Media
Related: About this forumCNN’s Ratings Surge Covering the Mystery of the Missing Airliner
On CNN, the plane rises from misty clouds accompanied by an eerie background score while anchors offer intriguing details some new, some days old of the disappearance of Flight 370. The reports, broadcast continually, often are augmented by speculation sometimes fevered, sometimes tempered about where the flight might have come to rest. And viewers are eating it up.
The story of the vanished Boeing 777 jet has been exhaustively covered across every form of news media, with television generally leading the way. Each of the broadcast networks began its evening newscast with stories on the plane every night last week, a consensus that happens once a year at most, according to Andrew Tyndall, who publishes a weekly report monitoring newscasts.
But it is CNN, the cable network that has been scrambling to find a sustainable business model against its main competitors, Fox News and MSNBC, that has perhaps invested most heavily in the mystery of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.
It is a tremendous story that is completely in our wheelhouse, said a senior CNN executive, who asked not to be identified defining the networks strategy for its coverage. CNNs ratings soared last week and over the weekend, rising by almost 100 percent in prime time. The network even managed the rare feat of edging past Fox News for leadership in several hours.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/18/business/media/cnns-ratings-surge-with-coverage-of-the-mystery-of-the-missing-airliner.html?_r=0
deminks
(11,261 posts)CNN - certainly not news.
MADem
(135,425 posts)deminks
(11,261 posts)MADem
(135,425 posts)queries, plus, one of his guests (one I'm betting he didn't book) was a guy from the tv show Decoded, which is apparently a woo-woo show on the HISTORY channel.
That said, I take the point that CNN is going along with the rest of the news outlets and putting a little "tainment" up in there with their info.