The funny part is he gets to be Conan's boss a second time (since tbs is in
the Time Warner stable)

-----Original Message-----
From: wnndl@googlegroups.com [mailto:wnndl@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
danny burstein
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2012 9:18 PM
To: wnn
Subject: [misc] Former NBC Prez Jeff Zucker expected to lead CNN (fwd)

>Newsgroups: rec.arts.tv
>Subject: Former NBC Prez Jeff Zucker expected to lead CNN

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/jeff-zucker-cnn-nearing-deal-394800

Jeff Zucker Nearing Deal to Run CNN (Report) by Kimberly Nordyke , Alex Ben
Block

CNN is close to a deal with former NBCUniversal CEO Jeff Zucker to take over
the reins of the struggling network, the New York Times reported.

Zucker, who currently executive produces Katie Couric's new daytime talk
show, would replace Jim Walton, who announced his decision to step down from
his longtime post as president of CNN Worldwide in July. Walton officially
will depart the Time Warner-owned company when his contract expires at
year's end.

Several sources close to Zucker told the Times that an announcement is
expected soon. However, the report cautioned that a deal could still fall
apart.

Other potential candidates for the job had reportedly included Mark Shapiro,
former CEO of Dick Clark Productions. Zucker and Shapiro also had been
reported as possible candidates for the CEO post at the beleaguered Tribune
Co. earlier this year.

CNN declined comment.

Zucker has a news background but has been out of the game for a while.
He first joined NBC as a researcher in 1986 but quickly rose up the ranks to
become the youngest executive producer of Today in 1992, when he was 26.
During his tenure, Today enjoyed a solid lead as TV's most-watched morning
show.

Eight years later, Zucker was named president of NBC Entertainment and
continued to add responsibilities before being named president and CEO of
NBCUniversal in 2007.

While overseeing NBC, he played a key role in the network's negotiations
with the Friends cast for a 10th season and signing Donald Trump for The
Apprentice, which became a breakout hit.

But his tenure also was marked by some disappointments, including the Jay
Leno-Conan O'Brien Tonight Show debacle and NBC's losing its No. 1 ranking,
dropping to fourth place. Zucker left the company in early 2011, following
its sale to Comcast, and later reteamed with his former Today co-host Couric
to launch her new daytime talk show.
Zucker spent more than a year leading up to the launch of Katie, helping set
it up with a distributor and working on the launch. Once it was sold to ABC
and on the air in September, he became executive producer, overseeing the
operation.

Zucker did not have the usual deal of an executive producer. He was a
partner in the venture with Couric and was in line to split the $20 million
ABC reportedly committed to pay them for the show.

Katie has not been a huge breakout hit in the way The Oprah Winfrey Show
once was, or Judge Judy is currently, but her show has been the best
performing of the five major syndicated talk shows that started this season.
She has remained the No. 1 new talk show among newcomers including Steve
Harvey and Ricki Lake for all of her first eight weeks on the air.

After seeing Katie's ratings go up and down, they have stabilized recently,
and she hit some seasonal highs in October.

The season-to-date average for the show is a 1.9 rating in total households
(an average of 2.4 million viewers a day). In the key demographic group who
advertisers pay to reach on daytime TV, women
25-54 years old, Katie has averaged a 1.1 rating (an average of 65,000
viewers a day). That makes it the sixth-highest-rated talk show in
syndication in total viewers and in women 25-54.

Couric, whose show has a two-year commitment from ABC and other stations,
has known for a few months that Zucker might leave earlier than originally
envisioned. A search began more than a month ago for a new executive
producer, but it is unknown what the status is of that quest.

Zucker will probably stay with the show until the end of this year. To
separate, he will have to negotiate his way out of a contract that promised
to pay him a reported $8 million. It is unclear how much he will walk away
with leaving this soon.

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