Think about it: CBS is ending The Late Show, and there are rumblings The Daily Show might be kaput at Comedy Central... Why not just move the show to CBS? Makes sense, they're under the same Paramount umbrella. Crazy idea?
Would it be cheaper than luring Guttfeld over?
The craziest. It's the same company (Paramount). Also the same company that has hired Bari Weiss to overhaul CBS News. And she's trying to get Scott Jennings from his position as right-wing token at CNN:Think about it: CBS is ending The Late Show, and there are rumblings The Daily Show might be kaput at Comedy Central... Why not just move the show to CBS? Makes sense, they're under the same Paramount umbrella. Crazy idea?
linear TV overall skews old, it's not even on the radar of these young Antifia hoodlums or Charlie Kirk worshippersAgain, guys----Bari Weiss is a game-changer. I said this in another thread. Expect a news product at 11:35, something that Bari's company The Free Press would have its imprint all over (CBS acquired that company when it put her in charge of news). It'll skew young, it'll be cheap and it will lean right.
linear TV overall skews old
She was not hired to preserve the status quo of CBS News.
Sure. But once again, the 11:30 PM hour is not in the domain of CBS News.
Yet.
They made her Editor-in-Chief of CBS News without that proof and already, Gayle King and John Dickerson are on their way out, and 60 Minutes may be in for an overhaul too.She has to demonstrate she knows how to produce TV.
11:35 for a cheap news product is kinda small potatoes by comparison.
The only way I see it happening is if the news department gives up the morning show time slot to entertainment. That would be a good deal.
Two hours for one? Yeah. But what does entertainment do with 7:00 a.m.-9:00 a.m.?
The last time CBS was ever competitive in that time slot to begin with!Bring back reruns of Captain Kangaroo.
That should attract an audience of hundreds of people.Again, guys----Bari Weiss is a game-changer. I said this in another thread. Expect a news product at 11:35, something that Bari's company The Free Press would have its imprint all over (CBS acquired that company when it put her in charge of news). It'll skew young, it'll be cheap and it will lean right.
I saw that. That was the overall average for all CBS programming—including 60 Minutes, CBS Sunday Morning and the CBS Evening News.That should attract an audience of hundreds of people.
Colbert made a joke last night about the average age of CBS' audience being 67 -- so the bottom line is that something intended to skew young won't reach that audience on CBS. Although maybe they could reach the younger crowd in streaming on Paramount+. For that matter, the audience that wants news that leans right already has multiple choices, so why would they tune in to CBS?