Tuesday, April 5, 2011

NBC prepping for Meredith Vieira's "Today" exit

Tue Apr 5, 2011 10:43pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - With media attention focused on turmoil at other network newscasts, NBC's top-rated morning show is quietly weighing its own shake-up as co-host Meredith Vieira considers a future without "Today."

Vieira, who seamlessly took the reins opposite Matt Lauer nearly five years ago, is said to be considering leaving the program when her reported $11 million annual contract expires in September. According to sources, Vieira, 57, has tired of the grueling lifestyle and would like to spend more time with her ill husband.

"There is going to be an opening; she's done," says one source with knowledge of the situation. Another suggests she is still making her decision but that re-upping looks unlikely.

Although NBC News executives proved adept at the host transition when 15-year veteran Katie Couric stepped down in 2006, Vieira's departure would nonetheless create a void at the dominant morning franchise -- and an opportunity for rivals to pounce. In addition to being among the longest-running programs, Today has been the top-rated morning show for nearly 800 consecutive weeks (or more than 15 years).

That longevity, coupled with its airtime -- four hours Monday-Friday and three hours on the weekend -- has made the show a profit center for NBC News. "Today" generated $454 million in ad revenue last year for its weekday broadcasts alone, according to estimates provided by Kantar Media. (By comparison, ABC's "Good Morning America," a perennial No. 2, took in $314 million, and CBS' "Early Show," a distant third in the ratings, earned $178 million.)

Vieira, who still hosts the syndicated game show "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire," could decide to extend her contract for another 12 months as she did last year. But sources say the "Today" team has already started weighing replacement options. Potential heirs apparent to Vieira are said to include "Today's" Ann Curry and Natalie Morales, Washington correspondent Savannah Guthrie and CNBC's Erin Burnett. (Lauer, who has co-hosted Today since 1997, is locked in longer than Vieira, but his potential departure has NBC News eyeing its male anchor crop, including MSNBC's Willie Geist and CNBC's Carl Quintanilla.)

An NBC News spokesperson declined comment on possible anchor changes, except to say, "The Today show anchors are currently under contract and firmly in place." Reps for Vieira declined comment.

Curry and Morales have the advantage of being familiar to NBC's morning viewers. Curry, in particular, has paid her dues at "Today," where she has been the show's news anchor since 1997. Whether she'll walk if the job doesn't become hers is a concern that will inevitably be factored into the decision-making process.

For her part, Burnett has seen her profile steadily rise at the company. She hosts CNBC's "Squawk on the Street" and "Street Signs" and appears on various NBC News programs to comment on financial stories. But while she sometimes turns up on "Today," one source suggests NBC higher-ups are not convinced she's a good fit for morning television.

Guthrie is said to have executives at the network most excited. The 39-year-old lawyer by training has proved a natural at traversing hard news and features -- a requirement for a network morning show -- when she has filled in for Vieira.

If Vieira does decide to bolt, it won't come as a major surprise to anyone who has paid attention to her comments through the years. "A couple months into it, a little voice in my head said at 3:30, 'You're mentally ill; don't get up,'" Vieira told the New York Daily News in 2006.

She has been similarly candid about having to navigate the personal burden of her husband Richard Cohen's long battle with multiple sclerosis. "I'll know when it's time to go, and I'm not afraid," she told Ladies' Home Journal in October. "If I were to leave Today at the end of next year because it's time for me, I wouldn't jump to another show. I would look forward to not working, to traveling with Richard and carving out time for us."

The possible "Today" transition comes in the wake of ratings erosion for broadcast news in general as well as a shakeup at CBS' "The Early Show" and tinkering at ABC's "Good Morning America." While the broadcast morning shows still command significant audiences compared to their early hours competition -- programs on NBC, ABC and CBS averaged 12.4 million viewers in aggregate last year -- they have largely failed to build viewership among the younger demographics favored by advertisers. According to the Project for Excellence in Journalism's annual State of the News Media report, morning news fell another 3% in 2010, the sixth consecutive year of losses.

In January, CBS News put in place an entirely new team led by Chris Wragge and Erica Hill. In the months since, the news division has seen "60 Minutes" executive producer Jeff Fager named chairman and former Fox News and Bloomberg executive David Rhodes coming aboard as president. While the pair's top priority at the moment is Couric and a potential transition at the CBS Evening News desk, both men also need to be assessing the division's other broadcasts.

More recently, ABC News president Ben Sherwood announced a major personnel change on "Good Morning America." ESPN's Josh Elliott will join "GMA" as newsreader, replacing JuJu Chang, who will be a substitute anchor at "Nightline."

The tweaks have yet to push either broadcast ahead of "Today," of course. For the first quarter, "Today" averaged 5.6 million viewers, followed by "Good Morning America" (4.9 million) and "The Early Show" (2.6 million), according Nielsen. And in the all-important 25-54 demographic, "Today" posted its largest margin over "GMA" since 2004, luring 2.5 million compared to the latter's 1.8 million.



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Ashley Judd talks of neglect, abuse in memoir

LOS ANGELES | Tue Apr 5, 2011 3:50pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actress Ashley Judd says in a new memoir that she had a lonely, painful childhood that included sexual abuse and thoughts of suicide while her mother Naomi Judd and sister Wynonna sought to build a career as country music stars.

In excerpts of "All That Is Bitter and Sweet", and in a TV interview on the "Today" show on Tuesday, Judd spoke of feeling neglected and emotionally abused while constantly moving homes with the Judd country legends.

"My family of origin, the one into which I was born, was also brimming with love but was not a healthy family system. There was too much trauma, abandonment, addiction and shame," the "Double Jeopardy" actress writes in the memoir, which was published on Tuesday.

