MSNBC needs a boost in primetime. Keith Olbermann is
out of a job after his contract expired at ESPN. It is being reported
that NBC News President Andrew Lack might be interested in bringing
Olbermann back to MSNBC.
An article in The Wrap on the changes that NBC News President Andrew Lack is making contained an interesting nugget:
Aside from Turness, Lack might be indirectly trying to resurrect another career-in MSNBC primetime. Although there has been no confirmation of direct talks between Keith Olbermann and Lack about a possible return, it’s not out of the question.“Phil isn’t talking to him, but someone else might be,” the insider told TheWrap, pointing out that like in many tense negotiations, a middleman not directly part of NBC News-MSNBC’s chain of command could be putting out feelers to Olbermann.The bad blood between Griffin and Olbermann, which dates back to his messy exit in 2011, might still cast clouds over a possible return. But it’s certainly not be a deal breaker.
“Phil might say over my dead body, but Andy doesn’t have those issues,” the insider said.
An Olbermann return would require that MSNBC boss
Phil Griffin be shown the door. Frankly, it is impossible to see
Olbermann ever returning to the network if Griffin is still around, but
there are roughly a thousand reasons for Griffin to be fired. The chief
among them being the fact that he has managed to take a profitable and
growing cable network and turn it into a raging tire fire.
MSNBC is a mess, and Phil Griffin is the reason the
network is in such bad shape. Griffin and his team have made a series of
horrible decisions that have pushed MSNBC’s audience away. A reunion of
the Olbermann/Maddow block would push MSNBC ahead of CNN in the
ratings. MSNBC viewers would quickly forgive the network for replacing
Ed Schultz with Chuck Todd at 5 PM if the network brought back Keith
Olbermann at 8 PM.
There are not many top notch broadcasters who could
come in and fix MSNBC primetime. Olbermann would be a quick fix for two
of the biggest problems at the network. MSNBC needs to undo the Chris
Hayes disaster and find another star to pair with Maddow. Olbermann
would solve both of these problems.
The
odds that Olbermann returns as long as the current leadership regime is
in place at MSNBC are long, but the fact that NBC News would consider
it suggests that the door is open for the return of the biggest star in
MSNBC history.
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