Is David Gregory the new host of Meet the Press?
Since the election's end, it's the one story media reporters want to break more than any other:
Who is going to host Meet the Press?
The Huffington Post threw its reputation in the ring Monday, reporting that NBC chief White House correspondent David Gregory is the man expected to take over the reins from interim host Tom Brokaw after Sunday, which is reportedly the former Nightly News anchor's final program in the big chair.
NBC sort of denied the Huffington Post report to Politico.com, saying it was not about to announce a choice -- which is not the same as saying a choice has not been made. But Politico's Mike Allen is also reporting with certainty this morning that Gregory is NBC's choice, making the 38-year-old anchor/reporter the show's 10th permanent host, succeeding the late Tim Russert.
(UPDATE: The New York Times is reporting that Gregory hasn't yet sealed a deal with the network, though NBC has told other contenders for the job that a decision has been made - hence the leak. Why they would tell other candidates the deal was done when it wasn't, is yet another mystery for the media ages. The story also quotes contenders assuming that Gregory's value as a successor to Today host Matt Lauer helped seal the deal.)
The Los Angeles Times reported last week the field had narrowed to Gregory, PBS host Gwen Ifill, correspondent Andrea Mitchell and political director Chuck Todd -- all names critics like me slung around back in June, when Russert died unexpectedly of a heart attack.
In many ways, Gregory is the most expected choice. A clear rising star at NBC, he has been parked on an MSNBC show themed around the presidential campaign for much of 2008, leaving questions about how he might maintain his visibility
after the election. He is the network's best-known political reporter, mostly due to his high-profile needling of White House officials during televised briefings and his star-making turns as fill-in host on the Today show -- a gig he most recently reprised during the Thanksgiving holiday.
He's also known for an occasionally playful attitude on camera, busting a move with R&B singer Mary J. Blige on the Today show and goofing with Keith Olbermann on MSNBC's Countdown.
Of course, the choice also passes up a historic opportunity to diversify the most important seat in TV political journalism, with names like Ifill and Mitchell left by the wayside. Expect NBC to offer some empty words in this direction, with more emphasis on diversifying the guests or contributors to the
show. Even as America makes history with its first black president leading a diverse cabinet team, it seems network TV cannot bring itself to follow suit.
Russert turned NBC's Meet the Press perch into the most prestigious chair in Washington, serving as the top political voice at NBC News and arguably all of political journalism. Of course, he cemented that reputation by being a dogged, yet charming inquisitor, and calling correctly everything from Bill Clinton's 1992 Democratic primary win to Florida's pivotal role in the 2000 presidential election.
Even under Brokaw's musty stewardship, Meet the Press has remained the highest-rated political show on Sunday TV. Even with the administrative part of Russert's job running the network's Washington bureau handed off to former Newsweek editor Mark Whitaker, Gregory's got some big shoes to fill, for sure.
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The Feed is a blog on TV, media and modern life by St. Petersburg Times TV/media critic Eric Deggans. Possibly the most critical guy at the Times, he has served as music, media and TV critic at various times over 10 years.
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I'm not surprised that network TV executives aren't into diversity. White male executives like to hire people they are comfortable with, who in turn rise in power until they are the top dogs making the hiring decisions, and surprise, surprise, they in turn hire people who they are comfortable with. To be frank, they are probably hiring people that the guy who hired them would feel comfortable hiring.
One of my uncles was president of a chain of department stores. He not only balked at hiring black executives, but he also quietly refused to hire anyone who had graduated from what he viewed as a liberal college. Forced by affirmative action to hire blacks, he once stated, during a Sunday dinner at my Grandma's house, that every black person was a thief. He claimed that blacks he had hired as junior executives stole from the company Coke machines, or something to that effect. I don't recall his exact words, I was not only shocked and counting to 10 myself, but I was wondering if my Grandma could control herself, or if she was going to scold him or something. She must have done something though, that family cut their trip short that visit and left the next day.
Of course, my uncle was not the only white executive I have heard voice bigoted statements such as that about black people. So figuring that many of the executives that my uncle hired are still working - along with the executives that were hired by other similarly-minded executives of his and younger generations - I figure that we are in for longer wait in terms of CEOs taking care of workplace diversity.
Heck, women over 40 are still fighting to stay employed in decent jobs. And that is after fighting to get a decent job at a decent wage to begin with. There is a lot of bias in white male executives.
And mind you, it wasn't an executive decision that made Barack Obama the president-elect. It was the vote of the people, many of whom - white and black, yellow and brown, male and female - know what it's like to be discriminated against.
Posted by: Lin Young | December 02, 2008 at 01:36 PM
Tim Russert was an icon, thus is difficult to replace. The announcement that David Gregory would be his replacement is just a continuation of NBC's swing to the far left in the news business.
Gregory's delivery was always been punctuated with body language, facial expressions and choice of words to maximize his view on the news, instead of reporting the news.
Mr. Russert was well known for his Democratic connections. Viewers, I believe, never saw a bias in his weekly grilling of the news makers. This trait was one that was traditionally cherished by real journalists. Sadly today, its hard to find a "journalist" who doesn't color his/her reporting with a definite slant.
Meet the Press is a juggernaut on Sunday morning, so any big ratings change wouldn't be expected any time soon. If Gregory doesn't change his ways, then I would anticipate a slow decline.
Posted by: RagsTTIger | December 02, 2008 at 01:08 PM