NBC Universal Inc.
NBC Officially Crowns Fallon Prince of Late-Late Night
There were no surprises at 30 Rock today as NBC announced the new host of Late Night when current host Conan O'Brien decamps to 11:30 PM sometime in 2009. As far back as February 2007, Bill Carter, The New York Times' veteran TV reporter and de facto historian of late night, had been reporting that Saturday Night Live alum Jimmy Fallon would be tapped to host the show. As reporters and film crews assembled on the 67th floor to take their lucite seats in a room with floor-to-ceiling windows dramatically framing a rainy, overcast day, Fallon's name was openly bandied about. read more »
Report: NBC to Launch 24-hour Local News Channel
Look out, Pat Kiernan! The world of round-the-clock local New York news channels is about to get a whole lot more competitive.
According to The New York Times’ Bill Carter, NBC Universal is planning to start a 24-hour local news channel, to be called … “New York’s Newschannel.”
More from the Times: read more »
NBC Moves Racy 30 Rock
NBC has moved 30 Rock to 9:30 p.m. on Thursdays, butting it out of its self-proclaimed "family hour," from 8 to 9 p.m. The schedule change comes a couple of weeks after NBC had the Parents Television Council calling them "hypocritical" for tainting their (antiquated, irrelevant) "family hour." "You know, 30 Rock just a couple of weeks ago had a show that I can't even mention, with a vulgar acronym for older women that pursue younger men," said Dan Isett, a PTC spokesman. He was talking about MILF Island, a Survivor-like reality show in which 50 eighth grade boys are stranded on an island with 20 "holy hot mamas." read more »
NBC Replenishes Lipstick
NBC has applied more Lipstick Jungle, ordering six more episode scripts, according to Variety. The show's ratings are catching those coveted 18-34 slot among women, apparently. Maybe it's hitting a note among those women that Cashmere Mafia was too corny to reach (the show was recently axed from ABC's line-up). In Sara Vilkomerson's Observer article on Lipstick Jungle, star Brooke Shields discussed how the show tackles real women's issues. “I like that it’s not only about the happily ever after,” Ms. Shields told the Observer. “What I love about these women is that the goal is not finding the man and having that be the only type of happiness. We spend so much of our younger years thinking that’s what you have to get: you have to get the relationship, you have to get the family. … Now when you’re actually in it, when you get what you wished for, how do you spend your days in it?”
When Talent Moves to Cable, Journalism Doesn't Always Follow
A recent episode of 'Race For the White House.'
“MSNBC and NBC are one,” said Phil Griffin. “We’ve said that for over a decade. It actually is true now.”
Mr. Griffin, the senior vice president of NBC News, was speaking on the phone to NYTV on Monday afternoon. He had brought up the unification of the two news operations as a way of explaining the internal politics underpinning the launch of MSNBC’s new prime-time show, Race for the White House, which premiered on March, 17 at 6 p.m., replacing Tucker. read more »
David Shuster Will Return to NBC In Time for Debate
Not only will David Shuster, the MSNBC talent who got into trouble over claiming the Clinton campaign had "pimped out" former first daughter Chelsea on the hustings, be returning to the network; his suspension will have lasted two weeks, and he'll be back in time for the NBC-sponsored debate between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama Feb. 26. Broadcasting & Cable reports: read more »
Greg Sargent: David Shuster Will Not Be Fired
After Hillary seemed to suggest that his suspension was not enough of a punishment for his pimp remark, MSNBC affirmed to Greg Sargent at Talking Points Memo that David Shuster will not be fired.
