The Newsroom

Jeff Zucker Confirms He Is Leaving CNN

He made the annoucement today to staff.

This site closed in March 2021 and is now a read-only archive
MO
Mouseboy33
CNN President Jeff Zucker Faces What Might Be His Last Lap
https://www.wsj.com/articles/cnn-president-jeff-zucker-faces-what-might-be-his-last-lap-11603487817
[quote]CNN president Jeff Zucker survived plenty of corporate intrigue since telecom giant AT&T swallowed up the cable network’s parent company two years ago.

Now that is changing, leaving Mr. Zucker frustrated and his future at the cable news network in doubt.

Mr. Zucker, who has overseen CNN for seven years, felt blindsided by a recent restructuring carried out by parent WarnerMedia, and has had friction with its chief executive, Jason Kilar, according to people familiar with the situation.

The 55-year-old’s contract expires next year and he hasn’t committed to extending his deal in meetings with WarnerMedia brass and communications with CNN employees, the people say.

Asked about his future in a town hall video chat on Wednesday, Mr. Zucker said he loves his job, but added, “The industry is changing, our company is changing, so I have a lot to think about,” according to a recording of his remarks. He added, “I’ll do that at the right time.”

Mr. Zucker said he won’t make a decision on whether to stay at CNN until after the election.

If this election is Mr. Zucker’s last ride, he would leave CNN after transforming its role in the cable news landscape and becoming one of the most polarizing figures in media in the process. On his watch, the network, once accused of giving Donald Trump too much airtime during his first presidential run, has become a critic of the administration.

CNN, like its rivals in cable news, has enjoyed a major ratings lift during the controversies of the Trump years, especially in election season. The network’s ratings have increased about threefold compared with where they were at the start of 2015, reflecting similar gains at Fox News and MSNBC. CNN has been second in the ratings for most of the year among viewers 25 to 54, the key news demographic for advertisers, but trails rival MSNBC in total viewers and is well behind ratings leader Fox News.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden participates in a CNN town hall event in Moosic, Penn.
Photo: Getty Images

Mr. Zucker also placed big bets on digital growth, some of which blossomed—the network’s main website expanded its audience—and some that fell flat.

AT&T doesn’t break out CNN’s results separately. A person familiar with the matter said the division has generated more than $1 billion in annual profit in recent years. This year is proving more challenging. During the town hall meeting, Mr. Zucker said he expects CNN to miss its profit target by between $100 million and $120 million, as digital and international advertising sales suffer during the pandemic.

Some media and finance executives say CNN could be a spinoff target for private-equity investors or blank-check companies known as SPACs. AT&T has fielded interest from potential acquirers of CNN on multiple occasions, including last year, according to people familiar with the situation. But despite the headaches of owning a network the president regularly attacks, AT&T has thus far held on to it, viewing it as a valuable financial contributor.

Though Mr. Zucker’s contract doesn’t end until well into 2021, he could leave before then; initial conversations about whether he’ll extend his employment have happened and are expected to deepen after the election, the people familiar with the situation said.

The Information, a subscription news site focused on technology and media, earlier reported Mr. Zucker was in discussions with the company about his future. Mr. Zucker could be drawn to pursue his other passions, which include politics and sports, people who know him say. A person close to Mr. Zucker said he may just be ready to move on following the election, after a long tenure at the network.

The media giant’s successive waves of corporate reorganization over the past two years have replaced executives at all levels from its Warner Bros. television studios to the leadership at HBO. Mr. Zucker had been the last man standing, maintaining control of his news and sports fiefdom.

When Mr. Kilar succeeded John Stankey atop WarnerMedia earlier this year, he carried out another overhaul in August that took away from Mr. Zucker oversight of CNN’s finances and human resources, as well as communications—an area run by one of Mr. Zucker’s top lieutenants, Allison Gollust. The changes annoyed and surprised Mr. Zucker, the people familiar with the situation said.

Mr. Zucker has had his hand in just about every area of media—morning TV, prime-time entertainment, sports and cable news—over a three-decade-plus career. He joined NBC News in 1986 as a researcher for the network’s coverage of the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea, and rose through the ranks, becoming executive producer of “Today” in 1991 at the age of 26. He helped to launch the program into more than a decade of ratings dominance.

Jeff Zucker, shown on the set of NBC’s "Today" show in 1998, became the program’s executive producer in 1991 at the age of 26.
Photo: Corbis via Getty Images

He later managed entertainment for NBC, where his greatest successes included reality shows “Fear Factor” and “The Apprentice,” starring Mr. Trump.

He helped launch the streaming service Hulu, which Mr. Kilar ran in its early years—meaning that Mr. Zucker now reports to someone who used to work for him. His run at NBCUniversal was marred by his decision to replace “Tonight Show” host Jay Leno with Conan O’Brien, only to soon reverse the move after bad ratings. He left NBCUniversal as its chief executive after Comcast Corp. took control of the company in 2011.

