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MEDIA
MATTERS
MSNBC
pulling plug on Keyes
Host
rejects offer for afternoon timeslot
June 19, 2002
By
Ron Strom
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
Barring
last-minute negotiations, "Alan
Keyes is Making Sense," a primetime cable news show
on MSNBC, will end its five-month run on July 11 after the network
told Keyes his show would be moved to an afternoon timeslot
an option the talk-show host rejected.
Debuting
last January, Keyes' show takes on various cultural and political
issues of the day, and has often focused on the Middle East conflict.
The show currently airs Monday through Thursday at 10 p.m. Eastern
time. Keyes' chief of staff, Mary Parker Lewis, calls the show
"fresh, honest, provocative" analysis.
Both
Bob Angelotti, Keyes' media representative, and Lewis said Keyes
is unwilling to move to an afternoon broadcast time.
"The
afternoon timeslot wasn't acceptable to the mission and message
of Alan's show," he said. "It would not reach our audience.
Primetime hours are the most conducive to getting the message
out."
Angelotti
says ratings "were not an issue" in the proposed move.
"His ratings were very steady," he said.
Lewis
concurred: "His ratings were solid for a new, provocative
show."
A
spokesperson for MSNBC, however, mentioned ratings as a factor
in the decision.
"His
ratings aren't the strongest," she said. "He drew 213,000
Nielsen households in May."
The
chief of media relations at MSNBC was unavailable for comment.
The spokesperson who talked to WND refused to give the newssite
her name.
She
confirmed that Keyes was offered an afternoon timeslot but that
he was "not inclined to take it."
"MSNBC
is working with him to be a regular on another show," the
spokesperson said. Lewis, however, says she's heard nothing about
the possibility of Keyes appearing on another program.
MSNBC
has no official statement as of yet that addresses the future
of "Alan Keyes is Making Sense."
Lewis
believes Keyes' show is an asset to the cable news network, noting
that "We have brought new viewers" to MSNBC.
Angelotti
speculated that the network wanted to group shows featuring conservatives
together, noting that Pat Buchanan's new show begins in mid-July.
As WND reported,
Buchanan and Bill Press will co-host a new debate show on MSNBC
that will air from 2 to 4 p.m.
Keyes'
afternoon show, had he accepted it, would have followed that
program. He said the network did not volunteer to rebroadcast
the Keyes show in the evening, which is common for some cable
news shows.
So,
will Keyes land at another network?
"He
wants to think it through," Angelotti told WND. Once the
current show ends, "he will figure out what he wants to
do."
Keyes
has no plans to shop his show to other networks, Angelotti said,
but added that the host has received calls from others in television
interested in the program. For now, says Angelotti, Keyes will
concentrate on making the final installments of his show the
very best he can.
Keyes'
show has made waves internationally, Angelotti noted.
"He
has emerged as a media superstar in Israel," he said, for
telling the truth about the Middle East and for his "logical,
factual, unbiased approach to the Israel issue."
"We
know for a fact that that bothers people," Angelotti said,
based on complaints from supporters of the Palestinians.
MSNBC
may not have gotten around to issuing a statement about the show
because they're too busy fielding e-mails from Keyes supporters.
A
Jewish website, Mesora,
is promoting an online petition to try to keep Keyes' show on
the air. Signing the petition sends an e-mail to executives of
MSNBC with the following message:
I
urge MSNBC to continue "Alan Keyes is Making Sense"
in the 10 p.m. slot. I protest your succumbing to pressures against
Keyes' stance for truth, and his honest fight against terrorism.
Too many Americans died, and Keyes is defending them, ... but
you favor those who oppose Keyes. This is not American. Keep
him on air, or I will cease watching your programming, and get
others to join me.
Rabbi
Moshe Ben-Chaim, founder of Mesora, says the drive has been active
only for two days, yet over 21,000 people have joined the effort.
The only response he has received from MSNBC is a complaint about
spam. Ben-Chaim told the network that the e-mail drive was not
spam because each message is from an individual; they're not
all from one source.
The
rabbi denounced MSNBC for squelching someone's voice "who
is searching for truth." He was not sure when the petition
drive would end.
"MSNBC
is not concerned with delivering facts," which is what Keyes
does, Ben-Chaim told WND. "That's contrary to what a TV
network should be."
Keyes
is an exclusive WorldNetDaily
columnist, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Social
and Economic Council and a 2000 Republican presidential candidate.
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