"He remains on suspension indefinitely, but he will not be fired and will be returning to MSNBC," MSNBC director of communications Alana Russo told Sargent, who then speculates (pretty plausibly, we think) what it all means: read more »
NBC Might Cancel Upfront Spectacular
NBC's CEO Jeff Zucker has been hinting that the network will cancel their song-and-dance spectacular for advertisers at Radio City Music Hall in May. Although no official announcement has been made, the writers' strike is affecting the spring series of presentations, which preview upcoming shows and schedules to lure advertisers into spending the big bucks for the best spots. With writers still on the picket lines, there are no new scripts to start developing in time to show Madison Avenue. read more »
As S.A.G. Departs, NBC May Unplug Globes
NBC executives have emerged from their Sunday night sweat-lodge, in which an answer was sought as to how they might telecast the Golden Globe awards without brining an angry storm of controversy upon their tribe. read more »
NBC Taps Monk, Psych During Strike
With no end to the writers strike in sight, NBC is tapping into its cable sister station USA's hit shows Monk and Psych to fill out next year's spring schedule. The two shows run as a two-hour block on USA on Friday nights, are set to return with new episodes on the cable network Jan. 11. read more »
NBC: Time's Up For Journeyman
Sorry, Kidd! NBC lapsed on its deadline to pick up time-travel drama Journeyman, starring Kevin McKidd, for a full season. According to Reuters, the show posted its lowest adults (aged 18-49) rating on Monday without Heroes to lead the charge.
The remaining two original segments will air as scheduled, an NBC spokeswoman said. read more »
Jay Leno to Pay Staff Through Christmas
In a meeting yesterday, Jay Leno told his staff he'd continue to pay their salaries through Christmas, Variety reports.
Previously, Mr. Leno had been paying them on a week-by-week basis, which he'll continue to do after the holiday, he reportedly said. read more »
Conan O'Brien Pays Staff During Strike
While Carson Daly continues to get lambasted for continuing to tape his show during the strike, Conan O'Brien is getting kudos for helping his staff through the shutdown. read more »
Quarterlife Too Cool for Web
Quarterlife has set a new standard for circuitous routes to a TV network pickup, writes Hollywood Reporter's . First passed on by ABC, the drama series resurrected itself last week on MySpaceTV, only to have the ensuing buzz rekindle interest from NBC, which has scheduled it for midseason. read more »
Heroes Producer Pens Kings for NBC
NBC has greenlit production on Kings, a modern retelling of the King David story penned by Michael Green, a producer and writer for Heroes, and former producer of Everwood and Smallville.
People familiar with the script said "Kings" could work well as a companion to "Heroes." read more »
Lorne Michaels: SNL Misses Its Dicks in a Box
Sigourney In 3-D
The Transom
The Transom
$2.45 M. Tribeca Newlyweds’ Spread for Bloomberg’s Daughter

Why Are the Feds After Josh Wolf?
The Apprentice's Sorcerer
David Gregory, Pls Come Forward in Libby Case
NBC should have reported whether its employee, Gregory, agrees with Fleischer's account (According to Fox News, the other reporter, John Dickerson of Time, disputes it).
Events for Tuesday, January 23, 2007
At 8 a.m., Gale Brewer is honored at the Reading Reform Foundation breakfast at the Woolworth Tower Kitchen
At 9:30 a.m., the legislature begins to screen comptroller candidates in Albany.
Also at 9:30 a.m., Mike Bloomberg and others attend the Mayors Against Illegal Guns National Summit in D.C.
At 10 a.m., Helen Marshall gives her state of the borough report at York College in Queens.
At 11 a.m., a tenants' group names the city's "most abusive landlord," and holds a convention on affordable housing, at 55 Washington Square South.
At 12:30, Hillary, Chuck Schumer and New York's congressional delegation discuss 9/11-related illnesses of first responders at a press conference in D.C.
At 1 p.m. , Christine Quinn visits the Beth Jacob of Boro Park School in Brooklyn, then the Hatzolah Dispatch Center at 1:45 p.m.; Ohel's Children's Home at 2:15 p.m.; and the W.E.B. Dubois High School Web Center at 3:30 p.m.
At 4 p.m., the NYC Board of Elections will hold a hearing about the new voting machines, at 42 Broadway.
At 6 p.m., Christine Quinn will hold a Neighborhood Forum on community and police relations, at Harlem Hospital.
The President gives his State of the Union speech.
Speech-watching parties are being held on West 44th Street by Laughing Liberally and on East 83rd Street by the Metropolitan Republican Club.
And Ben and the team at Politico make their debut over here.
-- Azi PaybarahThe Mark Green Show
Who gets to play him? -- Azi Paybarah"NBC has handed a cast-contingent pilot order to the drama 'M.O.N.Y.'
