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It’s midnight. Most
of ABC News’s New York headquarters is in darkness. Peter Jennings went home
five hours ago. The building is almost desolate. Almost. In the third-floor
newsroom/studio, a skeleton crew must fill two empty hours of network
airtime starting at 2:00 a.m. Nothing is unlikely. There could be eight
minutes of Russian TV news tonight. You might see political satire sung to
the accompaniment of an accordion. With a budget that amounts to spare
change and no overlords looking over their shoulders, the World News Now
nighthawks will scrounge content from just about anywhere. Their mission is
crystallized by a twist on ABCs familiar slogan: “More insomniacs get their
news from World News Now than from any other source.” And right now,
almost a million such insomniacs are out there, in the dark, waiting for a
combination of news and analysis leavened with slashes of weird humor and
seasoned with a wry kind of irony and cynicism.
“It’s not like
anything else ABC news does “ says Victor Dorff, the guy ABC hired to get an
all-night newscast up and running in January 19-92. Dorff speaks with a kind
of lazy matter-of-factness. Did he infuse World News Now with this deadpan
sense of humor, or did he pick it up working five years’ worth of nights?
Hard to tell, but everyone else seems to share a similar outlook. “It’s
definitely a Sesame Street situation — ‘one of these things is not
like the others.’ It’s filling two hours a night with whatever crumbs we
find on the floor; it’s the kindness of strangers. If we don’t put
everything back exactly where we found it, they’ll know someone’s been here.
So we try to be very quiet and not spend any money. I think they know we’re
here, because we hear from them from time to time. They’ll call and say ‘You
know that thing you did last night? Don’t ever do that again.”‘ Dorff has
since left ABC News to pursue a range of on-line adventures: disseminating
World News Now’s audio via the Internet and experimentally
“net-casting” it using the CU-SeeMe program, to name two.
The shortages of
money, personnel and resources ought to make working on he program akin to
being trapped in some kind of TV news purgatory; where misbehaving producers
get sent to throw a scare into them. The sheer volume of empty time should
make this an even more daunting assignment — like having to fill a
supertanker using a teaspoon. For the World News Nowniks, however,
this is a rare chance to challenge TV news habits and conventions by
creating a program that’s deeper, smarter and funnier. The way these people
see it, they’ve been handed a major-league network news division and carte
blanche to do whatever they want with it for 10 hours a week. And if doing
it with no money is one of the conditions of that arrangement, well, that
just makes any accomplishment that much more rewarding.
Air time is less
than two hours away, and there are a couple of pre-taped segments to get in
the can. Senior producer Terry Baker is in the control room while anchor
Kevin Newman and movie critic Jeffrey Lyons prepare to cast a discriminating
eye over the week’s new motion pictures. Usually in TV news, there’s a lot
more preparation behind a segment like this — endless pre-interviews by
producers, a couple of rehearsal/run-throughs. Surprises are the last thing
anybody wants. Things are different here. Roll and record. Cue the talent.
Lyons and Newman sound like they’ve just bumped into each other. Their
conversation is loose, unscripted, and somehow more “genuine” because of
that. The addition of film excerpts is equally casual. Director Brett Holey
listens to the conversation and rolls clips at the appropriate moments.
Lyons and Newman shut up while they play, then jump back in when it makes
sense to. Check tape. Tape is good. First take.
Why would Jeffrey
Lyons be talking about movies in a TV studio at midnight?
He’s already got a TV gig, so it’s not like he needs the exposure. The
money? If he’s getting paid anything for this, it’s probably scale, so the
promise of filthy lucre can’t have lured him here. He’s drawn as much by the
opportunity to go into more depth -- not to have to dumb down his work -- and know
he’s reaching an audience of intelligent adults.
