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Okay, Okay, Fine, We'll Talk About OprahIf you insist. Oprah Winfrey is stepping down from "The Oprah Winfrey Show" at the end of the 25th season, in 2011. She will appear on her cable network, OWN, which is set to launch in January 2011, but "The Oprah Winfrey Show" will no longer exist as the world knows it.
The loss of Ms. Winfrey's show will be missed in particular by the book publishing industry. ... The media personality and mogulwhose show has served as the main pedestal from which she has engaged newsmakers high and low, transformed obscure products and personalities into runaway successes, and preached a gospel of self-empowerment to her devoted, largely female audienceis betting that, in a world of ever-fragmenting audiences, the future lies with creating her own branded network. (LAT) ABC News has the full text of the statement she sent to the 200+ stations that carry Winfrey's show. And what does this all have to do with jobs? Not much, at least not directly. But according to Broadcasting & Cable, stations have been paying more than $200,000 per week to syndicate the show. "If ABC replaced the show with news, it could easily produce newscasts for much less than what it's paying for Oprah. Even if the ABC stations' ratings dropped in the Oprah time slots, the cost savings would likely make up for those declines." More local newscasts means more hiring. On the other hand, "Too much news in a market can mean too much advertising inventory in news, reducing the value of that news inventory for all players." So in conclusion? No conclusions have yet been drawn, but we'll have to watch and see. Finally: Anyone want some TomKat? Email This Post |
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