination of demands was something I found unpalatable,"
- says NBC News President Michael Gartner. "She wanted an enormous
- amount of money and a prime-time show in which she didn't share
- the billing. That didn't fit with the programs we had under
- development." Chung denies reports that she also sought
- "editorial control" of the new show and says CBS's offer was
- simply more attractive. "NBC was offering to make me the
- `greater of equals' (on the new show)," she says. "CBS was
- willing to make me sole anchor." Despite an eleventh-hour appeal
- by NBC President Robert Wright, who lobbied her aboard a
- corporate jet while flying from Washington to New York, Chung
- opted for CBS.
- </p>
- <p> A job that Chung will not get, however, is Sawyer's old
- spot on 60 Minutes. One candidate for that position is CBS
- medical correspondent Susan Spencer, who has been supplanted by
- Chung as anchor of the Sunday-evening newscast. But insiders
- give the respected Spencer little chance of winding up on 60
- Minutes (not enough camera appeal). Lesley Stahl, another
- candidate, is thought unlikely to want to move from Washington
- to New York. The current favorite for the 60 Minutes spot:
- winsome West 57th correspondent Meredith Vieira.
- </p>
- <p> However expensive they become, the star wars seem sure to
- continue. ABC, which recently hired not only Sawyer but also
- NBC correspondent Chris Wallace, has been dubbed the hot network
- for its aggressive talent raids. NBC, having lost both Wallace
- and Chung, is hurting. Staff morale is low, and some warn that
- the network's tightfisted attitude will doom it to the
- news-ratings cellar. Gartner insists that NBC is not opposed to
- paying high salaries to the right people but argues, almost
- quaintly, that by rejecting Chung's money demands, the network
- cast a vote for old-fashioned news values. "For $2 million," he
- says, "you can buy an awful lot of journalistic horsepower."
- True enough. But in the high-stakes world of TV news, a strong
- bench doesn't often win a pennant.
- </p>
- <p>-- Naushad S. Mehta/New York
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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