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I can name the moment when the relationship between NBC and Olbermann started to unravel. It was the summer of 2008. MSNBC thought it would be a great idea to have KO and Chris Matthews co-anchor MSNBC's convention coverage. But as I wrote on Aug. 28, 2008, once the live cameras started to roll two things became clear: One, it was hard to adjust to KO sitting in the Tom Brokaw chair, trying to be objective and all; and two, Olbermann and Matthews should never, ever, EVER work that closely together again.
The arrangement came under attack from the Bush White House and the McCain-Palin campaign. Not long after that, management changed its mind and announced that, on election night, Olbermann and Matthews would be shunted to the side and David Gregory put in the middle.
Olbermann gave an interview to the Times complaining that Fox News had Brit Hume at the center of its panel coverage, despite his conservative biases; why was MSNBC being singled out? The argument fell on deaf ears, including mine.
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To this day, NBC still does not know what to do with MSNBC. On the one hand, it enjoys making money with a prime-time lineup of liberals and progressives. On the other hand, it likes the corporate synergy of having CNBC's Dylan Ratigan and NBC White House reporters Chuck Todd and Savannah Guthrie and diplomacy queen Andrea Mitchell all anchoring daytime shows on MSNBC.
Had NBC management simply said to MSNBC, "After 6 o'clock at night, we don't care what you do. We're going home. Clean up when you're done," I doubt KO would be gone today. But the network was too nervous about tarnishing the NBC brand, and as a result it has lost its biggest cable star.
Read more:
http://www.kansascity.com/2011/01/24/2605712_nbc-blew-it-letting-olbermann.html?storylink=omni_popular#ixzz1ByrfnC2q