Chris Wallace to leave CNN
Chris Wallace is leaving CNN, according to The Daily Beast’s Hugh Dougherty.
Dougherty wrote, “The 77-year-old broadcaster said he will instead find a new home on an independent platform such as streaming or podcasting, which he described as ‘where the action seems to be.’ He highlighted how podcasters including Joe Rogan and Charlamagne tha God had set the agenda during the presidential election, but added, ‘I don’t flatter myself to think I will have that sort of reach.’”
Wallace has had a spectacular and respected career in broadcast news, having worked at CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox News and CNN. In 2020, Wallace was recognized with the Poynter Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Journalism.
Wallace joined CNN in 2021 after 18 years at Fox News. Just last week, Wallace was a part of CNN’s election night coverage. His three-year contract is up at the end of the year, and reports are that Wallace is the one who decided to walk away.
He told Dougherty, “This is the first time in 55 years I‘ve been between jobs. I am actually excited and liberated by that.”
Wallace is unsure exactly what he will do next, whether it’s streaming or a podcast, telling Dougherty, “Not knowing is part of the challenge. I‘m waiting to see what comes over the transom. It might be something that I haven’t thought of at all.”
Dougherty wrote, “CNN wanted to retain Wallace but his decision to quit ahead of contract talks will be seen as a sign of CNN’s waning influence in the media landscape.”
However, Wallace did say, “I have nothing but positive things to say. CNN has been very good to me.”
The ratings game
This should come as no surprise. Last Thursday, two days after the election in which Donald Trump defeated Kamala Harris, ratings for Fox News had massively jumped, while ratings for MSNBC headed south.
According to Nielsen, the total average daily viewers on Fox News was 2.6 million. That’s a 60% leap from one year earlier on the same day.
Meanwhile, MSNBC had only 596,000 total viewers. That was a 23% drop from the previous year.
CNN didn’t fare much better. They average 419,000 total viewers — a 40% drop.
That raises an interesting question about cable news TV ratings to come. There is some thought that we could see a “Trump bump,” meaning the constantly newsmaking Trump could be good for newspaper and website subscriptions and cable news ratings.
Fox News, whose viewers (for the most part) tend to be Trump supporters, is likely to see solid TV ratings for a while, but it wouldn’t be surprising to see the ratings stay down on MSNBC, which tends to be watched by more left-leaning viewers. It could be that dedicated MSNBC viewers might avoid the news for a while.
There’s also this. As Mediaite’s Alex Griffing points out, “Overall television viewership of election night was down significantly from 2020, some 25 percent across the 18 major news networks measured by Nielsen. The 42.3 million viewers who tuned into either broadcast or cable news on Tuesday night represent those Americans who have yet to fall prey to cord-cutting and other trends shifting viewers away from linear TV.”
As far as CNN, the latest from Puck’s Dylan Byers is “CNN’s Existential Post-Election Season.”
From Fox News to the White House
You often see cable news networks picking up on-air personalities from the White House. (Think Jen Psaki, Kayleigh McEnany, Nicolle Wallace and Dana Perino, just to name a few.)
Well, here’s a switch the other way.
Fox News contributor Tom Homan has been named “border czar” by President-elect Donald Trump. Actually, Homan was in politics before joining Fox News as a contributor. He was Trump’s former acting head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Wall Street Journal’s Michelle Hackman, Andrew Restuccia and Gareth Vipers wrote that Trump is “picking a key figure from his first term who makes no apologies for some of its most controversial policies, including the separation of migrant parents from their children.”
The Journal added, “Though Homan’s agency didn’t play a direct role in separating families, he was one of the policy’s most fervent advocates, both in public and in private, according to people who worked with him. … Homan, in a Monday morning interview with Fox News, said that he plans to once more issue guidance making all immigrants in the country illegally targets for arrest, and once again increase workplace raids.”
In the same Fox News interview, Homan had a warning for blue-state governors who said they would not cooperate with the Trump administration on this: “If you’re not going to help us, get the hell out of the way (because) we’re going to do it. So, if we can’t get assistance from New York City … we may have to double the number of agents we send to New York City because we’re going to do the job.”
Making a move
Jonathan Chait is joining The Atlantic as a staff writer. He has been a political columnist at New York magazine since 2011. Before that, he worked at The New Republic for 16 years.
Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, said in a statement, “Jon Chait is a journalist of immense gifts who writes in the tradition of Michael Kinsley. He is fearless, indefatigable, funny, acutely analytical, and smartly (which is to say, not axiomatically) contrarian. Our time requires truth tellers like Jon, and The Atlantic’s readers will benefit greatly from his writing.”
In a farewell piece for New York, Chait wrote, “My time at New York went better than I could have possibly hoped. When I think about why I am making this change now, the phrase that keeps popping back into my head is, ‘It’s time for me to go back to my home planet now.’ As I leave with fondness, I hope and believe this magazine’s best days are still ahead of it, and so are mine.”
OK, enough. Relax