Ted Koppel: The State of Television
News
Free Press/NY Times
And Now, a Word for Our Demographic
From New York Times, January 29, 2006
By Ted Koppel
NOT all reporters have an unfinished novel gathering dust but many,
including this one, do. If that isn't enough of a cliché, this novel's
hero is a television anchor (always plant your pen in familiar turf) who, in
the course of a minor traffic accident, bites the tip off his tongue. The
ensuing speech impediment is sufficient to end his on-air career and he finds
himself, recently divorced, now unemployed, at home and watching altogether too
much television.
After several weeks of isolation he discovers on his voice mail a message
from an old friend, the opinion-page editor of his hometown newspaper. She is
urging him to write a piece about television news, which, after some
hesitation, he does — with a vengeance:
The earls and dukes and barons of television news have grown sleek and fat
eating road kill. The victims, dispatched by political or special interest
hit-and-run squads, are then hung up, displayed and consumed with unwholesome
relish on television.
They wander the battlefields of other people's wars, these knights of the
airwaves, disposing of the wounded from both armies, gorging themselves like
the electronic vultures they are.
The popular illusion that television journalists are liberals does them too
much honor. Like all mercenaries they fight for money, not ideology; but unlike
true mercenaries, their loyalty is not for sale. It cannot be engaged because
it does not exist. Their total lack of commitment to any cause has come to be
defined as objectivity. Their daily preoccupation with the trivial and the
banal has accumulated large audiences, which, in turn, has encouraged a descent
into the search for items of even greater banality.
A wounded and bitter fellow, this fictional hero of mine, but his bilious
arguments hardly seem all that dated. Now here I sit, having recently left ABC
News after 42 years, and who should call but an editor friend of mine who, in a
quirky convolution of real life's imitating unpublished fiction, has asked me
to write this column examining the state of television news today.
Where to begin? Confession of the obvious seems like a reasonable starting
point: I have become well known and well-off traveling the world on ABC's dime,
charged only with ensuring that our viewers be well informed about important
issues. For the better part of those 42 years, this arrangement worked to our
mutual benefit and satisfaction. At the same time, I cannot help but see that
the industry in which I have spent my entire adult life is in decline and in
distress.
Once, 30 or 40 years ago, the target audience for network news was made up
of everyone with a television, and the most common criticism lodged against us
was that we were tempted to operate on a lowest-common-denominator basis.
This, however, was in the days before deregulation, when the Federal
Communications Commission was still perceived to have teeth, and its mandate
that broadcasters operate in "the public interest, convenience and necessity"
was enough to give each licensee pause.
Network owners nurtured their news divisions, encouraged them to tackle
serious issues, cultivated them as shields to be brandished before
Congressional committees whenever questions were raised about the quality of
entertainment programs and the vast sums earned by those programs. News
divisions occasionally came under political pressures but rarely commercial
ones. The expectation was that they would search out issues of importance, sift
out the trivial and then tell the public what it needed to know.
With the advent of cable, satellite and broadband technology, today's
marketplace has become so overcrowded that network news divisions are
increasingly vulnerable to the dictatorship of the demographic. Now, every
division of every network is expected to make a profit. And so we have entered
the age of boutique journalism. The goal for the traditional broadcast networks
now is to identify those segments of the audience considered most desirable by
the advertising community and then to cater to them.
Most television news programs are therefore designed to satisfy the
perceived appetites of our audiences. That may be not only acceptable but
unavoidable in entertainment; in news, however, it is the journalists who
should be telling their viewers what is important, not the other way
around.
Indeed, in television news these days, the programs are being shaped to
attract, most particularly, 18-to-34-year-old viewers. They, in turn, are
presumed to be partly brain-dead — though not so insensible as to be
unmoved by the blandishments of sponsors.
