Countdown with Keith Olbermann | |
---|---|
Format | News Political Commentary |
Presented by | Keith Olbermann |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 1,400+ [1] |
Production | |
Location(s) | Secaucus, New Jersey (April 3, 2003 – October 19, 2007) New York City (October 22, 2007 – January 21, 2011; June 20, 2011 – present) |
Running time | 60 minutes (March 2003 – January 2011; June 2011 – present) 63 minutes (some episodes in June 2011) |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | MSNBC (2003 – 2011) Current TV (2011 – present) |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) 1080i (HDTV) |
Original airing | March 31, 2003 June 20, 2011 – present |
– January 21, 2011 ;
External links | |
Website |
Countdown with Keith Olbermann is an hour-long weeknight news and political commentary program[2] that airs on Current TV, where it began airing on June 20, 2011.[3] The program was broadcast on MSNBC from March 31, 2003, to January 21, 2011. On MSNBC, the show presented five selected news stories of the day, with commentary by Olbermann and interviews of guests. At the start of Countdown, Olbermann told television columnist Lisa de Moraes:
"Our charge for the immediate future is to stay out of the way of the news.... News is the news. We will not be screwing around with it.... As times improve and the war [in Iraq] ends we will begin to introduce more and more elements familiar to my style."
The show is known for Olbermann's fast-paced rhetoric, historical and pop culture references, and liberal commentary. Olbermann melded news stories, both serious and light, with commentary, much of it critical of Republicans and conservative politics. The show has been the source of controversy due to these criticisms, as well as the host's ongoing commentary against Fox News and his feud with its leading primetime personality, Bill O'Reilly.[4]
During the January 21, 2011, edition of Countdown, Olbermann announced that it would be his last appearance on the show, but gave no explanation why.[5] The New York Times reported the following day that Olbermann had negotiated his exit from MSNBC, with a secret deal.[6] After being hired by Current TV, Olbermann announced on April 26, 2011, that his nightly news program on the new network would begin June 20, 2011, and would also be called Countdown with Keith Olbermann. As of September 2011, Countdown is one of three news and opinion programs airing on Current, alongside The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur and The War Room with Jennifer Granholm.[7]
Contents |
Countdown with Keith Olbermann debuted as Countdown: Iraq on March 31, 2003, hosted by NBC anchor Lester Holt; the program featured live updates on the then-unfolding War in Iraq. Countdown was broadcast at 8:00 p.m. on weekday nights, having replaced a cancelled talk show hosted by Phil Donahue. Olbermann -- who left MSNBC in the late 1990s -- returned to the network around this time and replaced Holt, becoming the permanent host for the renamed Countdown with Keith Olbermann. The show did not feature political commentary in its first few years, simply recapping the news of the day in a "5-4-3-2-1" format as the title suggested.
Countdown began to attract liberal and progressive viewers in 2005, when Olbermann began critiquing and satirizing conservative media commentators. Olbermann focused his attention to Fox News and its main primetime anchor, Bill O'Reilly. He criticized Fox and O'Reilly for purportedly deceiving their viewers in service to their alleged right-wing biases, frequently including the latter in Countdown's "Worst Person in the World" segment. O'Reilly, while not directly naming Olbermann, launched an online petition asking MSNBC to fire him,[8] and allegedly threatened a caller to his radio show for merely mentioning Olbermann by name.[9] O'Reilly and other Fox News personalities accused MSNBC, NBC, and parent company General Electric of facilitating a liberal media bias, leading to a long-time feud between the two networks.
In 2006, Olbermann started delivering occasional "Special Comments" in which he has expressed sharp criticisms of members of the George W. Bush administration, including then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Vice President Dick Cheney and President George W. Bush. While further Special Comments were directed at members of the Republican Party, Olbermann occasionally targeted Democrats as well. Issues addressed in the Special Comments dealt with the Bush Administration's foreign and domestic policies, mainly the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. One of Olbermann's Special Comments spoke out against the passage of Proposition 8 in California on November 4, 2008,[10][11] for which he was awarded the 2009 GLAAD Media Award for "Outstanding TV Journalism Segment".[12] Olbermann's Special Comments were compared to Edward R. Murrow's signature essays.[13][14][15]
On two occasions, guest hosts for Countdown proved popular enough to be given their own MSNBC shows, contributing to a widespread perception of MSNBC being a left-leaning network. In 2008, Air America Radio personality Rachel Maddow hosted Countdown in Olbermann's absence, leading to the debut of her own program, The Rachel Maddow Show.[16] In 2009, left-wing political analyst Lawrence O'Donnell hosted Countdown for an extended period, leading to the eventual launch of his show The Last Word. Subsequent guest hosts included progressive radio hosts Cenk Uygur and Sam Seder, Obama biographer Richard Wolffe, journalist Chris Hayes, and DNC chairman Howard Dean.
