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ABC
mulling over idea to replace Ted Koppels Nightline
with David Letterman show
By
DAVID BAUDER
Associated Press
NEW YORK
In his first public comments on ABCs effort to replace his
program with David Letterman, Nightline host Ted Koppel
said he hopes to stay with the network but criticized an ABC executive
for questioning the shows relevance.
Nightline
... ought to have a place in televisions expanding universe,
and I am confident that it will. I continue to hope that will be
at ABC, but that decision is beyond our control, Koppel wrote
in a New York Times Op-Ed piece published Tuesday.
ABC and its
corporate parent, the Walt Disney Co., have had discussions with
Letterman, CBS popular late-night host, about switching networks
and taking Koppels 11:35 p.m. time slot. Badly hurt by the
almost complete failure of its prime-time entertainment schedule
this year, ABC is looking to make money any way it can, and some
think an entertainment show appealing to young people would help.
In his Times
piece, Koppel called it perfectly understandable that Disney
would jump at the opportunity to increase earnings by replacing
Nightline with the more profitable David Letterman show.
For many
years now I, along with my employers, have benefited hugely from
Nightlines commercial success, he wrote.
I understand the nature of the bargain that I made.
Koppel also
said, I have to confess to a slightly perverse satisfaction
at the outpouring of warmth and generous support that my Nightline
colleagues and I have received since word of the possible
switch became public.
ABC News denied
a USA Today report Tuesday that George Stephanopoulos and Claire
Shipman have been chosen to replace Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts
as hosts of This Week, the Sunday morning public affairs
talk show.
ABC News President
David Westin called Donaldson Tuesday morning to tell him the report
was false, network spokesman Jeffrey Schneider said.
Koppel didnt
hear from an ABC executive about the talks with Letterman until
late Friday afternoon, when he took a call from Disney president
Robert Iger, said an executive who spoke on condition of anonymity.
In a meeting
with his staff Friday, Koppel angrily dismissed characterizations
of his show as losing relevance, the executive said. And in the
New York Times piece Tuesday, Koppel criticized an unidentified
ABC executive who, he said, was quoted in an earlier Times article
questioning how relevant the show is.
With terrorism
fears at home and U.S. troops in action abroad, the regular
and thoughtful analysis of national and foreign policy is more essential
than ever, Koppel wrote. He said that at times like these
it is, at best, inappropriate and, at worst, malicious to
describe what my colleagues and I are doing as lacking relevance.
Letterman has
been the longtime No. 2 in the ratings behind NBCs Jay Leno
in the late-night comic wars. He has long been unhappy that CBS
older prime-time audience and the weak local news programs on CBS
affiliates dont provide him with a stronger lead-in.
Letterman, mulling the switch to ABC when his contract with CBS
expires this summer, was on an island vacation Monday and unavailable
for comment.
Nightline
began as a regular show in 1980, an outgrowth of ABCs coverage
of the Iranian hostage crisis. Koppel was the original host.
Its ratings
have been sinking the past few years, as they have for most network
shows, but it still regularly outdraws Lettermans Late
Show. ABC executives are concerned that Nightline
doesnt reach the young audience most sought by advertisers,
and that the show appears less special in an era of cable news saturation.
Instead of coming
to the defense of Nightline when news of their discussions
with Letterman leaked last week, top ABC executives said they were
considering scrapping it in favor of an entertainment program even
if Letterman stayed put.
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