Exceptions, it should be noted, remain. Thus it is that the evening news
broadcasts of ABC, CBS and NBC are liberally studded with advertisements that
clearly cater to older Americans. But this is a holdover from another era: the
last gathering of more than 30 million tribal elders, as they clench their
dentures while struggling to control esophageal eruptions of stomach acid to
watch "The News." That number still commands respect, but even the evening news
programs, you will find (after the first block of headline material), are
struggling to find a new format that will somehow appeal to younger
viewers.
Washington news, for example, is covered with less and less enthusiasm and
aggressiveness. The networks' foreign bureaus have, for some years now, been
seen as too expensive to merit survival. Judged on the frequency with which
their reports get airtime, they can no longer be deemed cost-effective. Most
have either been closed or reduced in size to the point of irrelevance.
Simply stated, no audience is perceived to be clamoring for foreign news,
the exceptions being wars in their early months that involve American troops,
acts of terrorism and, for a couple of weeks or so, natural disasters of truly
epic proportions.
You will still see foreign stories on the evening news broadcasts, but
examine them carefully. They are either reported by one of a half-dozen or so
remaining foreign correspondents who now cover the world for each network, or
the anchor simply narrates a piece of videotape shot by some other news agency.
For big events, an anchor might parachute in for a couple of days of high drama
coverage. But the age of the foreign correspondent, who knew a country or
region intimately, is long over.
No television news executive is likely to acknowledge indifference to major
events overseas or in our nation's capital, but he may, on occasion, concede
that the viewers don't care, and therein lies the essential malignancy.
The accusation that television news has a political agenda misses the point.
Right now, the main agenda is to give people what they want. It is not
partisanship but profitability that shapes what you see.
Most particularly on cable news, a calculated subjectivity has, indeed,
displaced the old-fashioned goal of conveying the news dispassionately. But
that, too, has less to do with partisan politics than simple capitalism. Thus,
one cable network experiments with the subjectivity of tender engagement: "I
care and therefore you should care." Another opts for chest-thumping certitude:
"I know and therefore you should care."
Even Fox News's product has less to do with ideology and more to do with
changing business models. Fox has succeeded financially because it tapped into
a deep, rich vein of unfulfilled yearning among conservative American
television viewers, but it created programming to satisfy the market, not the
other way around. CNN, meanwhile, finds itself largely outmaneuvered, unwilling
to accept the label of liberal alternative, experimenting instead with a form
of journalism that stresses empathy over detachment.
Now, television news should not become a sort of intellectual broccoli to be
jammed down our viewers' unwilling throats. We are obliged to make our
offerings as palatable as possible. But there are too many important things
happening in the world today to allow the diet to be determined to such a
degree by the popular tastes of a relatively narrow and apparently uninterested
demographic.
What is, ultimately, most confusing about the behavior of the big three
networks is why they ever allowed themselves to be drawn onto a battlefield
that so favors their cable competitors. At almost any time, the audience of a
single network news program on just one broadcast network is greater than the
combined audiences of CNN, Fox and MSNBC.
Reaching across the entire spectrum of American television viewers is
precisely the broadcast networks' greatest strength. By focusing only on key
demographics, by choosing to ignore their total viewership, they have
surrendered their greatest advantage.
Oddly enough, there is a looming demographic reality that could help steer
television news back toward its original purpose. There are tens of millions of
baby boomers in their 40's and 50's and entering their 60's who have far more
spending power than their 18-to-34-year-old counterparts. Television news may
be debasing itself before the wrong demographic.
If the network news divisions cannot be convinced that their future depends
on attracting all demographic groups, then perhaps, at least, they can be
persuaded to aim for the largest single demographic with the most disposable
income — one that may actually have an appetite for serious news. That
would seem like a no-brainer. It's regrettable, perhaps, that only money and
the inclination to spend it will ultimately determine the face of television
news, but, as a distinguished colleague of mine used to say: "That's the way it
is."
— Ted Koppel, who retired as anchor and managing editor of the ABC
program "Nightline" in November, is a contributing columnist for The Times and
managing editor of The Discovery Network.
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