{"id":91006,"date":"2002-03-06T00:00:01","date_gmt":"2002-03-06T05:00:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/alpha.pewresearch.org\/pewresearch-org\/2002\/03\/06\/why-we-need-nightline\/"},"modified":"2024-04-14T04:16:40","modified_gmt":"2024-04-14T09:16:40","slug":"why-we-need-nightline","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/alpha.pewresearch.org\/pewresearch-org\/journalism\/2002\/03\/06\/why-we-need-nightline\/","title":{"rendered":"Why We Need \u2018Nightline\u2019"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">What&#8217;s left of broadcast television journalism is at stake now, many in the business believe, in the war within the Disney Co. over whether to replace &#8220;Nightline&#8221; with the late-night comedy of David Letterman. The people who run Disney seem intent on displacing &#8220;Nightline&#8221; from the 11:30 p.m. time slot it has held for 22 years &#8212; thus likely weakening or perhaps destroying it &#8212; no matter what.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">One explanation publicly offered by an unnamed Disney executive quoted in the press is that bcause of competition from cable news the &#8220;relevancy of &#8216;Nightline&#8217; is just not there anymore.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Another is that &#8220;Nightline&#8221; has run its course, since its star and creator, Ted Koppel now has cut back to three days a week. &#8220;Ted is the show,&#8221; an anonymous Disney executive says.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Both statements reveal the depth of misunderstanding among people who run Disney now.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The notion that &#8220;Nightline&#8221; has lost its relevancy because national news now airs in prime time (on cable) is demonstrably false. At a time when all broadcasting is losing viewership due to proliferating competition, &#8220;Nightline&#8221; has done pretty well by comparison. &#8220;Nightline&#8217;s&#8221; audience is down 8 percent over the past five years. Meanwhile, ABC&#8217;s prime-time entertainment programs in the half-hour before local news are down 18 percent. &#8220;Nightline&#8217;s&#8221; audience, even Disney executives acknowledge, is comparable to Letterman&#8217;s, perhaps larger, depending on which numbers you examine.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Disney executives also have suggested that &#8220;Nightline&#8221; is losing money. But internal ABC numbers shared last week with staff reveal this is false. &#8220;Nightline&#8221; is projected to make $ 13 million for the network this year. The comedy show that follows it, &#8220;Politically Incorrect,&#8221; loses money.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Finally, they suggest that &#8220;Nightline&#8221; attracts an older audience. But in fact its demographics, again according to the actual internal numbers, are younger than those for the evening news, &#8220;Good Morning America&#8221; and most of the prime-time magazines on all three networks &#8212; and only a couple of years different from Jay Leno&#8217;s and Letterman&#8217;s.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">What Disney executives are really arguing is that journalism is just another kind of content; that communication is communication. In other words, if people can watch Larry King at 9, or Chris Matthews&#8217;s &#8220;Hardball,&#8221; or the &#8220;O&#8217;Reilly Factor&#8221; on Fox, Ted Koppel becomes irrelevant.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">But what most people understand post-9-11, which Disney does not, is that when television journalism increasingly becomes defined by talk shows, celebrity and consumer segments and soap-operatic episodes on, say, &#8220;Dateline,&#8221; a show such as &#8220;Nightline&#8221; actually becomes more relevant &#8212; because it is so rare. Inside television, &#8220;Nightline&#8221; is now an island.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Which brings us to the second Disney misunderstanding: that Koppel is &#8220;Nightline.&#8221; Over the past nine years, the &#8220;Nightline&#8221; format has grown beyond the six-minute setup piece and 15 minutes of Koppel live interview to become a well of documentary, independent filmmaking, long interviews and more. In the current sad state of television news, &#8220;Nightline&#8221; has become much more than Koppel, or even its superb producers, Tom Bettag and Leroy Sievers, or its fine reporting and producing staff. &#8220;Nightline&#8221; keeps alive the idea that citizens are intelligent, capable and interested in the process of self-government. It embodies the idea that television can be a genuine medium for journalism.<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Ted Koppel once noted that turning a camera on an event is technology, not journalism. Journalism is making choices about what to present, editing, synthesizing. This is the relevancy of &#8220;Nightline,&#8221; and the reason why what becomes of it is important. And it is why corporations that have benefited more than most from the idea of informed citizens and self-government should be expected to contribute to its continued health.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>What&#039;s left of broadcast television journalism is at stake now, many in the business believe, in the war within the Disney Co. over whether to replace &quot;Nightline&quot; with the late-night comedy of David Letterman. The people who run Disney seem intent on displacing &quot;Nightline&quot; &#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":180,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"sub_headline":"","sub_title":"","_crdt_document":"","_prc_public_revisions":[],"_ppp_expiration_hours":0,"_ppp_enabled":false,"ai_generated_summary":"","relatedPosts":[],"reportMaterials":[],"multiSectionReport":[],"package_parts__enabled":false,"package_parts":[],"_prc_fork_parent":0,"_prc_fork_status":"","_prc_active_fork":0,"datacite_doi":"","datacite_doi_citation":"","_prc_seo_qr_attachment_id":0,"spoken_article_player_enabled":true,"bylines":[{"key":"259e5362-a9bc-4f1b-8504-ebefe6ecc218","termId":2199}],"acknowledgements":[],"displayBylines":true,"footnotes":"","prc_watchers":[]},"categories":[332,348],"tags":[],"bylines":[2199],"collection":[],"datasets":[],"level_of_effort":[],"primary_audience":[],"information_type":[],"_post_visibility":[],"formats":[458],"_fund_pool":[],"languages":[],"regions-countries":[],"research-teams":[527],"workflow-status":[],"class_list":["post-91006","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-media-industry","category-television","bylines-pew-research-center-journalism-media-staff","formats-report","research-teams-journalism"],"label":false,"post_parent":0,"word_count":603,"canonical_url":"https:\/\/alpha.pewresearch.org\/pewresearch-org\/journalism\/2002\/03\/06\/why-we-need-nightline\/","art_direction":false,"_embeds":[],"watchers":[],"table_of_contents":[],"report_materials":"","report_pagination":{"current_post":null,"next_post":null,"previous_post":null,"pagination_items":[]},"parent_info":{"parent_title":"Why We Need \u2018Nightline\u2019","parent_id":91006},"materialsOrdered":[],"chaptersOrdered":[],"partsOrdered":[],"partsEnabled":false,"datacite_doi":"","prc_seo_data":{"title":"Why We Need \u2018Nightline\u2019","description":"<p>What&#039;s left of broadcast television journalism is at stake now, many in the business believe, in the war within the Disney Co. over whether to replace &quot;Nightline&quot; with the late-night comedy of David Letterman. 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