On October 28, 2010, five days before the 2010 U.S. elections, Olbermann donated $2,400 each to three Democratic candidates for Congress: Kentucky Senate candidate Jack Conway, and Arizona Democratic Representatives Raul Grijalva and Gabrielle Giffords.[17] In response, on November 5 MSNBC President Phil Griffin suspended him indefinitely without pay for violating a network policy regarding political contributions which required prior approval from management.[18] An online petition calling for his reinstatement received over 250,000 signatures,[19] and two days after the suspension began, Griffin announced that Olbermann would return to the air starting with the November 9 program.[19]
On the January 21, 2011, episode of Countdown, Olbermann abruptly announced that the show would be his final MSNBC broadcast.[20] Olbermann thanked viewers, producers, and technical staff for his show's eight-year success. However, he did not thank Griffin or NBC News president Steve Capus. Neither Olbermann nor MSNBC divulged the reason for the cancellation. Many liberal bloggers and commentators blamed the cable operator Comcast for Olbermann's departure, accusing the company of silencing the host for political purposes just days after acquiring NBC Universal on January 18.[21][22] Statements from MSNBC and Comcast denied this allegation. Media critic Howard Kurtz, former MSNBC anchor David Shuster, and an anonymous NBC executive[23] said that Olbermann's 2010 suspension was a more likely precipitating factor in Countdown's cancellation.
In subsequent interviews, Olbermann went into greater detail about the circumstances surrounding his exit from MSNBC. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter published on June 7, 2011, Olbermann claimed that he faced increasing opposition from network management after Tim Russert died in 2008, because the Meet the Press moderator had been his ally and a peacemaker at the network. He further stated that "there were lots of people who were forced to choose sides" over his presence at MSNBC, including Maddow. Olbermann further stated that he didn't know he had been released from his MSNBC contract until less than a half-hour before his on-air farewell.[24]
On February 8, Olbermann announced that he had been hired as the host of a new primetime show on Current TV, the cable television network founded by former vice president Al Gore and businessman Joel Hyatt; in April, it was announced that the show would retain the Countdown title. Olbermann also became Current TV's "Chief News Officer" and bought an equity stake in the network.[25] On May 11, Olbermann announced that Daily Kos founder Markos Moulitsas, filmmakers Michael Moore and Ken Burns, and comedian Richard Lewis would become contributors to the new Countdown.[26] During a June 16 interview on NBC's Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Olbermann further announced that journalists Matt Taibbi and Jeremy Scahill, author John Dean, actor Donald Sutherland, and astronomer Derrick Pitts would also be contributors.[27]
On June 20, Countdown aired its first episode on Current TV, concluding with an abbreviated "Special Comment" in which Olbermann outlined his mission statement, quoting Harriet Beecher Stowe. The program drew 179,000 viewers, a significant increase from Current TV's normal 30,000 viewership; it drew more viewers than CNN in the key 25-54 audience demographic.[28] Countdown continued to beat CNN in the 24-54 demo throughout its first week on Current TV.[29]
For the first two weeks of its Current TV run, Countdown ran slightly longer than an hour at sixty-three minutes. However, Olbermann changed his mind and reverted the running time to the usual sixty minutes, realizing the move "would only serve to annoy fans of" both Olbermann and Maddow's MSNBC show while not benefiting his own program's ratings.[30]
The show's theme music is the opening bars of the second movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, a nod to NBC's Huntley-Brinkley Report and NBC Nightly News themes from the 1960s and 1970s. During the opening sequence of each nightly episode, Olbermann, in voice-over, previews upcoming stories after asking, "Which of these stories will you be talking about tomorrow?" On MSNBC, the stories featured in the show's "countdown" was introduced by a "5-4-3-2-1" format; this format, however, has been downplayed since Countdown's move to Current TV.
