By: Michael Calderone
1) Bring back “Crossfire”
2) Forget neutral — create a new identity
3) Bring in big personalities
4) Jazz up the broadcast
5) Mix it up ...
6) But don’t screw it up
The future of CNN, never exactly bright the past couple of years, suddenly
looked dire this week when ratings came out showing a 40 percent decline in
prime-time viewers since 2009.
Jon Klein, the network's president, has consistently defended its
down-the-middle news strategy, despite the increasingly large ratings leads
opened up by MSNBC and particularly Fox, with their ideological slants and big
personalities.
So is it time for a radical rethinking of “the most trusted name in news,” the
network of Larry King, Anderson Cooper, Campbell Brown and Wolf Blitzer? We
asked a dozen or so prominent media watchers, former industry executives and
CNN personalities for their recommendations.
Their near consensus: It has to change, get more personality, no longer be —
as one media critic called it — “the view from nowhere.” Exactly how to do
that was not so easy to agree on — and one person we asked, Phil Donahue,
doesn’t think the network needs to change at all. But the responses from
everyone else broke down into five different approaches.
1) Bring back “Crossfire”
2) Forget neutral — create a new identity
3) Bring in big personalities
4) Jazz up the broadcast
5) Mix it up ...
6) But don’t screw it up