April 19, 2024

Olbermann to Return to TV, Anchoring Postseason Baseball

Turner Sports announced on Wednesday that it had reached a deal with Mr. Olbermann to host its studio coverage of postseason Major League Baseball in the fall.

That means Mr. Olbermann will be on the air for the Turner channel TBS for much of October. TBS has the rights to the two wild-card playoff games in each league, and all four of the division series, as well as the National League Championship Series. (The World Series will again be broadcast on the Fox network.)

The news was first reported by The Hollywood Reporter.

David Levy, the president of sports distribution for Turner, did not disclose terms of the deal, or its length, but said the network’s goal was to have the studio show with Mr. Olbermann “last a long time.” In the studio role for Turner, Mr. Olbermann will be teamed with the Hall of Fame relief pitcher Dennis Eckersley, though Mr. Levy said the network expected to add to its studio team.

Mr. Olbermann has a long background in sports, including a recent stint on NBC as a host of its studio introduction to “Sunday Night Football.” It was his work as an anchor on ESPN’s “SportsCenter” in the 1990s that introduced him to many television viewers.

But he became best known for his tenure as the host of the MSNBC program “Countdown,” which at one point was the highest-rated cable news show not on the Fox News Channel. His eight-year run at that network ended in acrimony, as have many of Mr. Olbermann’s previous assignments on television.

Most recently, he was the main anchor for the Current TV network, which fired him only a year after he had joined. Both sides sued, and in March they came to a settlement whose terms were not disclosed.

In the telephone news conference on Wednesday, Mr. Olbermann made several joking references to his mercurial career in television, noting that this deal really only amounts to one month of work on Turner. “If you go through the 37 pages of my résumé, you will notice that every one of my jobs has lasted at least one month, so I’m covered no matter what the eventuality is.”

That one month of work means that Mr. Olbermann has 11 months free and he said that he would be “open to pursuing other things, of course.” But he added: “Planning on it? No. Need to? Fortunately not. Whatever else might be out there just could not be as compelling as this.”

He recalled that his first television job was with the Turner company 30 years ago as a sports anchor for newscasts on TBS, when it was a local station in Atlanta. During his first newscast, he said, a mistake with the teleprompter made his entire script flash by in eight seconds, “which I think was a precursor to my entire career.”

Mr. Levy deflected questions about any reluctance in hiring Mr. Olbermann given his contentious relations with past employers, saying, “We think he’s going to be an incredible asset to our company.” He added, “I do believe it is going to work.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/06/business/media/olbermann-to-return-to-tv-anchoring-postseason-baseball.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Speak Your Mind