Cox is—was—the National Correspondent for Air America, and the host of its weekly show “The Inside Story.” Most famous for being the founding editor of the blog Wonkette, Cox went on to cover the 2008 campaign for Time at its “Swampland” blog and the now-defunct Radar magazine. She remains a contributing editor to Playboy, itself in possibly bad financial shape, hosts a regular live-chat with Tucker Carlson at the Washington Post, and occasionally contributes to The Daily Beast. So what’s she going to do now?
She’s already familiar to their audience, since she appears regularly—and ably—on the Rachel Maddow Show. She’s funny. And there’s a paucity of anything resembling political comedy between the end of the Colbert Report at midnight and the beginning of Fox News’ Red Eye at 3 AM.
Right now, MSNBC is running third re-runs of their prime time shows in the late night time slots. Presumably if they were inclined to add more original programming, they’d start with the 10 and 11 PM. A new show is expensive: one needs to pay the on-air talent and the staff. A comedy show requires writers. Nevertheless, Fox News’ Red Eye seems to be produced on a relative shoestring, and garnered on average over 400,000 viewers last September, despite airing at 3 AM. Granted, Fox has a larger, more rabid fan base than the other cable news channels, but Red Eye in the middle of the night has bigger numbers than the other cable nets’ morning shows, which start three hours later. Sometimes, it gets better ratings than CNN at 8 PM.
What would a show hosted by Ana Marie Cox look like? Well, she’d have to move to New York from Washington, D.
NBC just rid itself of its most talented late-night comedian. In giving Cox a show, its younger cable sibling could start to bring NBC Universal’s karmic ledger closer to the black.
Nick Rizzo is a political consultant and writer. He lives in Brooklyn. You can follow him at www.twitter.com/nickrizzo.