Posted on 07/09/2007 4:48:33 AM PDT by abb
From outside the sleek glass chamber of the CBS Evening News set, you can see her: alone in a prim black pantsuit and pearls, shuffling a stack of papers at the wide, half-moon desk. Sitting stiff and still, she looks dwarfed under the stage lights and high studio ceilings, the cameras barely visible in the shadows.
Hello, everyone, Katie Couric says into the camera, mouth turned down, eyes narrowed seriously.
She introduces the lead story of the day, and a news segment rolls while she sits and waits at the desk. When it ends, the camera returns. She peers gravely into the lens and introduces another story. It rolls, and Couric sits. She waits. The program fades to a pharmaceutical commercial, and Couric shuffles the papers and studiously examines her notes for the camera.
Twenty minutes later, its over.
And so it goes every night: same stoic gaze, same sober lead-ins from a TelePrompTer, the effervescent personality of Americas Sweetheart nowhere to be seen. Its not exactly what Couric signed on for last year, when, with extraordinary fanfare, she became the first solo woman anchor on an evening newscast. CBS chief Leslie Moonves had lured her with the promise of blowing up the formulaic evening-news format, offering her a show that would be an incubator for her own ideas.
In the early, heady days after her arrival, the news had a chatty, friendly vibe and a bright, casual atmosphere never seen before at 6:30 p.m. There were fewer headlines, more news features, and off-the-cuff reactions from Couric. On her first broadcast, she conducted a sit-down interview with New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman about the state of the war on terror, asking him, Are we safer now? She introduced a segment of her own invention called freeSpeech that was supposed to foster public discourse by allowing celebrities and other guests to sound off on a topic of their choosing. She showed baby pictures of Suri Cruise (Yessiree, she does exist!). And at the end, as she signed off, she casually leaned against the news deska pose that, when the camera pulled back, revealed Courics famous legs. It might not have been revolutionary television, but it was a definite change from what Couric once derided as newzak. More than that, it was unmistakably Katie. A slightly more serious, more polished version of her morning-show persona, but Katie nonetheless.
Thirteen and a half million viewers tuned in to see her first broadcast. But it was only a matter of weeks before the numbers started dropping, first to pre-Couric levels, then even lower. By May, the ratings bottomed out at 5.5 million a night, the lowest in two decades. A distant third behind ABCs Charles Gibson and NBCs Brian Williams, Couric is, for the first time in her storied career, losing.
She and CBS are now taking a long, hard look at what went wrong. I think the one thing that I realized, looking back at it and analyzing it, is people are very unforgiving and very resistant to change, says Couric. The biggest mistake we made is we tried new things.
Which is why she is now sitting somberly behind the desk at CBS, shuffling papers and doing her best impersonation of a traditional news anchor. Her original show has been scrapped. Even her informal greeting, Hi, everyone, was buttoned up to a more formal Hello.
Would she have taken the job if she had known it would turn out this way? Couric hesitates. If Moonves had offered her the job shes doing today, she admits, she would have thought twice about it. It would have been less appealing to me, she says. It would have required a lot more thought.
At Sarabeths restaurant on Central Park South one morning last month, Couric glides through the crowd at the door like shes working the rope line at the Today show. She amiably chats up the family at a nearby table before playing a quick game of musical chairs to find just the right seat (facing away from the window) and ordering an omelette and coffee. Her face is preternaturally youthful at 50, nose pink after a weekend in the sun, lashy blue eyes dialing up the winsome smile by a few thousand watts. She doesnt look like a woman embattled.
I think that bugs people even more, she says, that Im not a woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Its probably disappointing to some people. Because in the arc of the story, thats what they want to see.
snip
Ping
poor thing: from “perky” to “prim”. what’s next? “Prudish”?
LOL! Don't care if you do, or don't Katie. Never watched. Never will.
Slow burn...
“The biggest mistake we made is we tried new things.”
And what was that “new” thing Katie? You?
But the same BS came through and her ratings tanked from the initial curiosity factor.
Like people slowing to watch a wreck and then being pissed they wasted time on it because it was on the other side of the median.
WTF is she talking about?
This whole Katie al-Couric thing has me so sad...
I could hang in there for $7500 an hour. :-)
I don’t care what happens to Katie, personally. As long as she pulls CBS News down into perpetual oblivion, that will be enough.
Slapping a producer over a word she doesnt approve of is a sane reasonable reaction?
Right.
Unfortunately, so much of the footage was found to contain images such as the still seen here that it was rendered unusable and the project had to be s**tcanned.
Katie told interviewers later that this is how she spends much of her free time as this is where she gets some of her best program ideas. She cited her interview with Hillary Clinton as a prime example.
"ployed." As in: "unem------."
Imagine a hard core feminist wouldn’t draw them into DNCBS?? The media is the only business that believes it can insult 50% of their customers.
Pray for W and Our Troops
Disagree....look, she obviously agreed to be interviewed in a piece that she knew was goign to be about her failure at CBS to date. To me, it sounds like desperate spin control..I think she’ll be gone after the 2008 election...the idea of Katie doing political “analysis” sitting between Bob Schiefer and Jeff Greenfield is hysterical..
right now petulant might be the operative word, or perhaps pugilistic
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