"The project centers on a socially conscious New York public advocate who is thrust into the uncomfortable position of becoming interim mayor and struggles to balance his moral center with the hardball realities of the city's politics."
Katie Go-Nightly
Is NBC's The Office Too Prickly for Primetime?
Presidential Funeral Affords Three Sightings of Wandering Sage, Brokaw
'The Israelis Should Return the Golan Heights'
And how revealing, that in seizing on the Golan provision of the report as one of its greatest challenges, Tim Russert and Andrea Mitchell just now on MS-NBC both described the return of these high, watered lands as something "we" were being asked to do: Americans, American politicians. As though we might snap our fingers and this ally in the Middle East would respond. The Baker report was also forthright on this point. "No American AdministrationDemocrat or Republicanwill ever abandon Israel."
Events for September 1-3, 2006
On Saturday, the West Indian American Day Junior Carnival and parade kicks-off at St. John's Place and Kingston Ave. in Brooklyn at 10:30
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin talks about rebuilding his city at Tribeca Cinemas at 11:30.
Upstate congressional candidate Eric Massa stops by the New York State Festival of Balloons in Dansville at 4. (Balloons released at 6.)
On Sunday, the four three Democratic candidates for state attorney general debate on NBC (taped Friday) at 6:30 a.m.
PA Republican Senator Rick Santorum and challenger Bob Casey debate on Meet the Press. You can also send in your questions here.
The Annual Bronx Democratic County Committee Barbecue takes place at 135 Westchester Square from 1 - 5 p.m.
-- Azi PaybarahLife of Brian
The Final Seinfeld: I Told You So!
NBC's Richard Engel Continues to Distinguish Himself
Win a Lovely Winged Lady! Emmys Are $350 Scammies
Tabloid Wars: Hud Morgan, Hollywood Is Calling
Highlights of the wit and wisdom of Hudson Morgan, Former Boy Reporter:
* "There are basically two ways you can climb the media ladder. You can either slave away at, like, a magazine and just sort of be promoted from editorial assistant to editorial associate to associate editor to depu--you know. But that takes forever. The other way is you can somewhere less prestigious like the Post or the Daily News, and, you know, it's not necessarily the most glamourous position but you cut your teeth that way."
* "I think I should pitch this article about model / DJs, just because they seem neither good at modeling nor DJing."
* "You don't need a skill set so much as you need boundless energy. You're going all day long dealing with lobotomized publicists."
* [Into telephone] "That's interesting, but he's dead! We always have a problem writing about dead people. It's just like: Who cares?
* [Into telephone] "So what were all those NBC people doing there? What was that all about? They're like locusts."
* "I've always been interested in other people's business. I wouldn't necessarily call it a flaw. I'd say it's a vice. I'd say it's a weakness. Why not apply it to a career?"
* MORGAN: Even Sheryl Crow can't get Lance Armstrong into the sack during the Tour de France, blah blah blah, one quote. LLOYD GROVE: Why is Sheryl Crow--is she, is she, like, a great piece of ass? MORGAN: Sheryl Crow--yeah. GROVE: She is? MORGAN: Are you kidding? GROVE: I don't know! MORGAN: Do you know who she is? GROVE: That's why you're here, to tell me these things. MORGAN: Yeah! Yes!
* "I used to bring my girlfriend to some of these things, but it's just like--it was kind of a disaster. Well, we broke up two days ago. Because this job, like, it's just, it's, it's pretty much impossible to maintain a serious relationship and do this at the same time."
* "I don't think I really thought this through. I didn't think how it would affect relationships, goals, ambitions, not to mention health and inner peace and general feng shui. And I wasn't ready for people to come after me, because I'm only, like, an assistant. Like Gawker linked to this website that was, like, speculating that I was gay... And, you know, my grandfather read it because my mom was showing him how to Google on the Internet. It was really weird. It was disorienting to be scrutinized like this."
* "I'm too fucking busy with the column to figure out all the bad things it's done with me."
* "He [Adrian Grenier] was just like, 'You should do something that actually contributes to the greater good.' And I was just like, 'Why?'"
