CBS chief calls Rather comments ‘sexist’
Former anchor said Couric broadcast was dumbed down and tarted up
![]() Matt Sayles / AP | CBS President and Chief Executive Officer Leslie Moonves said of ‘Evening News’ anchor Katie Couric: ‘She’s been on the air for nine months. Let’s give her a break.’ |
NEW YORK - CBS Corp. Chief Executive Leslie Moonves shot back at former CBS news anchor Dan Rather on Tuesday, saying his characterization of the network “tarting” up its newscast with anchor Katie Couric was “sexist.”
Rather, speaking by phone on MSNBC’s “
While referring to his successor, Couric, as a “nice person,” Rather said “the mistake was to try to bring the ‘Today’ show ethos to the ‘Evening News,’ and to dumb it down, tart it up in hopes of attracting a younger audience.”
MSNBC.com is a joint venture between NBC Universal and Microsoft.
Moonves, asked about the remarks at an appearance in New York sponsored by the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University, called the remarks “sexist” and said he was surprised at the amount of negative coverage Couric was receiving. Couric, the first solo female news anchor, has been struggling in the ratings.
“She’s been on the air for nine months,” Moonves said. “Let’s give her a break.”
Couric started strong but has settled into a distant third in the evening news ratings race. Last month her “CBS Evening News” set a record for its least-watched broadcast for at least two decades, then broke it the very next week.
Rather left as “
Moonves said he “absolutely” had confidence in Couric and the direction that CBS’s evening was going, saying it was imperative to reach younger audiences. Evening news broadcasts couldn’t continue to have audiences that are mainly over 60, Moonves said, otherwise “the evening news will die.”
Meanwhile, Moonves said the network’s decision last week to reinstate the canceled show “
“It was a campaign that couldn’t be ignored,” Moonves said of the mobilization of “Jericho” fans, saying it was “astonishing and well-organized.”
As part of the campaign, disgruntled viewers delivered thousands of pounds of peanuts to CBS’s corporate offices, a reference to a scene in the season finale where a character replies, “Nuts!” to a demand that the town in Kansas, which had been isolated by a nuclear attack, surrender.
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