Re: The Curse of the "Captain": CBS to Change Its Morning News Show Yet Again
While Kuralt was as classy as ever, the people at CBS News
failed to grasp that on Monday-Friday people are rushing to get
ready for work and don't have time for the long, leisurely pieces
so characteristic of "Sunday Morning," when people have time
to kick back and take them in.
Again, I think CBS's problems go back a long way. "Today" started
in 1952, hit its stride with (yes!) the chimp J. Fred Muggs, and built
a following from there. CBS had problems from the time they first
tried to compete with "Today": "The Morning Show," which debuted
in 1954 and had as hosts Walter Cronkite, Jack Paar, Dick Van Dyke,
and Will Rogers Jr., never caught on. What did was a 45-minute show
with Jimmy Dean in 1957, which was actually beating "Today" when CBS
decided to move it to the afternoon.
CBS got out of the morning-news race (except for a 15-minute newscast
with Richard Hottelet at 8 AM in the early '60s), decided to do one at 10
AM ("Calendar" with Harry Reasoner, succeeded by the "CBS Morning News
With Mike Wallace," which moved to 7 AM in 1965). After that there was
some turnover (Wallace, Joseph Benti, John Hart) before the Hughes Rudd/
Sally Quinn fiasco in 1973.
Now fast forward to 1975. ABC decided to get in on the action, and after
the disaster of "A.M. America," the show was revamped in November as
"Good Morning America." It was about this time that ABC was beginning to
move toward number one, and for the next three years or so, every primetime
ABC show seemed to have Hartman's voiceover promoting the next morning's show.
And with more and more people leaving their sets on the ABC station at night, "GMA"
was waiting for them the next morning--especially during the Iranian hostage crisis
when ABC was literally having the last word of the day with its late-night reports
(which became "Nightline").
Bottom line: on NBC is an American institution; on ABC is a show which developed
its own following rather quickly. And news habits are hard to break; by the time
CBS scuttled the "Morning News"/"Captain Kangaroo" combo, most of the morning
audience had committed to one of the other two. And it doesn't help when CBS has
to constantly change format and personnel.
At the other end of the day, however, it looks like CBS made a good move replacing
Katie with Scott Pelley. As I understand it, Katie was supposed to bring the predominantly
female audience from the morning shows along with features and interviews--and I don't
think people want features and interviews at 6:30 PM.
I think that right now, if I ran a CBS affiliate, I'd settle for one hour of hard news, choice
of 7 or 8 AM, and follow the lead of some Fox affiliates (ours has five hours, from 5 to 10 AM)
and expand my local morning news. Heck, the bucks are out there.