Chattanooga Times Free Press

2020 indelible television moments: Trebek, debate bluster and Floyd

- BY LYNN ELBER AND DAVID BAUDER

When the coronaviru­s pushed people out of the world and into homebound isolation, the small screen’s role grew bigger than ever.

Television and its mobile iterations bore witness to a tumultuous year of presidenti­al politics, the pandemic and racial reckoning, including the agonizing scene of a man begging police for his life that galvanized Black Lives Matter protests.

TV hosted a growing number of entertainm­ent choices, as old-guard Netflix and Hulu were joined by new streaming services — ready to receive movies intended for blockbuste­r status but deprived by shuttered theaters.

Most crucially, the medium substitute­d for the connection that was stripped from nearly all but essential workers as offices, stadiums and other gathering spots were left deserted. In their place came TV accounts of the emotional toll paid by those in health care; of economic despair; and the affection for a game-show host. And, for diversion, a sexy thriller and a celebrity confession.

Here are a selection of the defining moments of 2020 from the perspectiv­e of The Associated Press’ media and television writers.

GEORGE FLOYD

It was more than a moment. For nearly eight minutes, Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin knelt on the neck of George Floyd, ignoring pleas for mercy until Floyd’s life slipped away. Brave observer Darnella Frazier, then 17, held up a phone camera so a sickening and infuriatin­g video record of Floyd’s death was preserved. The images led to worldwide protests, for the

first time engaging many people who considered the issue of police misconduct mostly abstract.

HOSPITAL OVERLOAD

Weary nurses and doctors treating coronaviru­s-stricken patients poured out their frustratio­n as hospitals were overwhelme­d by the surging disease and the staggering number of lives that couldn’t be saved. “I’m broken. My colleagues are broken,” a tearful Joey Traywick, an ICU nurse in Billings, Montana, told NBC News. “People say it’s not that big a deal, and I want to take them by the collar and say, ‘You don’t know what you’re talking about.’”

PRESIDENTI­AL DEBATES

“Let me finish,” Democrat Joe Biden said, trying to answer a question early in his first debate with Republican President Donald Trump. We’re still waiting. Trump’s tactic of constantly interrupti­ng his opponent made the debate an unwatchabl­e mess for 73 million viewers, and polls showed it backfired on him. Moderator Chris Wallace had little chance. This raised the stakes for later candidate forums, where NBC’s Savannah Guthrie and Kristen Welker bolstered their reputation­s with sharp, in-control performanc­es.

LINING UP

Soup lines were an indelible part of the early 20th century’s Great Depression. That extreme need was recalled by images of Americans lined up — in cars, to guard against the pandemic — for the food they couldn’t afford to buy in a virus-crashed economy. The startling images were matched by drone shots of jammed roadways leading to drive-thru coronaviru­s testing. A more hopeful image for what’s ahead: conveyer-belt lines of vials to be filled with COVID-19 vaccine.

ALEX TREBEK

The “Jeopardy!” host made no secret of the fight with pancreatic cancer that ultimately claimed his life on Nov. 8. If there was any good to come of it, he inspired others and learned how much he was appreciate­d and loved. January’s “Greatest of All Time” tournament was a fitting tribute to his skill. We’re cheating here — since it was televised late in 2019 — but no one who saw Trebek choke up in reaction to contestant Dhruv Gaur’s “We love you, Alex” message will ever forget the moment.

“HAMILTON”

When Broadway king Lin-Manuel Miranda and his hit musical about founding father Alexander Hamilton debuted on the new Disney+ streaming service before its intended 2021 theater release, it was more than a harbinger for other bigscreen films during the pandemic. It demonstrat­ed how critical streaming platforms are to the fortunes of their parent companies. NBCUnivers­al’s Peacock and WarnerMedi­a’s HBO Max also joined the battle this year for a piece of TV’s future.

KORNACKI AND KING

Between Election Day and the morning, four days later, when most news organizati­ons declared Joe Biden the president-elect, NBC News’ Steve Kornacki and CNN’s John King were baby sitters and human calculator­s for a nation on edge. They stood before video screens crunching numbers as votes trickled in, soothing or creating anxiety. MSNBC couldn’t resist milking it — setting up a “Kornacki cam” to follow him during breaks and trying to turn his khakis into a fashion craze — but these tireless men were indispensa­ble.

ACADEMY AWARDS

February’s Oscars provided the usual spectacle of celebritie­s striking red-carpet poses and exchanging air kisses en route to a packed theater. It turned out be the ordinary made extraordin­ary: The last hurrah before the pandemic banished other awards shows to virtual incarnatio­ns, some as glamorous as a Zoom meeting. If we’d known the movie awards were a final chance for a communal night of unfettered stargazing, would only a record-low 23.6 million of us have tuned in?

“THE UNDOING”

The climax of “The Undoing” on HBO was a classic TV event, a murder mystery that built viewership and interest until the killer’s identity was revealed on Nov. 30. But it’s a reflection of how television is consumed in 2020 that, even now, we won’t say who the murderer was for fear of angering readers. Millions of viewers will see the story resolved on their own time, creating countless individual moments rather than a communal one.

THE SMITHS

Jada Pinkett Smith was ready to address social-media speculatio­n about her former ties to musician August Alsina, and Will Smith was listening. So were viewers of Pinkett Smith’s Facebook Watch series, “Red Table Talk,” becoming witnesses to an intimate exchange at a time of social and emotional distancing. The actors were conciliato­ry toward each other about what occurred during a marital separation, but Will Smith couldn’t resist revising his wife’s descriptio­n. “An entangleme­nt? A relationsh­ip,” he said.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/NOAH BERGER ?? Police use chemical irritants and crowd-control munitions to disperse protesters during a demonstrat­ion in Portland, Ore. Hundreds of people gathered for rallies and marches against police violence and racial injustice in Portland as often violent nightly demonstrat­ions that happened for 100 days after George Floyd was killed.
AP FILE PHOTO/NOAH BERGER Police use chemical irritants and crowd-control munitions to disperse protesters during a demonstrat­ion in Portland, Ore. Hundreds of people gathered for rallies and marches against police violence and racial injustice in Portland as often violent nightly demonstrat­ions that happened for 100 days after George Floyd was killed.
 ?? JEOPARDY! VIA AP ?? Alex Trebek, host of the game show "Jeopardy!" made no secret of the fight with pancreatic cancer that claimed his life Nov. 8. If there was any good to come of it, he inspired others and learned how much he was appreciate­d and loved.
JEOPARDY! VIA AP Alex Trebek, host of the game show "Jeopardy!" made no secret of the fight with pancreatic cancer that claimed his life Nov. 8. If there was any good to come of it, he inspired others and learned how much he was appreciate­d and loved.

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