...A Current Affair was hardly a "nightly newscast." It's partly why most Fox affiliates of the time still carried Independent Network News. Plus, in many markets, A Current Affair was carried by affiliates of the big 3 (WMTV/15 Madison, an NBC affiliate, carried it while WMSN/47 went with INN; I seem to recall WITI/6 Milwaukee carrying ACA when it was still a CBS affiliate, while WVTV/18 still had INN and the Fox affiliate at the time, WCGV/24, didn't carry either one); when INN folded in 1990, most Fox affiliates (including WMSN) merely picked up CNN Headline News...DToTheJ said:I'm sure if it was a lucrative option, I am sure that the affiliates would have been carrying one years ago. And with the nightly network news model on the back nine, I would not expect the Fox network to assemble such a program anytime soon.
By the way, technically, the Fox O&O's had their own nightly newscast back in the late 80's. It was called "A Current Affair."
e-dawg said:With majority of affiliates in the top-100 markets have locally produce or share newscast. Could they have a 30 min national news like the big three networks have?
I.E. Shepard Smith hosting FOX WORLD REPORT 630ET/530 CT/MT/PT?
Mark said:I don't think FOX would want to change the image of their news. CNN and MSNBC already have the liberal side...
DToTheJ said:Mark said:I don't think FOX would want to change the image of their news. CNN and MSNBC already have the liberal side...
Correction - CNN is actually trying to be "neutral"... But they do have their liberal moments...
Mark said:I don't think FOX would want to change the image of their news. CNN and MSNBC already have the liberal side, so why would FOX want to try to take that over.
They are already winning in the ratings, so the only thing going after a slice of the liberal pie would alienate those conservatives.
As for FOX doing a OTA evening newscast. I would ask, why would they do this? Is there more profit than running reruns or TMZ? If not, then why do it. Already NBC, ABC and CBS are splitting up the audience three ways. Would a FOX evening news attract NEW viewers? Or would it just win over viewers from a pie already being sliced three ways.
I think the people that watch the reruns or TMZ type shows, would not switch to news. They'd go to independent stations for more sitcoms or the like. Therefore FOX would only get viewers who already watch news on ABC, NBC, and CBS.