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The Problems With Meet The Press Are Not Unique To Meet The Press
Townhall.com ^ | September 7, 2014 | Derek Hunter

Posted on 09/07/2014 6:40:08 AM PDT by Kaslin

News broke this week that Luke Russert, son of the late Tim Russert, will be a regular part of the “revamped” Meet The Press starting today. He’s 29, has worked for NBC News since graduating college, and…that’s about it. His last name is the only qualification he possesses for joining the “team” of the longest running show on television. If this, and the other personnel decisions that have been announced, is NBC’s plan to save the once-great show, Meet The Press is screwed.

The new host, Chuck Todd, is a fine choice. But that’s just one piece of the puzzle. The host he replaces, David Gregory, was part of the problem, not the whole problem.

The problems with Meet The Press are not unique to Meet The Press; they’re across the board for all cable networks and news programs.

The biggest problem is they don’t do news anymore; they do entertainment masquerading as news.

Cable news has some of the best journalists in the business. But how often do you see them during the day? They’re on the beat gathering actual news. They’re just barely used.

You may get a quick update at the start of a segment – maybe – but that immediately pivots with a “Let’s turn to X for reaction…” X has no firsthand knowledge of the subject at hand because X usually is a blogger or a radio host who’s never worked a second in government or on the issue about to be discussed.

Essentially, a bunch of disconnected people are being granted the credibility (what’s left of it, anyway) afforded people on TV by being on TV. But they have none; they’ve simply read the latest newswire story on the topic and can deliver a few quips on the subject at hand.

I’m not saying there’s no place for commentary in the media – I do it for a living. Nor am I saying veteran commentators life George Will and Charles Krauthammer should go away – they’ve done the legwork and have contacts to obtain information and the historical knowledge to give important context to the day’s news. But, especially during the day, long before their opinion show start, shouldn’t news organizations spend more time conveying news from people they pay to gather it? Are audiences so detached from reality that they accept as news a conversation on the level of one you could overhear at a bar?

Ratings for all news outlets are down across the board; this may be part of the reason why. It’s possible to watch an hour of cable news, day or night, and not learn anything beyond someone’s opinion. It’s one thing if one of those people is an elected official and has a vote, or someone with expertise on a topic. It’s another if it’s just some person giving thoughts on something that person knows little about.

Worse, day or night, you can set your clock by who the guest is. No bus or train schedule has ever been as reliable as the repetition of disconnected cable news guests from week to week.

This isn’t just a cable news problem; the Sunday shows have been infected too.

Remember when the host or a panel of journalists would grill a politician or two for most of the show? Now they talk with politicians for maybe 10 minutes, then it’s right to a panel of non-politicians and ex-politicians to talk about what the politician just said, and other topics. It’s schizophrenic, not informative.

Sunday shows and cable news don’t attract an audience craving the latest Justin Bieber news or the opinions of people with no more information or insight than the average viewer already has. We want news. We’re not getting it, so we’re leaving. We’re going to the web.

You want to save Meet The Press (and I do)? Bring back the news. You want to save cable news (and I do, too)? Bring the news back there as well. There’s a place for bloggers, radio hosts and commentators to spout their opinions. But there shouldn’t be so many on staff, and they shouldn’t be weighing in so often on issues they know nothing about. Audiences can figure out for themselves what they think if they’re given the information.

That used to be the purpose of news. Now it’s cross-promotion, as we’ve seen on Meet The Press with every show stacked with MSNBC hosts and contributors no one wants to watch during the week. And it’s self-promotion, filled with disconnected talking heads whose only expertise is letting the world know they exist.

There’s a vacuum in the news world, and it’s on the air. It’s time put the “news” back in the news business. I hope it starts with Meet The Press, though I doubt it will. But it would be nice if someone, somewhere brought it back, even as an experiment. I suspect an audience would follow. I know I would.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: chucktodd; davidgregory; lukerussert; meetthedepressed; television
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To: Kaslin

My theory is that Sunday morning news shows were popular because it was the only time during the week that you could hear a conservative speak. Once Fox News arrived, viewers didn’t have to wait until Sunday.


21 posted on 09/07/2014 7:28:46 AM PDT by SampleMan (Feral Humans are the refuse of socialism.)
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To: Kaslin
The problem is not just the news shows. It is every channel on the list. No news on the news channels. No history on the history channels. No Sci-Fi on the Sci-Fi channel.

Everything is a "reality" show, where dysfunctional idiots curse at each other. Just like the "news" programs, where dysfunctional idiots have shouting matches. Top it off with 23 minutes of ads per hour and TV is unwatchable without a DVR to skip ads and Carl Rove.

TV is the only industry where the customer is always wrong.

