June 1, 2025

Media Decoder Blog: After Casting Wide Net, CNN Finds Co-Host for Morning Show

In his search for a new morning television host that lasted months, the new head of CNN, Jeffrey Zucker, considered dozens of names, some boldface and some unknown. It wasn’t until he paired Christopher Cuomo, the former ABC anchor he hired in January, with a young Washington correspondent named Kate Bolduan that he thought he had a perfect match.

On Thursday, in something of a surprise, Mr. Zucker named Ms. Bolduan the co-host of CNN’s forthcoming morning show, which has attracted considerable interest in the television business this year, given Mr.
Zucker’s past life as a former producer of NBC’s “Today” show.

“We were floored with excitement when we saw Chris and Kate together on screen,” Mr. Zucker said in a statement, referring to the “screen test” of the two hosts that took place about four weeks ago.

Mr. Cuomo and Ms. Bolduan will lead the new show, which will have its premiere in the late spring, replacing “Starting Point,” which was hosted by Soledad O’Brien.

They will be joined by Michaela Pereira, a new hire by Mr. Zucker who is a morning host on KTLA, the most popular local morning newscast in Los Angeles. “Chris, Kate and Michaela are a dynamic team that will give our viewers in America a new way to start their day,” Mr. Zucker said in his statement.

Mr. Zucker has declined interview requests since taking over as chief executive of CNN Worldwide in January. But his pairing of Mr. Cuomo, 42, and Ms. Bolduan, 29, suggests that he sees an opening for a morning show that is generationally different — or, to put it more bluntly, a morning show that has younger faces.

The top producer of the forthcoming program will be Jim Murphy, who ran ABC’s “Good Morning America” in the late 2000s while Mr. Cuomo was the news anchor of that program. Mr. Murphy, whose hiring was announced internally in February, said in a telephone interview that the CNN program would be a “wide-ranging morning show.”

“We’re not going to reinvent the wheel,” he said, seemingly trying to manage expectations. “But what we will provide people, I think, is a fresher, more energetic, more conversational and more interesting morning show than what they’re used to.”

Some of the specifics about the format and the content are still being sorted out, Mr. Murphy said. But he indicated that the new show “will not be all politics like MSNBC is,” referring to “Morning Joe,” or “as consistently about social issues as Fox is,” referring to “Fox Friends.”

Both “Morning Joe” and “Fox Friends” routinely outperform “Starting Point” in ratings, which may be part of the reason why Mr. Zucker has decided to start over from scratch and make a new show. “Starting Point” was plagued by executive-level disagreements about what the show should and shouldn’t be. Ms. O’Brien’s associates complained that the show wasn’t supported internally or promoted externally.

Mr. Zucker and Mr. Murphy seem determined not to repeat those missteps. Mr. Murphy said in the interview that “we really did cast a wide net” as the new management considered possible co-hosts for Mr. Cuomo.

Of Ms. Bolduan, he said, “It is a surprising choice, and we know that.” That’s because Mr. Zucker originally planned to pair Mr. Cuomo with Erin Burnett, a better-known host who CNN hired away from CNBC two years ago. But the plan fell apart, reportedly due to Ms. Burnett’s unwillingness to move to the morning time slot. She currently hosts a 7 p.m. newscast, “Erin Burnett OutFront.”

CNN executives portrayed this as a good thing, because it led them to Ms. Bolduan, who wowed Mr. Zucker and his lieutenants. Mr. Cuomo and Ms. Bolduan had obvious chemistry when they tried hosting together in an internal test, and that’s what morning producers look for when they put people together.

Ms. Bolduan, who at 29 will be the youngest morning host on any major television network, will move to New York from Washington for the new job. She is currently a congressional correspondent for CNN. She joined the channel in 2007 as a correspondent for the CNN service that provides news to local television stations. She was promoted to the main channel in 2009. Ms. Bolduan has gained a little bit of hosting experience lately by co-hosting one hour of “The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer” in Washington. But she hasn’t anchored elsewhere, so the new morning show could have something of a learning curve.

“It is a huge opportunity to work on this new show,” she said in a statement on Thursday. “Knowing that we have the resources of some of the most experienced executives in the business, the backing of a brand like CNN, and to be able to sit alongside such great people as Chris and Michaela — I can’t think of a better combination.”

Executives at CNN have said they know — and they want others to know — that the rebuilding of the channel’s daily schedule will take time. But the channel’s recent ratings lows suggest that it is primed for a comeback of sorts. “Starting Point,” for instance, averaged just 234,000 viewers last year, CNN’s lowest total viewer number in that time slot in more than a decade.

Inside the network, there is confidence that Mr. Zucker can increase its market share in the mornings. Mr. Zucker is the producer credited with taking the “Today” show to first place in the ratings in the 1990s. He went on to become the chief executive of NBC, until Comcast took over the company in 2011.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/28/after-casting-wide-net-cnn-finds-co-host-for-morning-show/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: Chris Cuomo Leaves ABC for CNN

2:00 p.m. | Updated Chris Cuomo, a former news anchor on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” is on his way back to the morning shift, this time for CNN.