Pre-tape two:
network star James Walker, usually seen earlier in the evening on the
Jennings broadcast. Earlier tonight, Walker’s story about a pyramid scam
aired on the 6:30 show. Standard TV news time constraints meant Walker’s
piece could only run about two minutes. World News Now will run the
piece again. But they’re supplementing it with Walker himself. He’ll follow
the package with a debrief, adding new elements that provide depth and
background. That adds up to greater impact. As he’s wrapping up with a few
thoughts about the nature of charity and greed, Walker quotes Saint Paul —
something about “the course set before you.” “I believe that’s the first
quote from Saint Paul we’ve ever had on World News Now,” Baker
observes to the people in the control room. General murmurs of assent. Some
chuckling. Check tape. Tape is good.
World News Now
is a different kind of newscast for other reasons besides its broader
editorial scope and its 2:00 a.m.
start time. It does a lot more than merely regurgitate the day’s stories in
an endless rerun loop, hoping to squeeze one more airing out of them before
they’re banked in the tape library. Its success depends entirely on its
staff and their willingness to experiment, to make television news which doesn’t rely
on high-priced correspondents, lavish satellite feed budgets, spiffy
graphics or slick production. Its minuscule budget makes those strategies
impossible. Improvisation, ingenuity and frugality are the show’s hallmarks.
The self-deprecating cynicism helps too. The newscast’s producers have just
one asset most programs don’t: time.
Last summer, anchor
Thalia Assuras — hired away from CTV’s Canada AM — felt worn out by
the nocturnal schedule (10 p.m. to 10 a.m. every day) and left for a shot at
dayside reporting and anchoring. Six months later, she’s back at World
News Now by choice. “It’s the most fun you can have in television news,”
she says of the program. “It’s satirical, it’s cynical to a degree — but not
depressed cynical. It’s clever and it’s intelligent and well aware of all
the elements of life, right across the spectrum, including the fringe
elements. And we don’t do happy talk.”
“I think risk is
the key, and this show has risk,” is Kevin Newman’s take on it. ABC offered
him a slot co-anchoring the broadcast just as the CBC was frustrating him
with its indecision about his future as the man on Midday. “It’s
scary most days to be in front of that, but at least you’re living. It’s
irreverent sometimes. It pokes fun at authority. It doesn’t take itself too
seriously, but it takes the news and its mission seriously. With some of the
stuff we do, the bosses roll their eyes and go, ‘The kids are at it again.”‘
The strange mix is
working. After four years on the air, World News Now is the most
watched overnight news in America.
Its nearest competitor, NBC News Nightside, gets about 500,000
viewers on an average night. CBS’s offering, Up To The Minute, comes
in third. CNN trails a distant fourth. Approximately 900,000 people dial up
World News Now, and they aren’t just casual channel-surfers. The
audience feels — and expresses — a passionate sense of ownership for the
program.
Of course, there
was no way ABC executives could have known any of that when they ordered an
all-night newscast. The program was conceived with minimal expectations; a
dirt-cheap network product for affiliates in the dead of night. Its shaky
beginnings attest to that.
“We had no idea who
our audience was going to be. The line was, ‘It’s probably just going to be
criminals and cool people,’” says Dorff. “It turns out we were a little
broader than that, but we have our share of those kinds of people. We had no
idea where we were going to get video to fill three hours of television
every night. We had a feed pattern that was so complicated that every
half-hour had to be color-coded in order for it to work across the country.
We had two weeks of material stored during the rehearsal period. We used it
all up our first night.”
TV news has been
made the same way for more than three decades. Wire services and newspapers
determine what gets covered; it’s easier to imitate than initiate. Time is
tight. TV has just enough minutes to tell you that something happened, not
how or why. There are two ways to camouflage that. First, you can keep it
flashy, trashy and fast-moving; if you’re blowing through the items on the
line-up quickly enough, nobody will notice they’re video wallpaper, a
headline and a couple of lame sound-bites. Or you can freight your show with
hollow self-importance; fake gravitas covers a multitude of sins, including
(but not limited to) the fact that your stories are video wallpaper, a
headline and a couple of lame sound-bites. Finally, and most dangerously,
most TV news doesn’t bother to offer anything more than simplistic tripe
because it’s assumed the viewers can’t handle anything better. If you
believe your audience is nothing more than a wad of remote-punching
couch-monkeys, why would you bother making a program for sentient Homo
Sapiens?