22 posted on 09/07/2014 7:32:17 AM PDT by SpeakerToAnimals (I hope to earn a name in battle)
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To: Kaslin
Luke Russert knows nothing beyond what he reads from his daily WH talking points memo. That acorn fell a LONG way from the tree.
23 posted on 09/07/2014 7:36:08 AM PDT by JPG ("So sue me". OK, we will.)
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To: baltiless

I agree. I don’t watch any of them for the same reason. The only one I do catch once in awhile is Greta Van Susteren and I can only watch so much of it.
I learn absolutely nothing from them and just can’t stand to watch them.


24 posted on 09/07/2014 7:39:00 AM PDT by sheana
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To: Kaslin

I’ve been saying for years that there’s no news on the news. I actually turn on al Jazeera sometimes because they’re doing an actual news story with cameras on the ground, not chatting about “newsy” stuff in a studio near Times Square.


25 posted on 09/07/2014 7:42:24 AM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: headstamp 2

Like button!!

I was about to write the same thing...tired of sound bite politics.


26 posted on 09/07/2014 7:43:06 AM PDT by conservaKate ( I grow weary of the goobers in the Republican party. (thanks Chris))
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To: SpeakerToAnimals

It started with no music on MTV.


27 posted on 09/07/2014 7:44:21 AM PDT by Henry Hnyellar
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To: Henry Hnyellar

I missed that one. Thanks.


28 posted on 09/07/2014 7:48:20 AM PDT by SpeakerToAnimals (I hope to earn a name in battle)
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To: Kaslin
The biggest problem is they don’t do news anymore; they do entertainment masquerading as news.

I don't find "hard core welfare-state activism" to be especially entertaining.

29 posted on 09/07/2014 7:52:02 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL-GALT-DELETE])
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To: Kaslin

Have always objected to the “Meet The Press” premise that the news media’s opinion is important.


30 posted on 09/07/2014 7:54:02 AM PDT by DakotaGator (Weep for the lost Republic! And keep your powder dry!!)
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To: sheana

Actually, I think Megyn Kelly does an excellent job on Fox.


31 posted on 09/07/2014 7:55:45 AM PDT by flaglady47 (The useful idiots always go first)
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To: cloudmountain

I am old enough to remember Meet the Press with
Lawrence Spivak. My parents and I watched it almost every Sunday. There was very little fluff. Tough questions were asked of the guests. We were also regular viewers of GE College Bowl with Robert Earle. Two high quality shows.

I still have the GE College Bowl list of 100 books to read.
I think I have read about 30.


32 posted on 09/07/2014 7:58:57 AM PDT by Maine Mariner
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To: junta
Will’s and Krauthammer’s lucrative jobs are to sit there and put an intellectual sheen on the libtard’s propaganda. Democrat spews lunacy, they take it seriously, then conservatives end up debating lunacy.

Correct. That is why I never watch it. They are not honest.

33 posted on 09/07/2014 8:35:56 AM PDT by The_Media_never_lie (The media must be defeated any way it can be done.)
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To: Kaslin
Todd's going to be fine as long as he asks his own questions. Input before the show - brainstorming - all fine. But when he's on air he's got to be his own man.

A problem these shows have is the 'behind the scenes' thug progressive... the type NO ONE would like or listen to - wants to 'feed questions' to the on air person. It's why David Gregory looked like an idiot - a man who didn't understand the stuff he was asking. He probably didn't. No one wants to watch an off air ventriloquist control his on air dummy

If Todd can 'do a Russert' and insist on asking his own questions this just might work out...

34 posted on 09/07/2014 8:51:55 AM PDT by GOPJ ("If America was a house, the Left would root for the termites." - Greg Gutfeld)
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To: Maine Mariner
I am old enough to remember Meet the Press with Lawrence Spivak. My parents and I watched it almost every Sunday. There was very little fluff. Tough questions were asked of the guests. We were also regular viewers of GE College Bowl with Robert Earle. Two high quality shows.
I still have the GE College Bowl list of 100 books to read. I think I have read about 30.

Where we lived we couldn't get NBC, too many hills in the way. Now giant towers let ALL the noise in.

35 posted on 09/07/2014 1:22:27 PM PDT by cloudmountain
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To: baltiless
I stopped watching the Sunday morning shows almost 15 years ago. I stopped watching the cable news channels maybe a year and a half or so ago.
It’s a little embarrassing that I watched that stuff regularly for so long.
Believe me, I can relate. My daughter was shocked to learn that I used to listen to "News Radio” assiduously up until she was about 4.
She grew up seeing me treat news reporting as a commercial for something I wouldn’t buy on a bet. Which is what it is.

36 posted on 09/07/2014 4:55:25 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion ("Liberalism” is a conspiracy against the public by wire-service journalism.)
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