* "I somehow expected more out of Hackensack. I thought it was sort of a bobo paradise. And these office parks are just brutal. I don't do charity work because I get hives when I come to places like this."
* "It doesn't require any skill. Maybe it helps to be charming."
Hansen Nabs Pervs, Viewers
The Iraq Orphanage Story--Does NBC Have a Moral Obligation to Help These Girls?
You will see that it has top billing on the NBC website. Here the headline is "How to Help Iraq's Orphans." NBC then suggests that viewers give money to Unicef, No More Victims, and two other nonprofit groups.
I don't think that's enough. By twice doing this story, for the edification and diversion of Americans in their kitchens, NBC has established a special connection that it should honora connection not to a generic group of Iraq orphans, but to these 56 girls. On last night's report, Engel said that masked men had lately come to the door of the orphanage. He showed the girls cowering in a back room. Will these girls now be a special focus of terrorism? The thought is almost too horrible to consider, but it should be on NBC's mind. What threat has this tearjerker exposed these girls to? What threat does life in Baghdada life far outside NBC's bunkered bureau and flakjacketsexpose them to?
Last night, Williams said that adoption by Americans was impossible. But there is an obvious answer. These girls should be evacuated. NBC should take steps to achieve that, even if that means getting them into the NBC bunker. My best guess is that evacuation means Syria, where in January I saw some of the hundreds of thousands of former neighbors who were now living peaceful lives. And my wife's cousin, who teaches in Damascus, told of teaching Iraqi refugees, some the victims of kidnaping.
Uses of Disenchantment: TV Anchor-Mom Fights Autism and Films It
A Foolish Consistency on NBC
By such choices, Brian Williams is hewing to the position he took at a forum of the news media in Harlem some weeks back (on C-Span), when he asserted that NBC was committed to covering the problems of black peoplewitness the New Orleans coverage. (An angry questioner had actually asked about Mumia Abu-Jamal; all the network types dodged that one, understandably). Good for them, and yet tonight's broadcast showed just how stupid such a stubborn posture can be, in the event. The important news was elsewhere; NBC couldn't go there, out of some kind of ideological bias.
Excellence in Journalism
Tim Russert Meows at the Times
In the mandala of press abuses, this one doesn't rate. Most authorsthe Times interview coincided with a new book by Russertwould happily accept Russert's treatment. A lot of what Solomon evidently did goes with the territory of magazine writing, making things easier for people to read. Russert never said that Solomon misquoted him or misrepresented his words or ideas. Oh, he doesn't like the headline. Russert needs to absorb the lesson of Big Russ, his father, and take it like a man.
George Crile Dies: CBS News Producer, Reported on C.I.A.
Famish, Rhymes With Haimish
The Cheney Nobody Knows
There's a larger point. Six years into the most disastrous administration anyone can remember, with a vice president regent, or so it's alleged, and we don't know his name. Cheney likes it that way. "I'm a private person," he told NBC's Kelly O'Donnell yesterday. Go to the New York Public Library website; there are no biographies of Cheney. None. The only thing that comes close is James Mann's Rise of the Vulcans, and it's about a lot of people.
I'd like to know more about Cheney getting thrown out of Yale, Cheney working as a lineman in Wyo, and, most important, Cheney's life in the American Enterprise Institute, what happened there to alter his thinking, just when he drank the neocon koolaid. And how, to again quote Col. Larry Wilkerson's talk at the Middle East Institutehow Cheney became a "paranoid."
Everyone talks about Cheney's power. The "toxic Buddha," Observer editor Peter Kaplan called him. Great image. But that's all we have, imagery and mythology, not knowledge.
David Blaine Inhales, But It’s Shelley Ross Who’s Holding Breath
Suozzi's End-Game Offensive
"The Sheriff of Wall Street. Mr. Tough Guy," Suozzi huffed. "... OK, tough guy, come and debate me about what you're going to do to improve the state of New York."
It's the "debate debate," and would be more newsworthy in another campaign, probably; Suozzi is comfortable talking like this at any stage in an election.
- Tom McGeveranThe Boob Tube Respected— Television Without the Villains

























