At ABC, though, there was turmoil. After Jennings stepped down in April 2005, and then after his death in August of that year, there
Why must a discussion of Gibson’s tenure always begin with that wobbly start? Because of what came after it: Stability. Charlie Gibson in that anchor chair was a steady, dependable rock — exactly what was needed at World News after such a rough ride, and really the only thing that could have kept things on an even keel in the 6:30 p.m. hour. Then, steadily and surely, he started gaining on NBC.
The evening news glare had turned to Katie Couric taking over at CBS in September 2006, and that upheaval over there represented a chance for Gibson and his team to entrench and slowly gain. Which is exactly what they did, creeping up against then-leader NBC and giving Williams & Co. a real run for their money, tussling for first throughout 2007 and ending that year neck and
Gibson has shown that slow and steadiness throughout his tenure — and now that he’s going, we realize that that is what is going with him. Eric Deggans today called him “the last old-school TV anchorman,” and while I’m not quite sure that’s correct — whatever his extracurriculars, Brian Williams is still very rooted in that tradition, and I think Diane Sawyer is as well (and also let’s not forget that Brokaw started at the Today show, too) — Gibson is the last one who seems to have just been an anchorman. He didn’t blog. He rarely gave interviews. He didn’t do the late-show circuit. He wasn’t interested in doing anything extra, unless that ‘extra’ meant, say, moderating a primary debate.
Deggans seems to think that’s a good thing, rather unkindly calling Williams a “frustrated stand up comic and calling Couric a “fixture” in “tabloid news or the online world” which makes the first sound like her fault and the second sound like it’s just as tawdry. I have written in the past that I thought Gibson could have and should have engaged with his audience more, and in the hindsight looking back on this decade it’s hard to argue that limiting
That seemed to be the theme tonight as his final episode drew to a close, and a video rolled with well-wishes from a whole host of characters from people who he’d interviewed, famous people who would miss him at 6:30, from his competitors Williams and Couric, from President Barack Obama, and, oddly, from a few muppets and Kermit The Frog in a nod to silliness that Gibson rarely allowed himself. And then the camera pulled back to show Gibson surrounded by his staffers applauding. Gibson beamed, turned to face them, clapped back to them, beamed some more, shuffled the papers on his desk, and looked down, acknowledging but not grandstanding, because the broadcast was over and that was how he did his job.
And then it was over, and there was a commercial for Diane Sawyer, leading ABC World News on Monday, because the news doesn’t wait and that’s how it goes. And it will probably be a seamless transition, and Sawyer will lead the broadcast into yet another new era, into the next century with its whole new set of rules.
But looking back, there’s no way she — or any of them — could have done it without Gibson, steady and calm at the center, an anchor in the true sense of the word.
Charlie Gibson leaves ABC News today as the last old school network TV anchorman [The Feed]
Charlie Gibson’s “
Four Little Words That Can Return Charlie Gibson To Ratings Victory [ETP]