Did anthony mason want to leave cbs this morning

There will be a surprising new face waiting to greet viewers at “CBS This Morning.”

Nate Burleson, the former NFL wide receiver and current CBS Sports football analyst, is joining the program, according to three people familiar with the matter. These people said Burleson is seen as a potential successor to some of the current anchors at the show, and the move will break up the current group of co-anchors: Gayle King, Anthony Mason and Tony Dokoupil. Mason, a veteran CBS News correspondent who has filled many roles, including as interim anchor of “CBS Evening News,” is expected to depart and take on a new role as a cultural correspondent. King, who has been with “CBS This Morning” since 2012 and has stood at the center of the show since it was revamped following the departure of Charlie Rose, has a contract that ends next year.

CBS News declined to make executives available for comment. CBS said Wednesday morning that the company had signed Burleson to a long-term deal that would have him co-anchor “CBS This Morning,” while continuing in his role as an analyst at CBS Sports’ “The NFL Today” while making regular appearances on the company’s sibling kids network, Nickelodeon. Burleson’s role at NFL Network, where he also works, will also expand.

Nate Burleson  Michael Greenberg/CBS

The anchor switch is another big move by CBS News under the management of new senior executives, Neeraj Khemlani, a former Hearst Newspapers executive, and Wendy McMahon, the former head of ABC’s TV stations. People familiar with the news division say Khemlani has been particularly focused on viewership data and the financial details of each news program. Jay Shaylor, who had been the executive producer of “CBS Evening News,” left the company in July as part of the duo’s work to recalibrate the news division.

The addition of Burleson would take the sober-minded morning program further from its roots. As originally conceived, “CBS This Morning” is supposed to provide a hard-news alternative to its main rivals, ABC’s “Good Morning America” and NBC’s “Today,” which rely as heavily on summer concerts, cooking segments and social media round-ups as they do on giving viewers a morning update on all breaking news of import. “CBS This Morning” is expected in the fall to move to a new studio in Times Square that once housed MTV’s “TRL” and can be seen from the windows of the New York set that houses “GMA” just a few blocks away.

Aficionados of the show may already be familiar with Burleson. He helped fill in while co-anchor Tony Dokoupil was on paternity leave, part of a test that had celebrities and others who do not hail from traditional journalism hanging out during the program’s 8 a.m. hour. He has also gained notice in the sports world, where he recently helped lead a unique sports broadcast of an NFL Wild Card Game aimed at the young viewers of Nickelodeon, also part of CBS News’ corporate parent.

CBS appears to be borrowing a page from a more successful rival. Michael Strahan, the former New York Giant and current Fox Sports football analyst, is an integral part of ABC’s “Good Morning America.” The CBS program has consistently lagged its broadcast competitors in the ratings, but gets plaudits for many of King’s interviews and for emphasizing stories about international affairs and business.

Shawna Thomas, who joined “CBS This Morning” as executive producer in January, told Variety in a May interview that “CBS This Morning” wasn’t getting soft. “We have longer, more in-depth pieces” than others, she said. “I am unwilling to sacrifice that kind of storytelling,” because “it is still our differentiator. This isn’t a knock on cooking segments by any means. They have their place. It’s just not necessarily us.”

Read More About:

Home Media CBS News: First it Was Anthony Mason, Now New Chiefs Kick Out...

  • Media
  • Television

First they came for Anthony Mason and removed him from co-hosting CBS This Morning.

Now the new heads of CBS News — Neeraj Khemlani and Wendy McMahon — are continuing to demolish the Tiffany network’s hierarchy.

Last week, Claire Atkinson reported that Khemlani and McMahon have fired CBS News communications-turned-political director Caitlin Conant, CBS News investigative chief Len Tepper, Washington, D.C.-based producer Katie Dominick, and director of professional development Katie Curcio, who ran the news division’s intern program.

(Unfortunately, all the initial outlets which reported this news put it behind pay walls, so no one could access the information. Only media undermines itself. Stupid.)

These aren’t the only people forced out of CBS News in the last few months. In July, Jay Shaylor was ousted as executive producer of Norah O’Donnell’s evening newscast.

All of these people are award winners and tops in the field. And even though O’Donnell’s show is in third place among the network news shows, as is the morning news, they are considered the most “serious” of the three networks still. But that description has been eroding quickly.

Over at the highly thought of “CBS Sunday Morning” and “60 Minutes,” there have been plenty of mistakes in the last year, strange outsidery or uninformed takes on subjects that never would have been allowed in previous news administrations.

Tepper’s ouster is more unusual than the others. For one thing, he was just promoted one year ago to chief of CBS News Investigations. Last week his group produced a series on military domestic violence, a two-year investigative project in which almost 40 survivors were interviewed. But that sounds so serious, maybe too serious for the new ratings hungry CBS News presidents.

Meanwhile, “CBS Mornings,” formerly “CBS This Morning,” is dreadful without Mason’s full time presence. Nate Burleson seems like a nice guy who wandered in from someplace else, reads his script, and nods his head.

Why did Anthony leave CBS This Morning?

Next TV reported that Mason would be stepping away from his anchoring duties on the show in order to make way for former NFL wide receiver turned commentator and TV show host Nate Burleson.

Where is Anthony Mason going after CBS This Morning?

The latest tweak to the morning show will see co-anchor Anthony Mason depart to become a culture correspondent for CBS News, with his seat at the table taken by former NFL player and Good Morning Football and NFL Today analyst Nate Burleson.

Who is taking Anthony Mason's place on CBS?

Nate Burleson To Join 'CBS This Morning' As Co-Host, Anthony Mason To Move To Culture Reporting Role.

What happened to CBS This Morning anchor?

On May 6, 2019, it was announced that Dickerson and O'Donnell would leave CBS This Morning, with Dickerson moving to 60 Minutes and O'Donnell to CBS Evening News. Anthony Mason and Tony Dokoupil were named as successors, and made their debuts on May 20, 2019, alongside King.

Related Posts

Toplist

Latest post

TAGs