The "Worst Person in the World" segment is a nightly feature in which Olbermann recounts three news stories involving people saying or doing things that Olbermann finds objectionable. "Nominees" for the dubious "Worst Person in the World" award are declared "worse", "worser", and "worst", which Olbermann refers to as bronze, silver, and gold levels, respectively. While many of his targets are not political, the overwhelming majority are conservatives, Tea Party activists, and, at the time, Bush Administration officials.[31] The segment is introduced by Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D Minor.[32] On a few occasions, during the show's MSNBC run, the segment was either briefly suspended or renamed in response to concerns that it contributed to an atmosphere of political divisiveness.[33][34]
Based on this segment of the show, a book titled The Worst Person in the World was published in September 2006. It includes transcripts of segments that aired from this feature's inception on July 1, 2005, through May 31, 2006, as well as some original material.[35] Another such book, Pitchforks and Torches — named after Olbermann's catchphrase in introducing the segment — was released in 2010.
The "Time Marches On" segment is another nightly feature, in which Olbermann shows footage of strange news stories from around the world. The segment was originally called "Oddball", as a reference to MSNBC program Hardball with Chris Matthews.
During the 2008 U.S. Presidential Primary season, Olbermann began using the term "Keith number" in reference to the sum of a pre-election opinion poll's margin of error and the percentage of respondents who are undecided. Olbermann believes this value tends to be predictive of the extent to which a poll may vary from actual election results, and also of the volatility of the electorate's leanings.[36]
To summarize:
On the January 11, 2008, episode of Countdown, Olbermann described the number as follows:
“ | What, you ask, is the ‘Keith number‘? This is the margin of error plus the percentage of undecided — in this case, four-and-a-half margin of error plus five percent undecided. I thought of it, so I named it after myself. You think of a better caveat for polls from now on and we‘ll name it after you.[37] | ” |
Olbermann's "Keith number" is unrelated (mathematically or otherwise) to the more traditional use of the term.
The Media Research Center (MRC), a conservative[38] media content analysis organization, has been very critical of Olbermann since he became the Countdown host. MRC issued a press release describing Olbermann's November 1, 2006 Special Comment as "preaching hate speech", and describing Olbermann as "a brown-shirted left-winger spew[ing] hate from an NBC-owned podium."[39] ("Brown-shirt" is a term that was used to describe the Sturmabteilung paramilitary organization of the German Nazi party).
In response, Olbermann has on a number of occasions named MRC founder Brent Bozell, whom he has described variously as "Redbeard the pirate",[40] and "humorist",[41] the "worst person in the world" for various comments he has made about Countdown and other topics, such as Bozell's criticism of the New York Times for sponsoring the 2006 Gay Games.[42] The anchor has also said that the MRC desires "an institutionalized, pro-Republican slant" in the media.[43]
Olbermann has addressed the assertions of liberal bias by stating that he would be equally critical of a Democratic president who had invited criticism by his actions:
"I mean, no one in 1998, no one accused me of being a liberal in 1998 because I was covering the Lewinsky scandal. And whatever I had to do about it, I tried to be fair and honest and as accurate and as informed as possible, and allow my viewer to be the same way. And nowadays it's the same thing. And now all of a sudden I’m a screaming liberal."[44]
However, Howard Kurtz has written that Olbermann departed MSNBC the first time as a result of the Clinton-Lewinsky coverage, which he did not personally agree with.[45]
On November 25, 2006, Fox News Watch panelist Cal Thomas named Olbermann as his choice for 2006's "Media Turkey Award" for what Thomas alleged were Olbermann's "inaccuracies" and "hot air".[46] Olbermann in turn gave the show the Bronze for "Worst Person in the World", not for naming him "Turkey of the Year", but for mis-spelling his last name as "Olberman" on the onscreen graphic.[47]
Olbermann gave Michael Medved "Worst Persons" honors on October 1, 2007 in response to his Townhall.com column titled "Six inconvenient truths about the U.S. and slavery,"[48] and chided him to "go back to reviewing movies."
In a commentary published in the Los Angeles Times, Howard Rosenberg comments on the show's absence of guests who challenge Olbermann's views, writing "'Countdown' is more or less an echo chamber in which Olbermann and like-minded bobbleheads nod at each other."[49]
Starting in 2009, in a response to the controversy over Obama's health care proposal, Olbermann, in conjunction with the National Association of Free Clinics, petitioned his viewers to donate money to provide free clinics in several major cities across the country. This effort has spread to other MSNBC shows such as Hardball with Chris Matthews and The Dylan Ratigan Show, and continues on the Current TV edition of Countdown.
Regular contributors featured on the show in its Current TV run as of June 2011 include:
Regular contributors in the show's broadcast history on MSNBC have included:[51]
Interviews with comedians are featured regularly during the final segment of the show; notable appearances have included George Carlin, Lewis Black, Mo Rocca, and John Cleese.
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