Mr. Zucker took over at CNN in 2013 and was promoted to oversee WarnerMedia’s sports properties last year. When Mr. Stankey was tapped this spring to become AT&T CEO, opening up the WarnerMedia CEO slot, the company considered Mr. Zucker for the role, among other internal candidates, early in the process, people familiar with the situation said.

AT&T wanted someone with a background in digital innovation who could spearhead the company’s push into direct-to-consumer media, and felt Mr. Zucker’s experience didn’t make him the best fit, the people said. Eventually AT&T decided to look outside and hire Mr. Kilar.

In addition to reorganizing Mr. Zucker’s executive team, Mr. Kilar has his own vision for how to expand CNN’s business, including the possibility of creating a subscription streaming service that would carry CNN programming, people familiar with Mr. Kilar’s thinking said. CNN has explored selling new subscription products directly to viewers under Mr. Zucker, but so far those plans haven’t come to fruition.

Jeff Zucker, president NBC Universal, attended an awards dinner with his future boss, Hulu CEO Jason Kilar, in 2009.
Photo: Getty Images

AT&T hasn’t yet decided how CNN’s 24/7 news programming fits into HBO Max, the streaming service that is Mr. Kilar’s primary focus at WarnerMedia. Mr. Kilar wants to give HBO Max subscribers some version of CNN, according to a person familiar with the matter, but the news network’s existing contracts with cable and satellite providers make that a tricky proposition.

Belt-tightening across WarnerMedia carried out by Mr. Kilar also prompted Mr. Zucker to close Great Big Story, a short-form video streaming channel that Mr. Zucker championed.

Mr. Zucker has taken heat from both sides of the political aisle. Critics on the right say he has steered the network toward opinion. Some CNN personalities, including prime-time anchor Don Lemon, are openly critical of the president, and the network has increasingly questioned the president’s policies, handling of the coronavirus pandemic and false claims—sometimes putting fact-checking into the “chyron” banners at the bottom of the screen.

Critics on the left are frustrated he has signed up political analysts such as former Republican senator Rick Santorum who are often sympathetic to Mr. Trump.

Some critics on the right, including Fox News host Tucker Carlson, say Mr. Zucker’s attitude toward the president is hypocritical. Earlier this year, Fox News aired recordings of conversations from 2016 between Mr. Zucker and Mr. Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, in which Mr. Zucker could be heard fawning over the then-candidate and proposing a weekly show for Mr. Trump.

Donald Trump and Jeff Zucker attend the 2004 NBC Winter Press Tour All-Star Party in Hollywood, Calif.
Photo: Getty Images

The intrigue about Mr. Zucker’s future comes as CNN is preparing to cover its biggest story in years—the 2020 election. Mr. Zucker, the de facto executive producer of CNN, is planning for a variety of scenarios, including a so-called “red mirage”—an early Republican lead caused by people voting on the day that disappears once mail-in votes are tallied. The network is scattering on-air talent across one-person studios in its offices in Washington, D.C., Atlanta and New York, to limit the risk of spreading coronavirus.

Mr. Zucker is known throughout CNN as an in-the-weeds manager who delves into the minutiae of story selection, hangs around the studio, tweaks production details and scrutinizes company finances. He sends emails on weekends and late into the evenings, recommending edits and suggesting stories for CNN.com. Editors and producers on the receiving end of Mr. Zucker’s emails call the suggested articles “JZ stories,” using their boss’s preferred nickname.

Some CNN reporters and editors complain that Mr. Zucker is a micromanager, annoyed that a business executive would inject himself into news coverage. Others describe him as an intimidating presence who doesn’t work well with indecisive people and prefers leaders with strong opinions. Some CNN employees grudgingly acknowledge that although Mr. Zucker’s late-night emails can be onerous, they are rarely off-target.

AT&T is trying to trim a large debt load fueled by takeovers such as its 2018 acquisition of then-CNN parent Time Warner. The company has about $30 billion of debt that comes due through 2025. Mr. Stankey has said he is looking across AT&T’s operations, including WarnerMedia, and will shed assets that aren’t considered core to the company’s mission.

As chairman of WarnerMedia, Mr. Zucker attended a CNN event at New York’s American Museum of Natural History in 2019.
Photo: Mike Coppola/Getty Images

He is already preparing part of its Xandr advertising business for potential sale and has shopped other assets including its Crunchyroll animation service, according to people familiar with the matter.

AT&T has held on to CNN for more than just its profit stream. Executives suspected that President Trump’s well-known f
Last edited by Mouseboy33 on 4 February 2021 2:43pm - 3 times in total
CI
cityprod
Okay, so there is a notable caveat here to this whole story, and that is the Wall Street Journal is owned by Rupert Murdoch, who of course owns Fox News Channel, a competitor to CNN, so take this story with a whole truckload of salt.

