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Home Front: Politix
Is Olbermann's Shtick Getting Stale?
2010-02-03
Keith Olbermann was already a renowned sportscaster when he rose to prominence as a political commentator. This was during the Bush Administration, when the left was badly in need of a forceful voice to rally around. Such was his popularity that MSNBC reoriented its entire primetime lineup around it.

But now the Democrats control Congress and the White House, and there are creeping indications that the world may not have quite as much need of -- or patience for -- Olbermann and his shtick as it once did.

Ratings for Olbermann's Countdown have been soft recently, and the 8 p.m. shows on CNN and HLN have narrowed the gap. In the important demographic of adults 25 to 54 -- the group advertisers are looking to reach -- Countdown was down 44% year-over-year in January. It averaged 268,000 viewers in that demo, only 3,000 more than Nancy Grace's show on HLN, and 12,000 more than CNN's Campbell Brown. Fox News's O'Reilly Factor dominated the hour with 964,000 viewers age 25 to 54, and was the only cable news show in the time period to increase its audience, by 55%.

But there are also more subjective signs that Olbermann's stridency and lack of proportion are alienating some of his natural allies. Quite a few eyebrows elevated last week when Jon Stewart, in a parody of one of Olbermann's "Special Comment" segments, called out the newsman for going way over the top in his denunciations of Republican Senator-elect Scott Brown of Massachusetts. The criticism was all the more remarkable, given that Stewart and Olbermann usually take the same side on most issues, especially when it comes to Fox News and the Republicans.

Olbermann's overheated rhetoric also drew a sharp response from Joe Scarborough, MSNBC's house conservative, who called his fellow host's attack on Brown "reckless" and "sad." The exchange (and a few earlier, similar incidents) inspired network president Phil Griffin to issue a stern memo admonishing his charges: "We do not publicly criticize our colleagues. This kind of behavior is unprofessional and will not be tolerated."
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#7  Olbermann has always been on the short end of the stick shtick.
Posted by: WolfDog   2010-02-03 11:14  

#6  I have never given more than 2 minutes to anyone who invites me to a party then trashes me for showing up; this guy is a piss ant, even during his prime as its called when he was only a sports common tator...and if ya saw the Stewart clip, were those funny flashing glasses an upside down 2010?
Posted by: swksvolFF   2010-02-03 10:59  

#5  "It's not fascism when we do it!"

Yep, that more or less sums up Keith Olbermann.
Posted by: eltoroverde   2010-02-03 09:02  

#4  A Point-Counterpoint with Glenn Beck would be amusing.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2010-02-03 08:55  

#3  I'm not sure, but I think it would be refreshing if UOlbermann added a high goose stepping march and a few enthusiastic seig heils during his show. At least it would be closer to the truth.
Posted by: ed   2010-02-03 08:45  

#2  Olbermann's trademark style (lots of alliteration, highbrow phrasing, Monty Python wanabee smartassery) actually is kind of amusing when he's doing NFL highlights on Football Night in America. (Well, I think so, anyway.) When deployed in support of a moonbat-Left worldview in a debate on something more than entertainment, it gets real old real fast.
Posted by: Mike   2010-02-03 08:29  

#1  Was it ever fresh?
Posted by: Glenmore   2010-02-03 07:30  

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