Lou Dobbs Tonight

Lou Dobbs Tonight
Lou Dobbs Tonight
Ldt.png
Format Opinion/Talk program
Presented by Lou Dobbs
Country of origin United States
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel CNN, later Fox Business Network
Picture format 480i (SDTV),
720p (HDTV)
Original run 1980-2009 (CNN)
2011 – present (FBN)

Lou Dobbs Tonight is an American editorial commentary and discussion program hosted by Lou Dobbs, previously broadcast on CNN and currently on Fox Business Network. The hour-long show aired live on evenings every weekday, and was replayed in the overnight/early morning hours. It covered the major news stories of the day with a focus on politics and economics. Field correspondents provided additional reporting and occasionally served as guest anchors. During Dobbs' tenure, notable politicians and economists were often guests on the show, facing his often pointed questioning.

On November 11, 2009, Dobbs announced that he would be leaving CNN effective immediately.[1] CNN anchor John King serve as his replacement,[2] beginning on March 22, 2010 with his new show John King, USA. Dobbs was eventually hired by Fox Business Network, which re-launched Lou Dobbs Tonight in March 2011.[3]

Contents

History

Lou Dobbs Tonight began with the name Moneyline with the premiere of CNN, and was CNN's main financial show for over 20 years, for a large portion of those years aring on CNN International as well.

In late 1997 Dobbs hired former ABC News and NBC News Executive Producer David Bohrman to turn the program into a more general evening newscast, which would be called "The Moneyline NewsHour." The program was half financially focused, and half general news. It was the first regular program at CNN to have its main control room outside of Atlanta.

As the show moved more towards general news and economic and political commentary, it was renamed Lou Dobbs Moneyline and then Lou Dobbs Tonight. The show was among CNN's most watched.[4]

On November 4, 2006, a taped weekend edition of Lou Dobbs Tonight, entitled Lou Dobbs this Week, began airing. The weekend show, which aired every Saturday and Sunday night, discussed a variety of heated issues from the past week and the week ahead. The weekend show has since been canceled.

On November 11, 2009, Lou Dobbs left the network, telling viewers that the night's episode of Lou Dobbs Tonight was his last and that "some leaders in media, politics and business have been urging me to go beyond the role here at CNN". Although he had a contract with CNN until the end of 2011, CNN agreed to release him early.[5][6]

After his resignation, the show was temporarily replaced by CNN Tonight, a news program hosted by John Roberts and later Erica Hill which featured reports filed by reporters who had filed reports for Lou Dobbs' program. On January 15, 2010, CNN Tonight was displaced by The Situation Room in a scheduling shift as a result of the premiere of Rick's List. John King's new program, John King, USA debuted in Lou Dobbs' timeslot on March 22, 2010.

Timeline

  • 1 June 1980: premiere date of both CNN and Moneyline. The latter was hosted by Lou Dobbs.
  • 7 June 1999: Dobbs leaves CNN and CNNfn to found Space.com.[7] He is succeeded as host of Moneyline by Willow Bay and Stuart Varney.
  • 19 March 2001: Varney leaves Moneyline, leaving Bay as sole host of the program as rumors of a pending return of Dobbs swirl.[8]
  • 14 May 2001: Bay leaves Moneyline as Dobbs returns to the cable network and the anchor desk of the newly-rechristened Lou Dobbs Moneyline.[9][10]
  • 9 June 2003: CNN announces change of program name from Lou Dobbs Moneyline to Lou Dobbs Tonight. [11]
  • November 4, 2006: weekend version of Lou Dobbs Tonight, named Lou Dobbs This Week, debuts.
  • 26 September 2007: program began broadcasting in high definition.
  • 5 November 2007: Lou Dobbs Tonight switched timeslots with The Situation Room's third hour making the latter one single news block starting at 4 PM Eastern. Lou Dobbs Tonight started airing at 7 PM ET.
  • 11 November 2009: Lou Dobbs announces that the night's show is his last, and that he is leaving the network effective immediately. Interim occupants of his timeslot afterward included documentaries, CNN Tonight, and the third hour of The Situation Room.
  • 10 November 2010: Fox Business Network announced that Dobbs will host a show on the channel. [12]
  • 3 March 2011: Fox Business announced that Dobbs' new show on their network will have the same name and time slot as Dobbs' old CNN show. Lou Dobbs Tonight re-launched on March 14, 2011 at 7 PM ET. [13]

