November 14, 2024

Shepard Smith to Run a ‘Breaking News Division’ at Fox

The schedule shift will enable Fox News to add a planned opinion program in prime time headed by Megyn Kelly, while also taking steps to enhance Mr. Smith’s role as the network’s primary hard-news anchor.

The plan calls for Mr. Smith to interrupt any of the other Fox News programs for breaking news reports; it also means the program lineup in prime time will be able to accommodate four opinion-based hosts instead of the current three. Fox has yet to announce formally the full evening lineup, but the widespread speculation is that Ms. Kelly’s new show would appear at 9 p.m., with Sean Hannity’s program making way by moving to 7 p.m.

The official announcement of the new lineup is expected soon. No start date was announced for Mr. Smith’s new program, to be called “Shepard Smith Reporting,” partly because he will undergo surgery next week for a torn shoulder labrum.

Mr. Smith said the new overall format, which will have him available all day to break in with news, should help delineate even more clearly the wall between news and opinion shows — what he called “programming” — at the network.

“My team is really good at news,” he said. “They are really good at programming. For me one of the best things we can do is raise the wall between news and programming even higher. We need that wall high. We serve different functions.”

Mr. Smith said he would operate out of a new, state-of-the-art studio and be able to follow stories as they happen by referring to social media accounts as well as conventional coverage.

“We need to stop pretending that people aren’t tweeting things,” Mr. Smith said. The idea is to check what may be trending on Twitter and use “information specialists” to verify that information, while also tying it to possible video on YouTube or photos on Instagram or Facebook.

He said he welcomed the shift because “I’ve been bored for a long time” from doing a conventional evening newscast reading from a teleprompter.

Mr. Smtih recently signed a new contract to remain at Fox News, and the breaking news project is very expensive, he said, without mentioning specific figures.

“Roger is spending an unbelievable amount of money,” he said, referring to the Fox News chief executive, Roger Ailes. “He’s been disrupting this industry for a long time. I love it.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/13/business/media/shepard-smith-to-run-a-breaking-news-division-at-fox.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: On Second Night in New Slot, a Ratings Slide for Kimmel

Not that anyone should have expected Jimmy Kimmel to stage an immediate late-night ratings coup, but on his second night in a head-to-head-to-head contest with Jay Leno and David Letterman, Mr. Kimmel fell slightly in the ratings, while both other hosts added viewers.

The strength of Mr. Leno and NBC’s “Tonight” show was underscored by his margin among total viewers. On Wednesday, Mr. Leno averaged 3.55 million viewers, up from 3.27 million the night before. That put Mr. Leno in a strong first-place position among total viewers.

Mr. Letterman also experienced an upward bounce, to 3.04 million total viewers from 2.88 million.

Mr. Kimmel, meanwhile, saw his viewer total drop off to 2.86 million viewers from 3.09 million on Tuesday night — meaning he finished third in viewers on his second night.

But in the contest among the viewers who count the most among advertisers, viewers between the ages of 18 and 49, Mr. Kimmel showed more strength. He picked up significantly from his first night, averaging 1.08 million viewers in that age group, up from 887,000 on Tuesday. That total was a virtual tie with Mr. Leno, who was just 6,000 viewers ahead in the 18-49 category.

Mr. Letterman also picked up significantly in that group, growing to 998,000 viewers in that audience segment from 683,000 on Tuesday.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/10/on-second-night-in-new-slot-a-ratings-slide-for-kimmel/?partner=rss&emc=rss