The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

MSNBC surges as home for Trump opponents

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK » For the first month since CNN’s Larry King owned cable news in October 2001, the most popular personalit­y in primetime doesn’t work for Fox News Channel. Rachel Maddow of MSNBC is the new champ.

Her network achieved other milestones in July, including its closest finish to Fox since 2000 and largest margin of victory over CNN ever. The numbers illustrate a surge in popularity at MSNBC, where politics has become prime-time entertainm­ent. Like late-night comic Stephen Colbert can attest, having President Donald Trump as a regular punching bag is great for business.

“I thought there would be a lot of interest in news,” said MSNBC President Phil Griffin. “I had no idea this would happen.”

It’s especially noteworthy because the year after an election traditiona­lly signals a slump in cable news ratings. During prime-time weekday hours in July, Fox News averaged 2.36 million viewers — still more than any other cable network, news or entertainm­ent. MSNBC was at 2.13 million and CNN and 961,000, according to the Nielsen company.

A wider view illustrate­s how things have changed. Earlier this year, Fox routinely had more viewers than MSNBC and CNN combined. Those two networks frequently duke it out for second place; last November CNN averaged 1.83 million viewers to MSNBC’s 1.64 million, Nielsen said. MSNBC took over second earlier this year and the gap continues to widen.

MSNBC’s Maddow, Chris Hayes and Lawrence O’Donnell follow Trump with a critical eye each evening. The rapid pace of new developmen­ts, often aided by the fierce competitio­n for scoops between The New York Times, Washington Post and other outlets, gives MSNBC a fresh helping of outrage every night for Trump critics eager to lap it up.

“They’re not interested in someone looking to be impartial,” said Rick Kaplan, former president of both MSNBC and CNN. “They want the same kind of red meat that a lot of conservati­ves wanted from Fox 10 years ago.”

Griffin believes a key to MSNBC’s success is that its hosts aren’t just spouting talking points, that their programs contain solid reporting. Maddow’s ability to make connection­s and tell stories is beloved by fans who want to get absorbed by the issues, even if they can be frustratin­gly slow for the non-believers.

“People want depth,” he said. “This is a complicate­d time.”

CNN believes that MSNBC’s success doesn’t come at its expense. The network is on pace to have its secondhigh­est prime-time viewership since 2008 and best ever in full-day ratings, Nielsen said. CNN also is comfortabl­y profitable, with more advertisin­g revenue at this point in the year than ever before, the network said.

Essentiall­y, MSNBC’s surge is fueled by newbies, people who weren’t regular cable news viewers. So the question remains of why these people are primarily going to MSNBC instead of CNN.

CNN’s prime-time is panel-based, with a stream of people talking about the news. Unlike MSNBC, CNN regularly includes Trump supporters in the mix and some of those — think Jeffrey Lord — infuriate the president’s opponents.

 ?? CHUCK BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Friday file photo, MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow speaks during a Democratic presidenti­al candidate forum at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C.
CHUCK BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Friday file photo, MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow speaks during a Democratic presidenti­al candidate forum at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C.

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