Judd, 42, wrote that she was molested by a family friend as a teenager, witnessed inappropriate sexual behavior between her mother and her new boyfriends, and said drugs were regularly available in her home.

Many of the memories, including times when she played with her mother's gun after school and thought about shooting herself, were repressed and were recovered when Judd underwent therapy in 2006.

Judd told "Today" in an interview that the goal of her book was to better explain the humanitarian work she does around the globe involving impoverished and abused women in brothels, slums and refugee camps.

"I was really encouraged by people I trust to include some of my own story, because why I love (humanitarian) work really baffled people, and so I eventually got willing to put it there," the actress explained.

Naomi Judd said in a statement to "Today"; "I love my daughter. I hope her book does well."

Ashley Judd called her mother's attitude to the revelations "exquisitely gracious".

Naomi Judd and her country singer daughter Wynonna are set to reveal details of their own tempestuous relationship in a six part TV documentary series starting on the Oprah Winfrey Network on Sunday.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant, editing by Christine Kearney)



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Police drummer, Monty Python comic turn to opera

LONDON | Tue Apr 5, 2011 12:33pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Police drummer Stewart Copeland and Monty Python star Terry Jones are the unlikely pair in a new operatic double bill which opens in London on Friday.

Copeland has set Edgar Allan Poe's Gothic horror story "The Tell-Tale Heart" to music and Jones provided the libretto for "The Doctor's Tale," a story about a successful doctor who is struck from the register just because he is a dog.

His words have been set to music by Anne Dudley, a member of the band Art of Noise and an Oscar winner for her score for the British comedy film "The Full Monty."

The trio has been commissioned to create the new works by ROH2, the Royal Opera House's contemporary arm, and the run opens this week in the company's smaller Linbury Studio Theater. Ticket prices range from 9.70 to 20.40 pounds ($16-33).

For Copeland it is his fourth opera outing, and comes 22 years after his debut "Holy Blood and Crescent Moon" met with a mixed response in the United States.

The 58-year-old American told Reuters he had tried to recreate the scale and power of Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde."

"I think there was a review which sniffed at that a little bit and I took that very much to heart," he said in an interview during rehearsals. "You learn a lot from the good reviews, from the bad reviews, from the accurate ones and ... inaccurate ones.

"It was liberating because you think okay, that's right, Mozart already did that, Wagner already did that, so what new can be done?"

He said a change of direction paid off.

"I don't know, maybe I'm getting better at it or something, but I've been getting an easier and easier ride as time goes on.

"I suppose there's another thing that critics and everybody hates, that's sidestepping from one career into another. Everyone else in opera has paid their dues ... and I guess by now I'm getting an easier ride because I've sort of paid some dues -- this is my fourth opera, I've written three ballets.

"I've actually been working this for about 20 years and so it's not such a facile move for me to say 'I think I shall now write an opera'. Well, that would piss me off too."

"NOT A BIG OPERA FAN"

For Jones, opera can be overrated.

"I hadn't seen much," he told Reuters when asked if he was an opera fan before writing The Doctor's Tale.



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Hamas suspect held in West Bank actor killing: Palestinians

RAMALLAH, West Bank | Tue Apr 5, 2011 12:33pm EDT

RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - A top Palestinian security official said police had arrested a member of the Islamist Hamas group over the assassination of award-winning Arab-Israeli actor and director, Juliano Mer Khamis.

"One of those arrested is a prime suspect in the killing, he belongs to Hamas and is being interrogated," the official, who declined to be named, said on Tuesday,

Jenin governor Qaddoura Moussa also declined to reveal details about the suspect in Monday's killing of Mer Khamis, 52, who was shot dead by a masked gunman, but he added that a number of other suspects had been held and were later released.

Western powers, including the United States and European Union view Hamas as a terrorist organization. It took control of the Gaza Strip in 2007 in a brief war with security forces loyal to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

"The security forces have arrested a number of people, there is an ongoing investigation," Moussa told Reuters.

Mer Khamis, the son of a Jewish mother and Christian Arab father, ran the Freedom Theater in Jenin's refugee camp in the northern West Bank for several years. He was driving his car near the theater with his infant son and a babysitter when the gunman ordered him to pull over and shot him.

Palestinians in the Jenin area and in the West Bank seat of government in Ramallah held memorial vigils for Mer Khamis.

"This is a sad day for the Palestinian people, you cannot find anyone here who is not against the killing except for the killer," said Qasem Ahmad from Jenin refugee camp.

Mer Khamis' project generated hostility from some Palestinians. In an interview in 2009 after the Jenin theater was torched he said: "We are under attack from a small group of people who think the arts are undermining the Palestinian struggle," he said.

"They put out leaflets calling me a Zionist Jew whose hands should be cut off."

His documentary entitled Arna's Children about his mother and the theater group won the Best Documentary Feature in the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival.

The Jenin refugee camp, where Mer Khamis lived with his partner and children, is home to some 16,000 Palestinians. It was the scene of some of the fiercest Palestinian-Israeli fighting in the second intifada, or uprising, in 2002.

The United Nations Middle East envoy, Robert Serry, said in a statement: "I am shocked and saddened by the murder of Juliano Mer Khamis, he was a unique, talented actor and director and was also a symbol of co-existence and peace."

Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad condemned the murder as an "ugly crime."

Born in the Israeli-Arab city of Nazareth Mer Khamis served in the Israeli army as a paratrooper and portrayed Israeli Jews in many of his roles both in film and on stage.

He appeared in almost 30 movies, including "The Little Drummer Girl" a 1984 American thriller based on the John Le Carre book of the same name that starred Diane Keaton.

(Additional reporting by Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem, Writing by Mohammed Assadi, Editing by Ori Lewis and Matthew Jones)



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