Time constraints
mean most newscasts can’t even manage to mash together a truncated video
version of the front page of the day’s newspaper. If you transcribed all the
words in a standard network newscast, the resulting copy would not fill a
single newspaper page. TV is better at telling stories that rely on
pictures. Analysis, investigation and depth get dumped in favor of rape,
murder, mayhem and sensation. World News Now aims to tell good stories and
to show good pictures; it wants to be the whole paper, not just the front
page — hard news, features, business, weather, and the op-ed section,
including the editorial cartoons. Each 30-minute chunk of World News Now
starts with a concise block of utilitarian, no-nonsense hard news, with the
running order and treatment changed on each go-round to keep things fresh
and interesting (as much for the people making the program as for the people
watching it). That still leaves 90 empty minutes.
“We spend eight or
nine or 10 minutes on a subject that on the evening news you’d only get 30
seconds or a minute-and-a-half of,” explains Terry Baker “It’s very freeing
that way. If we give you eight or nine minutes of a speech by the Speaker of
the House, we’re implying that you can decide what’s important in that, and
it gives you more context, a better idea of what the speech was actually
like.”
Stories on TV seem
to happen in a perpetual and evanescent “now” — nothing leads up to it,
nothing leads away from it. But World News Now has a sense of
history. A segment called “World News Then” raids the ABC News archives for
contemporary coverage of bygone stories. Sometimes they’ll offer deeper
background to bolster coverage of something current. Other times, it’s a way
of demonstrating that the more television production values change, the more
the stories stay the same. When Irish peace negotiations bogged down,
coverage of the Irish troubles from 15 years earlier served to remind
everybody just how long, bitter and bloody the conflict has been. Concern
over lawless, wayward mid-1990s youth prompted World News Now to
reach for coverage of lawless, wayward youth in the mid-1960s.
“As with most good
television, ‘World News Then’ came about accidentally,” Baker recalls. “If
you’re looking to fill two hours of television with no money and no staff,
you go, ‘Hey, we’ve got all this stuff sitting in the library. It was good
enough once. Let’s run it again.’”
When fighting
erupted in the Russian republic of Chechnya,
most mainstream newscasts parachuted in their high priced correspondents.
Others downlinked pictures from syndicated satellite services and wrote
script for them using facts culled from the wires. World News Now ran
the top eight minutes of that evening’s Russian national news with a
simultaneous English translation. There was more information, greater depth,
and a glimpse of what Russian TV news looks like. That daily segment’s
called “Their News,” and it offers the day’s big story as covered by the
people who live where it’s happening. Last summer, Canadian reports on the
Bernardo murder trial often made “Their News,” providing a counterpoint to
the Simpson trial hysteria.
“It’s a good way of
seeing how other people view the same story,” Baker says. “For ‘Their News,’
we’ve taken that a little further. We’ve done ‘International Channel
Surfing,’ where we call bureaus around the world and say, ‘Record a night’s
worth of stuff and send it to us.’ We often just run it, because a lot of it
translates automatically. That kind of stuff is fun, and it gives people an
idea of what the rest of the world is like— our similarities as well as our
differences — without having to beat them over the head with it.”
The “Their News”
mutation shows how fluid this show can be: it demonstrates the willingness
to alter the format, to allow it to evolve. The staff will try anything
once. If it doesn’t work, they’ll dissect it to see whether they can fix it,
or whether it ought to be ditched. If it flies, they’ll keep refining it
through trial, error and improvisation. Baker says ABC’s corporate culture
encourages that strategy. “They’re not trying to make it fit a mold. They’re
saying, ‘Go make a good show.’” The show they’ve made is so good that its
competitors have started imitating it. CBS’s Up To The Minute now
regularly rifles its network tape library for historical perspectives on
current events.
