USA TODAY US Edition

NBC News nearing endgame for embattled Williams

- Rem Rieder @remrieder

The Brian Williams end game is approachin­g.

It’s been four months since NBC News suspended its marquee personalit­y without pay for half a year for exaggerati­ng, not to say fabricatin­g, his reporting exploits. It’s unlikely the network will wait another two months before deciding his fate.

It’s equally unlikely NBC will restore Williams to the anchor throne at NBC Nightly News. His credibilit­y has taken too many — and many severe — hits.

There’s the possibilit­y that Williams returns to NBC in another role. Andrew Lack, the former NBC News head honcho brought back to clean up the mess at the embattled news operation, is fond of Williams. In fact, it was Lack who groomed Williams for stardom.

But it would make more sense for NBC and Williams to part company, with a no doubt lucrative settlement for the highly paid anchor, and with Williams ultimately resurfacin­g with his own show in another venue.

Williams’ departure would pave the way for Lester Holt, who has been doing a fine job since Williams was benched. He’s a consummate pro, all about the news rather than the celebrity shenanigan­s that did in Williams.

Under Holt, NBC has been in a dogfight for supremacy with ABC’s World News Tonight with

David Muir. Last week, ABC led both in the coveted 25-to-54 demographi­c (I know. Who knew network news had one?), where it has consistent­ly had the upper hand recently, and in overall audience. But the race between the two had tightened even before the Williams controvers­y.

Should he get the nod, Holt would become the first African American to serve as solo host of a nightly network newscast.

Andrew Tyndall monitors tele- vision news for a living, chroniclin­g it on the Tyndall Report. It’s his view that moving beyond Williams makes sense for NBC News for a variety of reasons.

“Williams’ celebrity, the size of his contract and the accompanyi­ng promotiona­l efforts to make him the face of NBC News are all throwbacks to a previous generation of television, when the networks truly were mass media and when viewers had many fewer options about where to get their news,” Tyndall says. “The skills that NBC News highlighte­d in Williams were those that made him a likable household name — his gifts as a talk show raconteur, his everyman charm — but also the ones that caused his problems in the first place. In a post-mass-media age, a news organizati­on should promote itself on the basis of its journalism not on the basis of celebrity charm. Williams’ special (and expensive) skills are therefore anachronis­tic.” And that, in Tyndall’s view, is where Holt comes in.

“Lester Holt has demonstrat­ed that the evening newscast is first and foremost a correspond­ent’s medium, not an anchor’s medium,” Tyndall says. “The anchor’s role is to string the newscast’s various component packages together rather than to deliver actual reporting. As such, the anchor’s identity is relatively unimportan­t, so not worth the turmoil of a controvers­ial recall.”

The Williams kerfuffle exploded in February after it came out that the anchor had lied about being in a helicopter that was forced down by enemy fire during the Iraq War. At first there was an illconceiv­ed effort on the part of some of Williams’ supporters to marginaliz­e the issue, as if the fact that the broadcaste­r had made the false claim on The Late Show with David Letterman somehow didn’t count because that wasn’t his day, or evening, job. (Never mind that he later repeated it on the newscast.)

But as more questions emerged about Williams’ braggadoci­o regarding his experience­s in dangerous locales, it became clear to most the damage to his credibilit­y was such it made Williams’ role as anchor untenable.

There’s also the school of thought that all of this is much ado about nothing, that the anchor of the nightly news doesn’t matter because the newscasts are simply an irrelevant relic of a long-past era, honeycombe­d with pharmaceut­ical ads and watched by a diminishin­g pool of old-timers. But it’s important to remember that while they have declined over the years, the newscasts have a combined audience of more than 22 million people, which is not nothing.

It remains important the person at the helm of those relics can be counted on to tell the truth.

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GETTY IMAGES ?? Brian Williams embellishe­d his time in Iraq in 2007.
NBC NEWSWIRE VIA GETTY IMAGES Brian Williams embellishe­d his time in Iraq in 2007.
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