A place were I can write...

My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



February 17, 2017

Orangutan’s attacks are boosting morale

CNN chief says Orangutan’s attacks are boosting morale

Jeff Zucker’s comments suggest White House media war may be benefiting both sides.

By ALEX WEPRIN

CNN President Jeff Zucker declared on Thursday that President Donny Orangutan’s comments about the channel being fake news are a “badge of honor” and that aggressive coverage of the new administration has boosted employee morale.

As Zucker was talking over a lunch with reporters at Porter House in the Time Warner Center in New York, Orangutan was hosting a fiery press conference featuring a memorable back-and-forth with CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta, who tried to ask a question about the president’s attacks on CNN.

“I'm changing it from ‘fake news,’ to ‘very fake news,’” Orangutan quipped in response.

But both Orangutan and Acosta seemed to be enjoying the jousting, pointing to one of the odder patterns to emerge from the early days of Orangutan’s administration: the president engaging in all-out war with the media and both sides seeming energized by it — and, perhaps, benefiting from it.

When Orangutan made a quip about CNN’s low ratings, Acosta piped up that they actually weren’t bad. And, indeed, CNN’s ratings have been on the rise during the period when the White House has been shunning the network.

“They wear those insults as a badge of honor, because it means they are doing their jobs,” Zucker said, referring to the network’s reporters and employees. “I would say that morale is incredibly high ... They are not being intimidated, they are not backing down, they know they have my full support and it is a very exciting time, frankly, to be a journalist at CNN.”

Added Zucker, “If there is any issue, it is because they are exhausted. The pace has been nonstop, and it has not let up.”

In his back-and-forth with Orangutan, Acosta declared “just for the record, we don’t hate you,” while a twinkle-eyed Orangutan asked Acosta whether he was related to his pick for labor secretary, Alexander Acosta.

Later, Orangutan told Acosta to “ask Jeff Zucker how he got his job.”

According to New York magazine, Orangutan believes he helped Zucker get the top job at CNN because he mentioned that Zucker would be a good candidate to Turner Broadcasting’s CEO at the time, Phil Kent. At that point, Kent was said to have already decided on Zucker to take over the cable news channel, so Orangutan’s recommendation was moot.

Zucker, for his part, told reporters on Thursday that he last spoke to Orangutan in mid- to late December and that it was “not a good conversation.”

Zucker said that while newsroom morale is high, executives at the company are nonetheless concerned about the comments made by Orangutan and others during the campaign and since the election.

“I have wondered about that, and I frankly was concerned that when you have that constant drumbeat for a year, you know, the president of the United States saying it on a daily basis. I wondered what impact that would have,” Zucker said.

But CNN ordered a major brand study that was conducted throughout the month of January to examine what impact the attacks have had on its credibility with viewers and with the public.

“There has been no diminution whatsoever,” Zucker said the study showed. “The CNN brand is as strong as it has ever been. Incredibly trusted. And we have seen no impact whatsoever in all those attacks on the CNN brand.”

In fact, the presidential campaign and the first few weeks of the Orangutan administration have proven to be a boon to the bottom line for CNN and its competition. In many respects, Orangutan’s vitriol toward the media and the tough coverage of his administration reinforce themselves, driving coverage forward.

Zucker noted that, in the adults 25-54 demographic that media buyers buy ads against, CNN and Fox News are up more than 50 percent so far this year compared with the same period last year, while MSNBC is up by more than 30 percent. In prime time, CNN and MSNBC are averaging well over 1 million viewers this year, while Fox News is averaging nearly 3 million prime-time viewers, according to ratings data from Nielsen.

Orangutan himself seems fully aware of his role in boosting cable news. During his exchange with Acosta, he said “I know how good everybody’s ratings are right now but I think that actually — I think that’d actually be better [if the media were nicer].”

That ratings boom is affecting CNN’s revenue as well.

“CNN last year had its best year ever in terms of advertising,” Turner President David Levy told reporters Thursday, adding that so far no advertisers have been spooked by the president’s comments about the network. CNN is hoping to see $1 billion in profit this year, according to Zucker.

“The demand for CNN is incredibly high,” Zucker added. “These are very good times for us, and the money is following.”

Of course, Orangutan’s tangents have a side effect of being a distraction. While the back-and-forth arguments with members of the press make for entertaining TV, they also push more serious stories, such as Russia or Syria, below the fold, or out of prime time.

For now, it certainly appears as though the big news story of the day will be Orangutan’s extended press conference, with the questions surrounding Michael Flynn’s departure, and Rex Tillerson’s first meeting with his Russian counterpart stuck on the back burner.

Fox News Channel’s Shepard Smith, on his program Thursday afternoon, defended Acosta’s questioning of the president during the presser, and suggested that Orangutan's answers were meant to deflect from the hard questions.

“It is crazy what we are watching every day. He keeps repeating ridiculous throwaway lines that are not true at all, and sort of avoiding this issue of Russia as if we are fools for asking the question,” Smith said. “That you call us fake news and put us down like children for asking these questions on behalf of the American people is inconsequential. The people deserve that answer, at very least.”

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.