Regular features

One regular feature on the show was "Exporting America", in which Dobbs documented the American companies that had outsourced jobs to overseas facilities, as well as those businesses that had taken special steps to keep jobs on U.S. soil. Dobbs had compiled a list of companies that had outsourced that he had posted on the show's website and occasionally repeated on the air. Dobbs frequently criticized U.S. international trade policy as insufficiently protecting American jobs, advocating in favor of what many consider to be economic protectionism in contrast to free trade. As part of his criticism of globalization, Dobbs often noted that the United States is running trade deficits with virtually every major trading partner it has, especially China.

Another regular feature was "Broken Borders", which highlighted what Dobbs considered to be the problems and costs associated with illegal immigrants, and the inefficiencies in the U.S. Border Patrol and immigration policies in general.

Around the middle of the show, a daily poll was opened that was answered on the show's website. Voting for the poll continued until the end of the show, when the results of the poll along with some viewer comments were revealed. These polls were often overwhelming in their margins.

Correspondents and production

Kitty Pilgrim was a correspondent for the program, and the most frequent substitute anchor when Dobbs is not on. Other reporters attached to Lou Dobbs Tonight included Dana Bash, Lisa Sylvester, Bill Tucker, Suzanne Malveaux and Casey Wian. The show was broadcast live from CNN's New York studios, located in the Time Warner Center.

Criticism

Critics of his broadcast, such as the civil rights group Southern Poverty Law Center, allege Lou Dobbs Tonight regularly aired segments featuring, and had as on-air guests, people that the SPLC considers to be involved with white supremacist groups, without the show revealing involvement in such groups.[14][15]

Ratings

Its highest rated show in 2008 was the day after the presidential election - two million viewers. Lou Dobbs Tonight was off by 15 percent between January 26 and February 22, 2009, according to Nielsen Media Research data.[16]

References

  1. ^ Stelter, Brian; Carter, Bill (2009-11-11). "Update: Lou Dobbs to Quit CNN". The New York Times. http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/11/lou-dobbs-to-depart-cnn/?hp. Retrieved 2009-11-11. 
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Fox Business Officially Slates ‘Lou Dobbs Tonight’, TVNewser, 3 March, 2011
  4. ^ Nielsen Media Research, June 2008. http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/original/2Q%20'08%20FINAL%20competitive%20P2%20Adobe%20(2).pdf%20-%20Adobe%20Acrobat%20Professional1.pdf
  5. ^ Lou Dobbs Tonight. Lou Dobbs. CNN. 2009-11-11. Transcript. Retrieved on 2009-11-11.
  6. ^ Bauder, David (2009-11-11). "Lou Dobbs leaving CNN for 'new opportunities'". Associated Press. Yahoo!. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091112/ap_on_en_tv/us_tv_lou_dobbs. Retrieved 2009-11-11. [dead link]
  7. ^ Announcement of Dobbs leaving CNN
  8. ^ Announcement of Varney leaving CNN
  9. ^ Time-Warner announcement of Dobbs' return to CNN
  10. ^ "Brief" ratings article from Medialife Magazine showing new Moneyline moniker
  11. ^ CNN announces Moneyline name change
  12. ^ Lou Dobbs joining Fox Business Network Los Angeles Times November 10, 2010
  13. ^ Lou Dobbs' new Fox Business show gets a start date and a name The Huffington Post March 3, 2011
  14. ^ Heidi Beirich and Mark Potok (Winter 2005). ""Broken Record"". Intelligence Report (Southern Poverty Law Center). http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=589. Retrieved 2008-07-04. 
  15. ^ Eviatar, Daphne (2006-08-26). ""Nightly Nativism"". The Nation (The Nation). http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060828/eviatar. Retrieved 2008-07-04. 
  16. ^ "Show Tracker". The Los Angeles Times. 2009-02-24. http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/showtracker/2009/02/fox-news-and-ms.html. 

External links


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