WEIGHING ANCHORS
One of the basic troubles with radio and television news is that both instruments have grown up as an incompatible combination of show business, advertising and news . When you get all three under one roof, the dust never settles. --Edward R. Murrow
On June 1, 1993, Dan Rather and Connie Chung co-anchored the CBS Evening News for the first time, and the dust has never settled. Unfortunately for CBS, their ratings have: in third place among the U.S. networks, behind ABC's World News Tonight and the NBC Nightly News. But then, the news that Dan and Connie make is sometimes more interesting than the news they read.
The latest controversy arose after the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19. Rather was on vacation at the time, at a resort in Midland, Texas, but when he called CBS News executives shortly after the bombing to offer his services, he was told thanks, but no thanks. Chung, it seems, was already on her way from Sacramento, California, where she had been anchoring the Evening News. Never mind that field reporting is Rather's forte, that Oklahoma City was in his neck of the woods, or that the story was big enough for two anchors. There are egos to deal with, and believing they had to choose between upsetting Chung and upsetting Rather, CBS News execs chose the latter.
To make matters worse, Chung managed to offend some Oklahoma viewers with a few innocuous questions to the city's assistant fire chief about the community's ability to handle the crisis; cbs News was forced to reel her back to New York City after just three days. The only good thing to come out of her assignment was that the proceeds from T shirts asking WHO THE HELL IS CONNIE CHUNG? went to the disaster-relief efforts.
Beleaguered staff members at the Evening News found the whole episode to be a disturbing distraction. "This awful thing happened, and all these people are dead, and there's this bickering about who's going to read the lead-ins?" says a news-division staff member. "It's hard to imagine getting more off the mark about what's important."
While CBS News executives remained incommunicado last week, Chung insisted that all is well between her and Rather. "We talk to each other all the time," Chung told TIME. "But neither of us would be worth our mustard if we didn't want to cover all the stories that are on the map."
Still, in the words of a longtime staff member, there's a "palpable tension" in the CBS newsroom. From the executive suites to the cafeteria lines, the conversation at CBS News is about what to do with Connie and Dan. Dump her, keep him? Dump him, keep her? Dump them both and bring in Ed Bradley from 60 Minutes? The talk spilled over to Don Imus' nationally syndicated radio show two weeks ago, when professional curmudgeon Andy Rooney called the Rather-Chung teaming "the worst network-news mistake since ABC paired Barbara Walters with Harry Reasoner."
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