USA TODAY US Edition

MONEY Pelley proud to be safeguard of CBS News’ hard-news heritage

Old-school anchor hearkens back to days of Murrow, Cronkite

- Roger Yu @RogerYu_

Four dark TV moniNEW YORK tors loom forlornly over the CBS Evening News anchor desk. The monitors, which once played the network’s main competitor­s, ABC, NBC and CNN, juxtaposed against its own programmin­g, aren’t so much abandoned as deliberate­ly ignored.

Turned off permanentl­y, they’ve morphed over the years into defiant symbols of CBS’ singular, old-school approach to covering the news.

“I have never seen competitor­s’ broadcasts,” Scott Pelley, the anchor of the CBS Evening News, said in a recent interview at his studio near Central Park in Manhattan. “My first day here, I had them turned off. What they’re doing has nothing to do with anything I’m trying. I know what I have to do here every day.”

Five years ago this month, CBS News bosses tapped Pelley, 58, to replace Katie Couric, who left amid sluggish ratings and recognitio­n by all parties of their incompatib­ility. The designatio­n of the 60 Minutes correspond­ent — once described by The New York

Times as “one of the blander faces” of the venerable program — was a deliberate pivot back to the Edward R. MurrowWalt­er Cronkite heritage that is celebrated and marketed heavily by the network. That a globe-trotting 60 Min

utes correspond­ent would settle in at the nightly evening anchor desk was a strategic statement that the network planned to hold on to its hard-news-first ethos, says David Rhodes, the news division’s top boss. It was also meant to be a stark point of product differenti­ation in a fragmented market with competitor­s that have no qualms about pursuing rating spikes with jazzier formats, bright graphics, blood-boiling stories and the manufactur­ed drama of dueling analysts.

“We’re taking a different path here, and Scott’s really an expression of that,” says Rhodes, president of CBS News. “Scott certainly has more orientatio­n toward serious news coverage. And I think that’s created a good expectatio­n. People just know we’re going to cover these topics.”

The broccoli journalism approach has been a mixed bag for CBS in the ratings wars. In CBS’ glass-half-full interpreta­tion of Nielsen’s data, the network says Pelley’s show has added 1.4 million viewers since he debuted five years ago in June 2011, a 23% increase that outpaces its rivals.

In an age when network news shows are thought to be losing their eminence, CBS Evening News finished the 2015-16 television season up 2% in viewers — to 7.35 million from 7.23 million — adding the most viewers among the network evening news broadcasts, CBS says.

“Things don’t change overnight in this business, but I like

our trends,” says Steve Capus, executive producer of Pelley’s show. “I’ll take growth at a time of diminished audiences and market saturation. This is an era of commoditiz­ed news, and the quickest way that we’re going to be doomed is if we just kind of offer the same thing.”

Still, the CBS Evening News

with Scott Pelley finished the 2015-16 television season significan­tly trailing both of its primary competitor­s — ABC’s World News Tonight with David Muir and NBC Nightly News with Lester

Holt — despite changes in ABC’s programmin­g and the anchor replacemen­t at NBC in the wake of the Brian Williams debacle.

During the week of May 30, ABC averaged 7.77 million viewers, and NBC had 7.71 million. CBS lagged with 6.53 million.

Pelley never has really beaten his rivals — despite being in his position the longest — on any consistent basis. And CBS also has to contend with some stronger affiliates of rival networks, particular­ly ABC, that provide better “lead-in” numbers, says Andrew Tyndall, a media analyst who closely monitors the three networks’ evening news broadcasts. “Time will tell whether (CBS’s serious-news orientatio­n) works or not,” Tyndall says. “But that has been the case for 15 years now. If their affiliates don’t give them the lead-in, the thing may not work.”

Things didn’t work for Couric, whose arrival in the CBS anchor chair in 2006 was much ballyhooed. She became the first solo female network evening news anchor and had a hefty salary to match the position’s prominence.

Couric’s show was remade to match her reputation as a lively personalit­y — greeting viewers with “Hi, Everyone,” standing up while presenting news, more feature stories, chronicles of the art world and slots for guest commentari­es. While CBS dialed back some of the initial changes, it eventually became evident the show’s format and Couric were an ill-fitting match to viewers’ expectatio­n of the sober, meat-and- potatoes orientatio­n of Cronkite, Dan Rather and Couric’s immediate predecesso­r, Bob Schieffer. Couric left to pursue projects that are more in her “wheelhouse,” as she once told PBS’s Tavis Smiley. She now works as Yahoo’s global news anchor.

Pelley was happy at his job as a correspond­ent for 60 Minutes, cranking out more than 20 stories a year for the TV news magazine. But with his ample street cred thanks to a résumé featuring big-time gigs — chief White House correspond­ent, war correspond­ent, reporter for both 60

Minutes and 60 Minutes II — CBS’s choice of Couric’s successor surprised few.

“Scott is old school,” says Betsy FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016 West, a journalism professor at Columbia University who was former senior vice president at CBS News. “He sees himself as in the CBS tradition — of Morley Safer, Edward Murrow. He’s worked incredibly hard to get to the network, and that’s how he sees himself.”

Pelley recalls seeing Jeff Fager — then executive producer of 60

Minutes — at a bar in late 2010 as they prepared to receive an award at Columbia University. Fager casually told Pelley he was being promoted to chairman of CBS News and that he wanted Pelley to be the new anchor. “Like Jeff Fager often is, it was very brief, startling and strange,” Pelley says. “My breath caught in my throat, and before I had a chance to say anything, he was gone. Anchoring was something I never thought I was going to do.”

The infusion of 60 Minutes sensibilit­ies was immediatel­y clear after Pelley began anchoring in 2011, amid the depth of the recession. CBS attacked the economic story with vigor. And his show was “a real downer,” Tyndall says. “That’s sort of where Pelley sealed his reputation for being a straight, by-the-facts, unsentimen­tal, hard-edged anchor,” Tyndall says.

Fager’s mandate was clear. Make the evening news more like a condensed version of 60 Min

utes. CBS has devoted the fewest hours so far this year covering the Donald Trump campaign vs. the other two networks, according to Tyndall’s data. But it spent more hours than its rivals on domestic policy, foreign policy, the war in Syria, the municipal water scandal in Flint, Mich., and the Zika virus. CBS spent the least amount of time on more viral, videodrive­n fare — crime, weather and transporta­tion accidents.

“I don’t think (Pelley) will probably ever be a household name that Safer and Mike Wallace became,” West says. “But I believe he has establishe­d himself as the face of CBS News.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY ?? Scott Pelley, top center, maintains a hectic schedule, dividing his days between working on 60 Minutes stories and the CBS Evening News. “It’s a 12-hour day,” he says.
PHOTOS BY ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY Scott Pelley, top center, maintains a hectic schedule, dividing his days between working on 60 Minutes stories and the CBS Evening News. “It’s a 12-hour day,” he says.
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 ??  ?? Pelley, managing editor of
CBS Evening News, replaced Katie Couric as anchor in June 2011.
Pelley, managing editor of CBS Evening News, replaced Katie Couric as anchor in June 2011.

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