That’s a cheap shot and barely worth addressing.has he ever been outside the academia bubble?
Woelfel’s “thought experiment”, as he himself described it, is precisely the thing you want people in an academic environment to do. The broadcasting business is in trouble and needs new ideas. Academics are one source of such ideas. Some may pan out; some may not. But practitioners of the news business on a daily basis often don’t have the time to step back to gain a broader perspective. I’ve said elsewhere that broadcasters seem limited in their thinking. That’s not surprising: a lot of things have to happen every day. Time and mental energy aren’t boundless. Outside perspectives, particularly from people who are preparing new entrants into the field, can be worthwhile. This sort of thing happens in technology all the time. Tech businesses that aren’t open to new ideas don’t stick around. So they’re doing new things all the time. Some work, some don’t. Broadcasters could learn from that.
There are very good local news operations around the country. KUSA is one of them. It’s probably the best news operation in Denver. Who’s to say that people at the network level couldn’t learn something from them. The only problem I have with that suggestion is that I would hate to lose Clark and company. But that may happen anyway if the Nexstar-Tegna merger goes through.Hire someone from Denver to run CBS News and end CBS Mornings! This should fix everything!