Every newscast has
a “kicker,” some lame attempt at humor stuck in on Fridays or at the end of
the rundown. Something gigglesome is supposed to make viewers feel better
about the onslaught of degradation and misery that’s just bombarded them.
They avoid that kind of goofball nyuk-mongering at World News Now. The
newscast boasts two regular contributors whose work lampoons current events
and some of the conventions of punditry — it’s humor with a brain. Ian
Shoales is a high-speed hyperpundit, rattling off his opinions with a
poisonously hilarious combination of sneering contempt and amphetamine
intensity. The shtick works on two levels, making fun of the topic at hand
while skewering the pomposity of professional opinion-fabricators.
Barry Mitchell
plays the accordion and sings his own musical satire of current events. His
comic strategy is no less pointed for its apparent whimsy. When former
Kennedy administration Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara published his
book last spring announcing — 30 years too late — that the Vietnam War had
been a colossal blunder animated by hubris and delusion, Mitchell offered a
cutting, cunning song called “McNamara’s War” to the tune of “Macnamara’s
Band.” It was a lot funnier and more thought-provoking than the chorus of
pundits yipping “whither America?” on cue elsewhere. Every Friday, Mitchell
performs the program’s self-mocking “World News Now Polka,” a very different
theme from the bombastic, urgent anthems usually heard when a newscast’s
credits roll. And recently, Simpsons voice specialist and
free-floating wise-ass Harry Shearer has been added to the weird roster.
As its half-hour
wheel continues to turn, World News Now scans the front pages of the
next day’s papers and leafs through that week’s forthcoming magazines before
they hit the newsstands. There’s a daily look at business across the Pacific
Rim through a satellite hook-up to Japan’s NHK network. Nightline
guests often stick around after talking to Ted Koppel to knock off a
double-ender with Assuras or Newman.
Even the regular
boilerplate parts of any newscast are different at WNN. Sports scores
scroll past while an offbeat sports story runs in the main part of the
screen. The weather map is succeeded by a video essay with music (everything
from Steely Dan to John Philip Sousa), consisting of beautiful pictures and
predicted temperatures for cities. Some of those local predictions are red
herrings: “Anytown, USA... weather — mild.”
Finally, there’s
the World News Now National Temperature Index. At the end of the
weather forecast, a number appears over a map of the lower 48 states. In the
winter, it’s around 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Summers, it can get up to 700
degrees and change. It’s all very authoritative. But nobody outside a select
few World News Now staffers knows what it means. What the hell is the
World News Now National Temperature Index?
“We needed a number
that could tell you at a glance what the weather’s going to be like,” Victor
Dorff says. “It’s like the Dow-Jones Industrial Index. Are you going to
decide whether or not to buy a particular stock based on the Dow? No. Yet it
gives you an idea of how the market did on a given day. This is the same
thing, only it’s national and it’s a temperature index. We’ve had calls from
the National Weather Service asking about it, phone calls and letters from
meteorologists around the country. We got calls from the Air Force, because
the military meteorologists couldn’t figure out what it was.” Neither can
anybody else, apparently, except Victor Dorff, Terry Baker, Brett Holey and
one or two World News Now staff members. Victor Dorff, a math major
in college, devised the formula for calculating the index, but he won’t
divulge it. It runs daily, carrying the authority of ABC News, even though
it was conceived as a recurring prank.
Everybody who
assembles and presents World News Now says that as with the
Temperature Index, people either “get” the program or they don’t.
