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Home business strategy

Death of MSNBC

by Dana Blankenhorn
November 13, 2006
in business strategy, journalism, Television
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Conservatives may be cheered by this.

MSNBC, which has given Keith Olbermann a ratings home for the last few years, is going away.

This was already hinted at several weeks ago, when NBC announced major lay-offs, lay-offs that began today at its Dateline show.

I discussed it all a week ago, in my piece on the horrid election coverage being done by all networks.

Jeff_immelt_2
But the election happened a week ago, and MSNBC is essentially running
with the same coverage. Talking heads, often in adjacent windows,
talking to anchors about politics.

Why? It’s cheap.

It costs almost nothing to do talking heads news coverage. When the
so-called "correspondents" have themselves devolved to nothing more
than talking head status the handwriting is on the wall.


This is also a turning point in terms of cable generally.

We have seen, over the last few years, how networks have been
bought-and-sold essentially as program vehicles. ABC bought the Family
Channel from Fox, which had bought it from Pat Robertson’s CBN, and
within a short time the Family Channel was showing ABC re-runs instead
of Fox re-runs.

Something similar happened here when Turner South was acquired by Fox.
A ton of interesting shows disappeared, and what we were left with
(after a time when such garbage was placed on the air that no one
watched) was essentially a second regional Fox cable sports network.

This, however, is something else entirely. What we’re seeing, slowly,
is the disappearance of what had been a major network. Within a few
months, I predict, the name will be changed to simply NBC. You’ll have
a small studio somewhere deep in 30 Rock trying to do broadcasts, and
"shows" taking corners of other studios on a rotating basis. If even a
fraction of the viewers now watching MSNBC tune in, the tiny rating
will still mean a profit to General Electric.

In a larger sense, I predict that what is happening is that NBC itself
is going on the block. You can’t cut your way to 15% annual profit
growth — not for very long. You can only grow your way into it. And if
Jeff Immelt (above) doesn’t think NBC can achieve these goals, then he is right
to seek a buyer for the property.


But whom?

Tags: cable TVKeith OlbermannMSNBCMSNBC ratingsNBC lay-offsTelevisiontelevision newsTVTV ratings
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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