Sunday morning talk shows

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The Sunday morning talk shows in the United States are influential television talk/public affairs programs broadcast on Sunday mornings. The five current programs, in order of their debuts, are:

While these are the "Big Five" that are universally included in the definition, there are some other shows that are occasionally included in this category. Examples include NBC's syndicated The Chris Matthews Show, Bloomberg Television's Political Capital, the PBS roundtable The McLaughlin Group, C-SPAN's Newsmakers[1], MSNBC's Tim Russert Show, FNC's Journal Editorial Report[2] and several others.

The talk shows often feature national leaders in politics and public life, including U.S. Senators, U.S. Representatives, state governors, candidates for President and Vice President, Cabinet secretaries, White House officials, and directors of federal agencies. U.S. military leaders, ambassadors, and religious leaders also appear, as well as promient journalists and commentators. Members of prominent think tanks such as Brookings, AEI, Cato, Hoover, and Heritage often are invited to appear on the Sunday morning talk shows.

The shows are generally aired live or recorded in Washington, D.C., providing easy access to many political leaders. Many individuals manage to appear via satellite or in studio for two or more of the programs. In the eleven years that there have been five talk shows, four times has an individual appeared on all five programs in one week. In 1998, William H. Ginsburg, attorney for Monica Lewinsky's family during the Lewinsky scandal, performed what would be named in his honor as the "Full Ginsburg." Then-Vice Presidential candidate Dick Cheney repeated it in 2000, as did then Senator and vice presidential candidate John Edwards in 2004, and in 2007, presidential candidate and Senator Hillary Clinton equaled the feat. More common is an interviewee appearing on different shows in consecutive weeks (for instance, a Presidential candidate may appear on Meet the Press one week, This Week the next, and Fox News Sunday the week after that).

C-SPAN Radio provides a commercial-free rebroadcast of all five shows in rapid succession, beginning at noon Eastern. Other radio stations rebroadcast some of the shows with commercials on Sunday afternoon.

Many local television stations also produce their own programs that air in this time frame, generally focusing on local or state politics rather than national issues.


[edit] Australia

Similar Sunday-morning current-events shows exist in Australia. These include Network Ten's Meet the Press since 1992, Nine Network's Sunday, since 1981, and Insiders, a political interview program on the ABC.

[edit] United Kingdom

Similar practice occurs in the UK, in the form of shows such as The Andrew Marr Show (previously known as Sunday AM) on the BBC and Sunday Live with Adam Boulton on Sky News; however, these shows have a somewhat-broader range, often intervewing figures from the arts, popular entertainment, and sports in addition to political leaders (similar to CBS News Sunday Morning in the United States). The first such Sunday show in Britain was Weekend World, made by London Weekend Television for the ITV network from 1972 to 1988.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Politico Sunday morning tip sheet
  2. ^ Beall, Joshua. Weekend Talk Show Preview. Free Republic.
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