That being said, there's nothing in this story that I believe to outside the realms of possibility. Jeff Zucker could indeed leave the network when his contract expires next year, and honestly, it wouldn't totally surprise me if he did. This could be just the excuse needed to revamp the CNN networks into a product that will appeal more to what AT&T would want the networks to be.

I feel the least likely outcome currently is CNN being sold, but it's not impossible. I suspect they'll wait until after Zucker's contract situation is sorted out to decide if they will sell, and if Zucker leaves, I expect them not to sell. If he stays, then selling might well be the higher possibility.
MO
Mouseboy33
Okay, so there is a notable caveat here to this whole story, and that is the Wall Street Journal is owned by Rupert Murdoch, ..... so take this story with a whole truckload of salt.

I guess that also applies to anything written by the Times. WSJ is hardly a gossip rag.
CI
cityprod
Okay, so there is a notable caveat here to this whole story, and that is the Wall Street Journal is owned by Rupert Murdoch, ..... so take this story with a whole truckload of salt.

I guess that also applies to anything written by the Times. WSJ is hardly a gossip rag.


Yeah, WSJ is not the New York Post by a long margin, but yeah, also applies to the London Times. It's regrettable, but Murdoch is known for inserting his own agenda in when he needs to, and yeah, a story that could be seen quite easily as negative on CNN, definitely needs a lot of salt.

Indeed, compared to some of the stuff that has appeared in both WSJ and London Times, this is decidely tame, which is why I'm not completely dismissing it.
FT
FranceTV
The news reporting in the WSJ is about as unimpeachable as it gets in print media. They’ve successfully maintained a pretty good firewall with the editorial side since the Murdoch takeover (and even before then it was renowned for pairing accurate news reporting with staunchly conservative opinion pages).
CI
cityprod
The news reporting in the WSJ is about as unimpeachable as it gets in print media. They’ve successfully maintained a pretty good firewall with the editorial side since the Murdoch takeover (and even before then it was renowned for pairing accurate news reporting with staunchly conservative opinion pages).


There have a few occasions when Murdoch has gotten a bit of his agenda, but it's never as overt as it is in the New York Post, not even close. I would say the story is a bit speculative, but not in an over the top way. Hence, take it with some salt, a large truckload recommended, but I'm not dismissing the story as a complete fabrication.
NZ
nznewser
I also read the story from Variety with interest, which largely backs up the WSJ story. One thing Variety notes is that "Estimates from the market-research firm Kagan project that CNN will take in $608 million in advertising this year, up 5.2% from the $578 million it captured in 2019", so CNN has no doubt done quite well this year, in amongst the challenges that the pandemic has brought. But that's meant it's been an unprecedented news year. Variety also says that CNN generates the bulk of profit among the Warner assets. If that is the case, it is hard to see Warner trying to sell it off.

As an International viewer, I would like to see CNN invest more in it's international news programming. Prior to this year, CNNI had dropped a significant portion of international programming for the likes of putting on more New Day, and this year US programming has, understandably, dominated the schedule. I hope after the US election, CNNI starts bringing back more of it's international shows and returns to what it does best.

I also think CNNUS prime time should be rejigged for more news shows and less opinion. CNN has an opportunity to be the network in the middle - let Fox go for the right and MSNBC go for the left, but CNN's opportunity is to be trusted for reliable, hard news that you can trust. Leave the opinion to the others who are just going for the lowest common denominator. CNN should prioritise news and analysis, let people know that if they just want the best news and analysis you can trust, you can turn to CNN.

Particularly as the US and the world continue to face the pandemic and hard economic times, I see that as the future of CNN that in years to come would pay dividends. I understand why Zucker has taken the approach he has, but it's not the approach that we need in these times.

In these uncertain times people want news that they can trust, and I hope that is the approach that CNN takes once this election is done and dusted. Perhaps Zucker is not the right person for the changes CNN needs to face the challenges over the next year or so.
MO
Mouseboy33
Unfortunately without an owner like Ted Turner with noble journalistic ideals, the current ownership will always value corporate financial interests over anything else. Especially since CNN's ratings are up and so is its profits. Thats all they care about. I hate to be cynical, but unless they spin it off or get a new channel runner in place, I cant see CNN or CNNi significantly reversing course. Im afraid all these news channels have hit on a formula that "works" and righting the ship will take something monumental. Ted Turner still has money and he is still barely clinging to life. Wouldnt that be something if he bought the channel back.....and secured its future? (Not going to happen though)
PS
psi123
Article on Mediate with report that Fox Business claims there are rumors on Wall Street that Amazon/Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos is interested:

https://www.mediaite.com/tv/fox-business-charles-gasparino-hot-and-heavy-speculation-on-wall-street-that-jeff-bezos-is-buying-cnn/

100 days later

MO
Mouseboy33
Jeff Zucker announced it this morning. He will complete his contract and leave CNN at the end of the year.
Confirmed by Hollywood Reporter. He working out to the end of his contract.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/jeff-zucker-staying-cnn






Last edited by Mouseboy33 on 4 February 2021 3:17pm - 3 times in total

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