Showing posts with label maddow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maddow. Show all posts
10/31/08
The Maddow/Obama Interview
Rachel Maddow is the most intelligent pundit working in television. Period. Here is her interview with Obama. She says he is unflappable, calm, happy, at ease, and he complimented her pants!
9/19/08
Rachel Maddow: Hot!
I don't remember exactly when I saw her first, probably on Countdown. She impressed me. She seemed smart and funny, hip and square, liberal and serious. Can I also call her adorable?
When folks got smart enough to give her a show, I was happy.
Right now, as far as I'm concerned, she is the best thing on television. I hear her ratings are nothing to sneeze at either. Yeah, she's hot!
So, here's to America. If we're smart enough to give Rachel Maddow a show, we should be smart enough to get Barack Obama elected.
This all bodes well.
Carry on.
When folks got smart enough to give her a show, I was happy.
Right now, as far as I'm concerned, she is the best thing on television. I hear her ratings are nothing to sneeze at either. Yeah, she's hot!
So, here's to America. If we're smart enough to give Rachel Maddow a show, we should be smart enough to get Barack Obama elected.
This all bodes well.
Carry on.
8/19/08
Rachel Maddow Gets A Show!
It took a little while, but the smartest woman on TV, Rachel Maddow, just got her own show!
Update: Better picture now (wiki)
Rachel Maddow will replace Dan Abrams as host of the 9PM hour on MSNBC, the New York Times' Bill Carter reports. Just last month in a Times article by Jacques Steinberg, MSNBC president Phil Griffin declared Maddow "at the top" of a "very short list" for those who should have their own show, though at the time he said he "[didn't] know when" that would be. As Carter reports, the final stretch of the 2008 election season will be Maddow's debut as the host of her own MSNBC show:Just in time for the closing rush of the presidential election, MSNBC is shaking up its prime-time programming lineup, removing the long-time host -- and one-time general manager of the network -- Dan Abrams from his 9 p.m. program and replacing him with Rachel Maddow, who has emerged as a favored political commentator for the all-news cable channel.The last broadcast of Abrams' "Verdict" will air Thursday.
The moves, which were confirmed by MSNBC executives Tuesday, are expected to be finalized by Wednesday, with Mr. Abrams's last program on Thursday. After MSNBC's extensive coverage of the two political conventions during the next two weeks, Ms. Maddow will begin her program on Sept. 8.
MSNBC is highlighting the date, 9/8/08, connecting it to the start of the Olympics on 8/8/08, as a way to signal what the network's president, Phil Griffin, said "will be the final leg of the political race this year." He added, "We making that Rachel's debut."
Mr. Abrams, who is well liked at MSNBC, is expected to remain at both that network and at NBC News, where he is the chief legal correspondent. He will also serve as an anchor during some of MSNBC's daytime coverage, as well as a substitute host on NBC's "Today" show, Mr. Griffin said.
Abrams, the network's former General Manager, told the Times that he understood the decision.
"Putting my general manager's hat back on, considering where the network is right now, it is actually the right call," he said.
Almost immediately, Keith Olbermann took to DailyKos to celebrate the news, brag about his involvement in the decision — "Yes, I had something to do with it," he wrote — and remind readers that though Maddow's rise at the network was quick ("less than five months between first paid appearance and own show"), his was quicker ("I believe I still hold the MSNBC record: I came back to guest host for three days in 2003 and 39 days later I had a contract to do the 8 PM show.").
Update: Better picture now (wiki)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)