| BREAKING THE MOLD
Katie Couric’s move to CBS is a milestone
by Deborah Potter
The buzz about Katie Couric becoming the next anchor of the "CBS
Evening News" was so loud, and at times so nasty, you'd have
thought something important was at stake. It was.
Couric is making history, and it's about time. Half a century since
network news became an institution, we'll finally have a woman as
solo anchor of a nightly network newscast — a powerful, public
position that speaks volumes about gender equality. When she takes
over in September, Couric will be on an equal footing with two solo
male anchors at the other networks, now that ABC has replaced Elizabeth
Vargas with Charles Gibson.
Couric's success, if she does succeed, will be due in part to those
women who paid their dues for decades, including Barbara Walters,
who coanchored at ABC in the 1970s, and Connie Chung, who shared
the anchor desk at CBS a decade ago. Both were basically set up
to fail by being teamed with established male anchors — Walters
with Harry Reasoner and Chung with Dan Rather — who visibly
resented their presence.
Couric won't have that problem. And she's bound to get a better
reception than Lesley Stahl did in 1974 when she got the chance
to be CBS' first woman coanchor on election night. In her book,
"Reporting Live," Stahl remembers visiting the set before
the broadcast and noticing that each chair had a name card. Cronkite.
Rather. Mudd. Wallace. And then there was the card for her chair,
which read simply, "Female."
With a five-year contract, a multimillion dollar salary and the
title of managing editor, Couric will be in a strong position to
reshape the "Evening News," which is exactly what the
network wants. CBS President Les Moonves said he wasn't looking
for a "voice of God" anchor, and by golly, he didn't hire
one. The newscast has been dead last in the ratings for more than
10 years, but it's shown some life under interim anchor Bob Schieffer.
Couric's new bosses are counting on her to build a bigger audience
that includes more women and younger viewers.
The reason, simply put, is money. Advertisers covet younger viewers
because they spend more. With Couric at the helm, NBC's "Today"
had the youngest audience of the three morning news programs. At
49, Couric is 20 years younger than Schieffer, and while she may
not appeal to Gen-Xers who rarely watch network news, she could
bring back younger baby boomers and lower the average age of the
evening news audience, which now hovers around 60.
Advertisers also pay more to reach women because they make most
decisions about what to buy. But will women watch other women deliver
the news? They certainly do on the local news. According to research
by the Radio-Television News Directors Association, women now hold
57 percent of all TV anchor positions. Stations like ABC affiliate
WPBF in Palm Beach, Florida, where three women anchor the main nightly
newscasts, have seen their ratings climb.
Couric's biggest challenge will be making a smooth transition from
morning television, with its cooking segments, celebrity interviews
and silly chitchat, to the more sober evening newscast. Can she
do it? Why not? Tom Brokaw did. When he took over NBC's "Nightly
News" in 1983, some critics thought he was a good-looking lightweight.
Never mind that he'd been a White House correspondent, he just didn't
seem seasoned enough. He lacked, well, gravitas. Sound familiar?
Couric covered the Pentagon before moving to "Today,"
where she's interviewed politicians and world leaders with intelligence
and skill. She is not, as one letter-writer sniped to New York's
Daily News, merely "gifted at applying hair spray."
Yes, she's easy to look at. So is NBC's Brian Williams. Does anyone
really think he's anchoring the nightly news only because of his
journalistic skill? To succeed, a TV anchor has to connect with
viewers on a personal level. Couric has that part of the job down
pat, and it's not a "girl thing." Remember good old "avuncular"
Walter Cronkite? Viewers liked Uncle Walter as a news anchor; he
had substance, but he also had warmth. Few remembered that he once
cohosted the "CBS Morning Show" with a puppet named Charlemagne.
Couric's comfort level with live television makes her a good fit
for the question-and-answer format Schieffer has adopted. Her years
of experience on a feature-oriented program won't be wasted on an
evening newscast that already spends more time on longer explainers
than on headline summaries.
But her impact won't be confined to a half-hour on television.
What Couric does online may be even more important to the future
of network news. That's where CBS really hopes to lure a younger
audience, and where Couric's personal appeal could pay off first.
She's expected to have a daily presence on cbsnews.com,
although the precise form and content haven't been decided. She
may not fit the model of news anchors past — imagine Dan Rather
blogging — and that could be one of the best possible reasons
to give her the job.
This article was originally published
in American Journalism Review, June/July 2006
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