Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Jeff Zucker’s legacy is defined by his promotion of Donald Trump

- Margaret Sullivan Margaret Sullivan is the media columnist for the Washington Post.

Many questions still swirl around Wednesday’s startling announceme­nt that, after nine years, Jeff Zucker’s reign as CNN president was over.

Was his ouster really all about his failure to disclose to his corporate bosses a consensual relationsh­ip with another top network executive? How much of a factor was the continuing mess over former host Chris Cuomo’s firing in December? To what extent were the network’s flagging ratings part of the calculatio­n?

It will all eventually be revealed — teams of reporters are racing to dig into one of the biggest media stories in recent memory. But we already know one thing for certain: When the dust settles, it will be Mr. Zucker’s relationsh­ip with Donald Trump that defines his legacy.

Mr. Zucker, as much as any other person in the world, created and burnished the Trump persona — first as a reality-TV star who morphed into a worldwide celebrity, then as a candidate for president who was given untold amounts of free publicity.

The through line? Nothing nobler than TV ratings, which always were Mr. Zucker’s guiding light, his be-all and end-all, and ultimately his fatal flaw.

Two decades ago, as an NBC executive searching for a way to goose the flounderin­g network’s popularity, he gave the green light to a reality show, “The Apprentice,” featuring a flashy mogul whose soon-to-be-famous tagline was “You’re fired.” Mr. Trump had a checkered history of bankruptci­es, racism and failed real estate projects, but his confident bluster made him a natural on television.

“The show was built as a virtually nonstop advertisem­ent for the Trump empire and lifestyle,” Washington Post journalist­s Marc Fisher and Michael Kranish wrote in their 2016 book, “Trump Revealed.” The rise of Donald Trump had begun.

Mr. Zucker created Trump the TV sensation, which was the necessary foundation for Trump the candidate. Years later, after moving from NBC to CNN, Mr. Zucker recollecte­d very well that Mr. Trump was a self-proclaimed “ratings machine” — a rare instance of Trumpian truth-telling.

CNN infamously took his campaign speeches live, sometimes going so far as to broadcast images of an empty lectern with embarrassi­ng chyrons such as “Breaking News: Standing By for Trump to Speak.” You can’t buy that kind of media.

Mr. Zucker also brought on the air Trump surrogates who should have had no place on a national news network — people like the bully Corey Lewandowsk­i, the sycophant Jeffrey Lord ( who praised Mr. Trump as the Martin Luther King of health care) and Kayleigh McEnany, who later became a White House press secretary bad enough to somehow make one pine for Sean Spicer.

When Mr. Trump became the Republican nominee for president and started trashing Mr. Zucker’s network and staff with endless invective about its “fake news,” it was too late for second thoughts. By then the standard had been set. Every Trump utterance became breaking news, and CNN, like many other news organizati­ons, never figured out how to responsibl­y cover Mr. Trump throughout his democracy-damaging presidency.

Mr. Zucker expressed a modicum of regret in late 2016. “If we made any mistake last year,” he said, “it’s that we probably did put on too many of his campaign rallies in those early months and let them run.”

But he excused his decisionma­king: “You never knew what he would say.” Audiences were riveted, so what could he do?

The same motivation cropped up in 2020, early in the pandemic, when CNN’s prime-time star Chris Cuomo was driving audience numbers via his cozy chats with his older brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. That was an unwise break with the policy that had been in place ever since the younger Cuomo arrived from ABC News: He would not be allowed to cover his politician brother.

But, again, how could Mr. Zucker say no to those ratings?

His ill-advised decisions about Mr. Cuomo and Mr. Trump have only backfired.

Mr. Trump celebrated Wednesday in a predictabl­y nasty statement: “Jeff Zucker, a world-class sleazebag ... has been terminated for numerous reasons, but predominan­tly because CNN has lost its way with viewers and everybody else.”

Mr. Cuomo apparently has knives out too, or at least is keeping all options open, after Mr. Zucker fired him for being too involved in trying to salvage his older brother’s career last year as the governor tried to fend off allegation­s of sexual misconduct. A lawyer for the former host has sent a “hold letter” to CNN, asking network executives to preserve any communicat­ions between CNN and the former governor or members of his staff. “Cuomo’s team is hoping to prove that CNN executives ... knew about the extent of his involvemen­t with his brother’s cleanup effort,” The Washington Post reported Wednesday.

There are kinder ways of looking at Mr. Zucker and his legacy. One CNN host, Alysin Camerota, speaking on air, called him a visionary leader with “this uncanny ability to make, I think, every one of us feel special and valuable in our own way, even though he is managing an internatio­nal news organizati­on of thousands of people.”

And I’ll note that CNN recently has done important work, including specials about the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on and a new “Democracy in Peril” show in the 9 p.m. slot recently occupied by Chris Cuomo.

But why is American democracy in peril? Some portion of the blame — not a tiny portion — belongs to the network executive who couldn’t resist the “ratings machine.”

 ?? ?? CNN President Jeff Zucker
CNN President Jeff Zucker

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