Mark_Giardina said:Maybe I should start a new topic but what the hell I will just comment here.
When you come down to it, Juan Williams actually made out a lot better than Bob Edwards did.
For those who might not remember, it was announced back in the spring/summer of 2004 that Bob Edwards would no longer be hosting "Morning Edition." NPR wouldn't even allow Edwards to stay on the air long enough to celebrate his 25th (I believe) anniversary with the network. Edwards helped make "Morning Edition" into one of the most popular shows on NPR.
So instead of taking a job as a "special correspondent, or what ever title someone came up with, Edwards left NPR and went to satellite radio.
I may be wrong, but I highly doubt Edwards is making the money that Juan Williams is pulling down these days. And unless one is a subscriber to satellite radio, Edwards is no where close to having the audience Williams does on FOX. (I know comparing radio to television when it comes to audience is like comparing apples to oranges.)
MattParker said:I'm sure Colonel Bob isn't starving. He signed with Sirius when Mel was throwing money at talent. Of course, when it comes time to renew, he is probably looking at a huge pay cut.
Question is: What the success of Morning Edition due to Bob or due to the show? The fact that ME seems to be doing just fine without him, suggests it's the show. Bob has great pipes but he is not a compelling personality. In 25 years, nobody ever called it "The Bob Edwards Show" or thought of doing so. And Bob is a news presenter (not that there's anything wrong with that). He read words written by others, introduced stories reported by others and asked questions composed by others. Besides his voice, there wasn't much of Bob himself in the show. But for an announcer, he's done pretty well.
MattParker said:Yes, Mark and NPR has not gotten any better at firing people since. In fact, the entire broadcasting industry's human resource skills need a great deal of work. It's amazing there are not a lot more law suits.
It was time for him to go, but NPR screwed it up by making it a virtual firing. They should've figured out a way of easing him (Bob Edwards) out of the job.
If people weren't afraid of being blacklisted, there would be more law suits. The broadcast industry is a tight little fraternity.
aaronread said:There was a ton of audience research that demanded, among other things, that NPR needed co-hosts on the ME shift. Edwards didn't want a co-host. NPR and Edwards argued (mostly privately) about it for a while, no resolution was reached, and Edwards was let go.
MattParker said:Juan has been a Fox "contributor" since 1997. He joined NPR in 2000. They knew what they were getting.
He was their token conservative, hired to placate conservatives in congress, the CPB and major corporate sponsors.
What audience research?
When Bob Edwards first came on board as anchor, Morning Edition had lower ratings than All Things Considered. (Snip) Edwards later said, after he left NPR, that all he requested from the network was to be allowed to stay until his reached his 25th anniversary, which was just a few months away from the date he was taken off the show. The network brass refused him that one simple request.
Mark_Giardina said:...It's all a moot point anyways since "Col Bob" landed on satellite radio. However I wonder how long Sirus/XM can keep operating with the huge debt it has? What will also be interesting is to see if Sirus/XM will renew Edwards' contract once it expires?
DG said:Mark_Giardina said:...It's all a moot point anyways since "Col Bob" landed on satellite radio. However I wonder how long Sirus/XM can keep operating with the huge debt it has? What will also be interesting is to see if Sirus/XM will renew Edwards' contract once it expires?
SatRadio may be Bob's primary high-payin gig these days, but he's still heard on many PubRadio stations across the country.
Our public station carries his "Bob Edwards Weekend" program. Granted, he probably doesn't have the high-listenership he enjoyed while doing ME, but I'd at least proffer that he still has an appreciable audience on the more traditional terrestrial PubRadio outlets, and perhaps has more listeners there than on satellite.