That's the title of a provocative essay by Stacey Woelfel, professor emeritus at the University of Missouri School of Journalism. Woelfel was news director of KOMU-TV, the university's NBC affiliate, for 24 years. He describes his ideas as a "thought experiment". Some of them are...well, idealistic...others are intriguing. To summarize them as bullet points:
Some of this is what I call "capital-J journalism" stuff, not entirely mindful of economic realities; others are fairly sensible. Notably, while having an hour of prime-time news has been a long-time pipe dream of "capital-J" journalists, the time may have come for it: it's cheaper to produce than another entertainment show and there are all sorts of cross-promotional opportunities that would be enabled.
I encourage people to read the whole thing before reacting to it.
Disclaimer of sorts: Woelfel was two classes after me at the J-School. Since the core of the program was two years in duration, our paths didn't cross and I didn't know him. But I definitely understand where he's coming from, both the parts I agree with and the parts that I don't.
Here's the essay: If I Were the Boss at CBS…
- Spin 60 Minutes off into an independent entity
- Program an hour of news in broadcast prime time on CBS every weekday
- Immensely expand the DC newsroom
- Refocus Face the Nation into a journalist-led debate program
- Go all in on CBS News 24/7 (and change the name) {this is referring to CBS's streaming service}
- Flood and own social media
- End CBS Mornings (except CBS News Sunday Morning)
- Hire Denver’s Kyle Clark and his team to remake the CBS Evening News
- Bring in a local TV news director to be a real editor-in-chief
If this was more than a thought experiment and I really wanted all of this to happen, I’d need to find the right person for the job to lead the new CBS News. Rather than an editor-in-chief who appears to be brought in to shift CBS in favor of the billionaire class, I’d look to hire someone who’s already been making TV news work. And I wouldn’t have to look any further than among the best local news directors working today. Unlike my anchor pick, I won’t name any specific names here. But look at the most successful local newsrooms out there, CBS or otherwise, and you’ll find people creating newscasts and serving their communities at a level the networks haven’t achieved in years.
Some of this is what I call "capital-J journalism" stuff, not entirely mindful of economic realities; others are fairly sensible. Notably, while having an hour of prime-time news has been a long-time pipe dream of "capital-J" journalists, the time may have come for it: it's cheaper to produce than another entertainment show and there are all sorts of cross-promotional opportunities that would be enabled.
I encourage people to read the whole thing before reacting to it.
Disclaimer of sorts: Woelfel was two classes after me at the J-School. Since the core of the program was two years in duration, our paths didn't cross and I didn't know him. But I definitely understand where he's coming from, both the parts I agree with and the parts that I don't.
Here's the essay: If I Were the Boss at CBS…