“The relationship
with the audience is unique,” says Baker “It’s different from any place I’ve
ever worked on a news program. My feeling is — I don’t think I’m unique in
this — that we’re serving them. If they didn’t exist, we wouldn’t exist. On
the Internet, there’s actually a Usenet group that talks about nothing but
this program. But it was created by the viewers, not by us. They run it,
they operate it. We simply tap into it to get feedback.”
“People are not
stupid,” Assuras says, voicing a sentiment considered heresy in most TV
newsrooms. “When I went to journalism school, we were taught ‘you’re serving
the lowest common denominator.’ Bull. That is not true. People are very
intelligent. They pay a lot of attention to news. They really care how you
treat it. And they can see through a lot.”
Feedback is
encouraged, whether on tape, by telephone, email or snail-mail. A lot of
that reaction gets on the air. That’s how they found accordion-playing
satirist Barry Mitchell. He sent in a tape of himself singing an
appreciation of former anchor Lisa Macree. Dorff and Baker liked it, aired
it, then offered Mitchell a regular opportunity to comment musically on
current events. One viewer sent in a batch of cookies, along with a
videotape of herself baking them. World News Now aired the tape, then
offered to mail the cookie recipe to anyone who requested it. They were
inundated with requests. Viewers in journalism schools love making their own
parodies of the program and mailing them in. World News Now airs
them.
The only other news
program to inspire that mix of loyalty, affection and sense of ownership
aired in the same time slot fifteen years ago. NBC News Overnight,
co-anchored by Linda Ellerbee and a succession of male confederates, was
also launched with low expectations. When Overnight was canceled
after just 19 months, viewers howled. As Ms. Ellerbee is fond of saying,
“And so it goes.”
“There was an
article in The New York Times that called me ‘the Linda Ellerbee of
the ’90s,” Assuras says. “I went, ‘huh?’ I admire her work, but I wasn’t old
enough when it was on to be up that late.”
“We’ll gladly
accept the comparison,” Victor Dorff says. “We’re flattered. But this is a
different show.” He’s right. World News Now has managed to take the
best of Overnight’s sardonic bemusement and refine it further And as of this
spring, World News Now will have lasted more than twice as long. And
maybe World News Now is more desperately needed — and therefore more
appreciated — than Overnight was. The TV landscape’s changed a lot in
15 years. There’s more news, of course, but there’s also more flat-out crap
on TV — the vacant clowns on infomercials, the zombie legions of the
white-trash freak-shows and the babbling cadres of psychic friends. With
that many desperate losers crowding the late-night dial, people have a
greater need for the refuge World News Now offers: an all-night haven
for the smart and the smart-ass; a way station for the weird and the weary,
a place to hunker down in your shirtsleeves with your brain and your
funny-bone and watch the world while you wait for the dawn. That could all
change, of course. Overnight’s cancelation was a shock that came from
network bosses who said ratings didn’t matter, then whizzed it because, they
said, its ratings weren’t good enough. So far, the numbers and viewer
response should ensure a longer, healthier life for World News Now.
The people who make the newscast are smart enough to know how hard to push
the envelope without making their network bosses scared or angry. If
anything, the bosses like the attitude the program fosters; Kevin Newman is
anchoring Good Morning America Sunday these days. But he figures
there aren’t too many elements of World News Now that could fly
during the daytime. His WNN colleagues back him up on that. If WNN
succeeds in making television smarter, in transforming other parts of the
schedule, it will be a long shot. The stakes are so high in daytime TV, that
no one is willing to take chances.
“This program might
get the same audience if it were on at 2:00 p.m.,” Terry Baker says. “But at
two in the after noon, that wouldn’t be a big enough audience to justify
having it there. It wouldn’t be cost-effective at two in the afternoon. The
reality of it is that television is a business.”
“I don’t know if
this kind of program would work at 10 in the morning,” Thalia Assuras says.
“It should. I don’t see why not. Would anybody consider doing it? No.”
“That’s why we’re
here,” Dorff says. “We take the news very seriously. We don’t take ourselves
seriously at all.” |
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