Inside The Situation Room: “We Proved…That We Can Do News Differently”
Only on TVNewser: Maybe The Situation Room should be four hours long.![]()
“We have so much news!,” CNN senior executive producer Sam Feist exclaimed Monday afternoon, 40 minutes before Wolf Blitzer‘s broadcast premiered in Washington.![]()
D.C. bureau chief David Bohrman smiled. “There’s stuff he can’t fit in, and he has three hours!” By 6pm, Bohrman was joking about adding a fourth hour. (I should probably stress the word joking. After 180 minutes of live TV, I was exhausted, and I was just a fly on the wall.)![]()
Bohrman said TSR is probably the “most complicated daily news show” he has even been a part of. Months ago, the show was just a concept in his head. “I could see it, but it just took months to get it out,” he said.![]()
Imagine producing a show with this goal in mind: “I really hope the rundown that Sam and his company have prepared at 3 o’clock bears little relation to the program the ends at 6 o’clock,” Bohrman said.![]()
And sure enough, after the show, Feist said only two of the segments in the 5pm hour were written into the original rundown.![]()
After the three-hour premiere, the staff gathered for champagne and cake.
“One thing we learned is, you have to go to the bathroom afterwards,” Bohrman joked. He called the show a “spectacular new venture.”![]()
Blitzer thanked the staff, and quoted Tiger Woods: “Practice, practice, practice!” He said the rehearsals paid off: “For a first show, I don’t think it could have been any better.”![]()
In the days to come, they’ll work out the kinks: The camera angles, the video wall coordination, the teases, the graphics. ![]()
But Monday was an accomplishment worth recognizing. As Feist told the staff, “we proved today that we can do news differently.”

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Nadine Cheung
Editor, The Job Post
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