The dumping of Curry in favor of Savannah
Guthrie on the “Today” show has not been a success. So NBC announced late
Tuesday that the guy in charge of the show, Jim Bell, has been named executive
producer of NBCUniversal’s Olympics coverage full time.
NBC is expected to announce that Bell is
being replaced on “Today” — by an actual woman, which would be a “Today” show
first.
The odds-on favorite within the industry is
Alexandra Wallace, a senior VP of NBC News. The New York Times reported late
Monday that she is expected to take the job.
In Tuesday’s announcement, NBC noted that
Bell rejoins NBC Sports Group after seven years of leading “Today,” the program
that dominated the morning infotainment show race for 16 years — until ABC’s
“Good Morning America” blasted it out of the top spot in early April.
NBC also noted that Bell served as both
executive producer of “Today” and of NBC’s coverage of the London Olympics last
summer.
It had been a given among The Reporters Who
Cover Television that Bell was toast, given the “Today” show’s continued
ratings problems, Curry’s botched exit and the general uncomfortable-making
dynamic among its on-air talent during its first two hours.
Names of possible Bell replacements have
been floating about for weeks.
It’s the probable selection of a woman
that’s making news. Wallace has experience in the day part, having produced the
weekend edition of “Today” before moving over to the night side, where she
exec-produced “NBC Nightly News.” She then took over the news division’s prime-time
head-scratcher, “Rock Center With Brian Williams.”
A couple of months ago, Bell said that it
was his decision to show Curry the door — and not the decision of her longtime
co-anchor Matt Lauer, who took most of the blame in the court of public opinion.
At that time, Bell indicated that Curry’s year in the co-anchor chair was
sufficient to determine she was not a good fit.
But Curry’s teary on-air exit from the show
did not sit well with viewers, and the pairing of Lauer with Guthrie has done
nothing to wipe that bad image from memory.
Curry got the hook in June because the show
was already in ratings trouble, and ABC’s “Good Morning America” was taking
over as the new morning infotainment front-runner.
But her departure didn’t fix the problem.
“GMA” continued to rank No. 1 in the ratings derby during 11 of 13 weeks
between late June and the start of the official TV season in September, with
“Today” beating “GMA” only during the two weeks in the summer when it broadcast
from the London Games.
Six weeks into the current TV season,
“Today” continues to trail “GMA” among all viewers, and has lost five of the
past six weeks among 25-to-54-year-old viewers who are the currency of news
programming.
In the most recent week for which ratings
are available, “Today” edged “GMA” in that age bracket by 8,000 viewers.
Elmo accuser recants
The man who claimed he had a sexual
relationship with longtime “Sesame Street” puppeteer Kevin Clash while underage
has recanted one day after the story broke in the media.
“I am relieved that this painful allegation has been put to rest. I
will not discuss it further,” Clash, the puppeteer and voice of of “Sesame
Street’s” Elmo for nearly three decades, said in a statement.
Earlier, the law firm that purports to
represent the accuser said in a statement that the man withdrew his claim and
acknowledged that “his sexual relationship with Mr. Clash was an adult
consensual relationship.”
On Monday, Sesame Workshop said that it had
met with the accuser after it first received a communication from the
then-23-year-old man in June. Sesame Workshop said that it also met with Clash
and that after a “thorough investigation . . . found the allegation of underage
conduct to be unsubstantiated.”
The production company also said that it
had put Clash on leave while he took steps “to protect his reputation.”
The law firm representing the accuser had
claimed that Sesame Workshop placed “greater value on a puppet than the
well-being of a young man,” according to TMZ, which first reported the story
Monday.
“We are pleased that this matter has been brought to a close, and we
are happy that Kevin can move on from this unfortunate episode,” the Sesame
Workshop said Tuesday.
Sara Ganim to CNN
CNN rebounded nicely from Monday’s
devastating news that it had lost hunky weatherman Rob Marciano to
“Entertainment Tonight,” announcing Tuesday that it has hired Sara Ganim as a
correspondent based in Atlanta.
Ganim, who joins CNN from the Patriot News
in Harrisburg, Pa., broke the story of the grand jury investigation into Jerry
Sandusky, the former Penn State University football defensive coordinator who
was found guilty of child sex abuse.
The Sandusky case enveloped the university,
including its late football coach Joe Paterno, and Sandusky’s Second Mile
Charity in scandal. Ganim won a Pulitzer Prize for her reporting.
And you’ve already seen her on CNN and HLN
as on-air contributor during those networks’ coverage of Sandusky’s trial and
conviction.
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