MSNBC: Too Much Opinion and Not Enough News? Focus on commentary and advocacy may be dampening viewership Has MSNBC leaned too hard on âLean Forwardâ? The NBCUniversal outlet has used that slogan since 2010 to portray itself not as the buttoned-down news source it was when it was a joint venture of NBCU and Microsoft, but as a community for progressive discussion that trumps humdrum reportage with advocacy. Say what you will about the ongoing collapse of the Fourth Estate, but the partisan approach, in which Al Sharpton and others actively push for change, has worked, bringing ratings increases and celebrity status for primetime personalities like Rachel Maddow. In recent weeks, however, MSNBC ratings have slipped, and leaning forward may be a cause. MSNBC markets itself as a place for discussion and community. Yet when bombs explode at the Boston Marathon or unrest shatters Egypt, viewers want information first, and analysis â even solutions â later, if at all. For the week ended July 7, MSNBCâs primetime programming captured 14% to 15% fewer viewers between the ages of 25 and 54 â the demographic coveted by sponsors of news programming â than a year earlier, according to Nielsen. In May, MSNBC , which usually plays second only to Fox News, saw its ratings fall behind those of CNN and HLN, too. MSNBCâs top executive, Phil Griffin, thinks the shift is short-lived. âThere has been an inordinate amount of big, breaking news, and that is, honestly, when CNN does well. Itâs pure muscle memory,â he said. MSNBCâs performance is bound to suffer in comparison with that of 2012, he added, when a presidential election drew political junkies and casual viewers alike. Sounds plausible, but could MSNBCâs recent ebb suggest something more seriously amiss? Je rey McCall, author of âViewer Discretion Advised: Taking Control of Mass Media Infl uence,â believes so, saying that the newsie generated its initial momentum by riding the optimism of President Obamaâs rise to prominence. âMSNBCâs problems might be more than just a hiccup,â McCall maintained. âNow that the Obama administrationâs fortunes have apparently declined with various challenges like NSA, IRS and Benghazi, previously (enthusiastic) news consumers on the left might find it hard to keep tuned in.â To be sure, thereâs nothing wrong with opinion-making. But MSNBC offers an awful lot of it. An analysis by Pew Research of 108 hours of cable-news programming during three days in November and December found opinion and commentary overwhelmed straight news on MSNBC by 85% to 15%. Fox News content included 55% opinion and commentary and 45% factual reporting, Pew said, while CNN content consisted of 46% opinion and commentary and 54% factual reporting. No matter what their mix, both Fox News and CNN have for years pitched themselves as places to go when viewers need details, not discussion, an angle MSNBC does not take. MSNBC made a strategic decision to essentially rebrand itself as the policy yin to Fox Newsâ yang, explained Mark Jurkowitz, associate director at the Pew Research Centerâs Project for Excellence in Journalism. âSo far this year, (it has) probably seen some of the pitfalls of that rebranding.â Griffin remains steadfast in the transparency of MSNBCâs mission, and believes thereâs little reason to change. The cabler will focus on getting past political malaise, he said. âThere is a sense that America doesnât do big things. We do, in some ways as much as ever. We have to find it.â Look for the network to dabble in digital community-building with a new website in the fall. Dispensing âjust the factsâ is no longer enough for most people. Just ask your local newspaper publisher. Still, when big stories do arise, you need newsgathering muscle, not gum flapping. Activist Sharpton canât do what Brian Williams does, and the more Maddow and Chris Matthews pontificate, the farther they get from being able to present news events in an objective fashion. Who is the face of MSNBC should terrorism cripple a major American city? MSNBC has woven a grand tapestry. But it should never forget that there are times when a news network simply has to stick to its knitting. http://variety.com/2013/biz/news/does-msnbc-lean-too-far-forward-1200570561/
Left wing News is a psyop every time. People that watched the Zimmerman trial via MSNBC never knew that Martin was bigger than Zim, that the first criminal act was Martin attacking Zim, that Martin was a burglar, that Martin was a drug user, that Martin was doing MMA. I tried to tell them things like that and they thought I was nuts. One moron was crying after the not guilty finding, she said "a child was killed, somebody has to pay for that".