The cable news channel said Tuesday that it is developing a brand-new morning show to replace “Starting Point,” the news and interview show it created just a year ago. The new, unnamed show, with Mr. Cuomo as a co-host, will start sometime in the spring.

Many observers in the tight-knit television news industry, including some at CNN, expect he will be paired with Erin Burnett, who like him is a former morning co-host. But in a news release on Tuesday, CNN said only that Mr. Cuomo had been hired to “have a major role in a new CNN morning show.” It declined to comment on Ms. Burnett’s status.

The moves come just one week after Jeffrey Zucker formally took over CNN Worldwide, following his appointment to president last November. The morning time period is a top priority for Mr. Zucker, and the television industry has been paying close attention to his plans because he led NBC’s “Today” to ratings highs two decades ago, starting a 16-year winning streak for the show.

Last year, he was a sounding board for Ben Sherwood, the president of ABC News, as ABC’s “Good Morning America” finally put an end to the “Today” show’s streak.

TMZ first reported Mr. Cuomo’s impending move on Monday night. Mr. Cuomo said in a statement, “This is a fantastic opportunity to do what I value the most and hopefully to do the work that I do best.”

His brother, the Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York, said in a radio interview Tuesday morning that Mr. Cuomo “had a lot of fun at ABC,” but CNN would “work better for him personally.” Governor Cuomo added, “He’ll be on every day, so there will be a certain relevance to what he’s doing.”

Cuomo has been the co-anchor of the once-a-week ABC newsmagazine “20/20″ for the past three years. He previously spent three years as the news anchor on “Good Morning America.”

Mr. Cuomo was in the running for the co-host chair on “G.M.A.” when Diane Sawyer left the morning show for the evening newscast “World News” in 2009. But the co-host job went instead to George Stephanopoulos. At CNN, Mr. Cuomo will have a new opportunity to lead a morning newscast.

CNN could use the help. “Starting Point” had just 234,000 viewers on a typical morning in 2012, its lowest total viewer number in more than 10 years. Of those, just 96,000 were between the ages of 25 to 54, the crucial demographic for cable news advertisers.

“Starting Point” is anchored by Soledad O’Brien, whose political interviews were widely praised last year despite the program’s relatively low ratings. CNN tacitly acknowledged on Tuesday that Ms. O’Brien will be moved out of the morning time slot. A spokeswoman said in an e-mail, “Soledad is very important to the network, and we’re discussing various options with her.”

As it seeks a bigger audience in the mornings, CNN risks irritating the audience it already does have by making sweeping changes. After all, “Starting Point” had its start just 12 months ago.

Ms. O’Brien’s supporters say the show never received the internal support and the external marketing it was promised; they imply that the show wasn’t given a chance to succeed. But top executives at CNN and its parent company, Time Warner, have been dissatisfied with the show and they believe a shakeup is in order.

Meanwhile, pairing Ms. Burnett with Mr. Cuomo would create another hole in CNN’s weekday schedule. Ms. Burnett is best known for her years at CNBC, where she and Mark Haines were at the helm of the midmorning markets newscast “Squawk on the Street” from 2005 to 2011. She is now the anchor of the 7 p.m. hour on CNN. But the hour has suffered like “Starting Point” and the rest of the channel’s schedule.

Representatives for Ms. O’Brien and Ms. Burnett declined to comment on Tuesday.

Mr. Cuomo is the third boldface name from ABC to be hired by CNN in the past year. The first was John Berman, a longtime ABC correspondent, who now co-hosts “Early Start,” the predawn newscast that precedes “Starting Point.” The second was Jake Tapper, the chief White House correspondent for ABC.

Mr. Zucker was instrumental in signing Mr. Tapper, who will begin anchoring a daily program for CNN later this year. The executive in charge of talent at CNN, Amy Entelis, is also a transplant from ABC. She arrived at CNN about three months before Mr. Berman.

Now, Mr. Zucker is figuring out where they and CNN’s other hosts fit on the channel’s schedule. Mr. Zucker, who rose from “Today” to run all of NBCUniversal in the 2000s, was hired two months ago to revitalize the ailing channel. He officially started last week, and he seems to be wasting no time.

On Tuesday, CNN Worldwide’s managing editor, Mark Whitaker, stepped down, stating in a e-mail to staff members that Mr. Zucker “deserves his own team and management structure and the freedom to communicate one clear vision to the staff.” Mr. Whitaker was a top lieutenant of the prior CNN Worldwide president, Jim Walton.

Mr. Zucker has declined interview requests about his plans, but a talent announcement last week — the poaching of the sports reporter Rachel Nichols from ESPN — was a hint of what’s to come. He said Ms. Nichols would host a weekend sports program and called her hiring “an important step in expanding the range of programming and storytelling on CNN.”

The channel was starting to do that even before Mr. Zucker arrived. Late last year, it ordered documentary series from Anthony Bourdain and Morgan Spurlock. The two series will have their premieres this spring.

Thomas Kaplan contributed reporting.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/29/abcs-chris-cuomo-is-said-to-jump-to-cnn/?partner=rss&emc=rss