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Keith Olbermann Fired? MSNBC Relationship Was 'Failing For A Long Time'

Keith Olbermann Fired

DAVID BAUDER   01/22/11 09:42 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Keith Olbermann's exit from MSNBC appeared abrupt to viewers of his show, but the talk-show host and his network were involved "in a relationship that's been failing for a long time," an NBC Universal executive said Saturday.

Olbermann's announcement at the end of Friday's "Countdown" that it would be his last show quiets, at least for the moment, the most dominant liberal voice in a cable-television world where opinionated talk has been the most bankable trend over the past several years.

As Olbermann read from a James Thurber short story during a three-minute exit statement Friday night, MSNBC simultaneously e-mailed a statement to reporters that the network and host "have ended their contract." Neither indicated a reason nor addressed whether Olbermann quit or was fired.

But the NBC Universal executive characterized it as a mutual parting of the ways, with Olbermann taking the first step. The executive spoke on condition of anonymity because settlement talks were kept confidential.

Olbermann was nearly fired in November but instead was suspended for two days without pay for violating an NBC News policy by donating to three political campaigns, including the congressional campaign of Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. He returned and apologized to his fans, but not the network.

Last fall, Olbermann saw his role on NBC's `Sunday Night Football" eliminated. Olbermann, a former sports anchor, had willingly worked six days a week to be involved with the highly rated football telecast. NBC said he was removed so he could concentrate on his MSNBC job.

MSNBC spokesman Jeremy Gaines insisted Olbermann's exit had nothing to do with the acquisition of parent company NBC Universal by Comcast, which received regulatory approval Tuesday. That deal marks the exit of NBC Universal chief Jeff Zucker, who saw Olbermann's value in turning around a once-unprofitable network, despite headaches the mercurial personality sometimes caused his bosses.

Olbermann and his manager did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Saturday.

One clue Olbermann offered in his goodbye statement was that he'd "been told" that Friday was his last show. But Olbermann also said that "there were many occasions, particularly in the last 2 1/2 years, where all that surrounded the show – but never the show itself – was just too much for me. But your support and loyalty and, if I may use the word, insistence, ultimately required that I keep going. My gratitude to you is boundless."

"He did more than anybody to establish the credibility of progressive views through market-driven success," said David Brock, founder and CEO of the left-wing media watchdog Media Matters for America.

Olbermann's show was also an incubator for left-wing talent on the air, he said. Two-thirds of MSNBC's prime-time lineup, Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O'Donnell, got their own shows after successfully subbing for Olbermann. His show also gave platforms to bloggers like Josh Marshall and Markos Moulitsas, as well as his own organization and the Center for American Progress, Brock said.

"Countdown" took off at a time when there was a large imbalance toward conservatives in radio and television political talk, Brock said.

"Keith led the way in correcting that," he said. "Now we're back to some degree of the balance going the other way."

After Giffords was shot in the head on Jan. 8, Olbermann came into the studio and took to the air on his day off with an emotional editorial saying politicians and talk-show personalities – including himself – need to swear off any kind of violent imagery so as not to incite anybody into acts like the Giffords shooting. He said on Jan. 10 that he was ending his "Worst Person in the World" feature because some viewers took literally a feature that was "born in humor."

The aftermath of the Giffords shooting led to a discussion about the need for more civility in political talk, but Olbermann made no mention of that issue on Friday night. MSNBC is replacing him with O'Donnell and moving anchor Ed Schultz into the 10 p.m. time slot and, along with Maddow, all of them swing left politically.

Phil Griffin, MSNBC's chief executive, expressed confidence in his new lineup Saturday while declining to talk about what happened with Olbermann.

"They're tested," he said. "We didn't have to bring anyone here who is new. We brought in people we know and who will succeed and that's why we're confident going forward."

Anyone who expects the volume of political rhetoric on MSNBC will go down will be "rudely surprised" in about a week, said Brent Bozell, founder of the conservative watchdog Media Research Center.

O'Donnell "is every bit as mean-spirited (as Olbermann), but not as creative," Bozell said. "I don't think the philosophy of MSNBC will change one iota."

While he disagreed with most everything Olbermann said, "he had probably the best-produced show on television," Bozell said. That's the danger for MSNBC and liberals – Olbermann may be replaced by someone who has the same viewpoints, but not necessarily with a show people are as eager to watch.

"I'm not in the slightest bit surprised" by Olbermann's exit, Bozell said. "I've been expecting this to happen for a long time. But I was expecting a more spectacular blow-up."

Olbermann's peripatetic career landed him at MSNBC eight years ago – his second prime-time stint on the network – with a humorous show counting down the day's top stories. That changed on Aug. 30, 2006, when Olbermann aired the first of a series of densely worded and blistering "special comments," this time expressing anger at then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's criticism of opponents to the war in Iraq.

More anti-Bush administration commentary followed. Olbermann dropped any pretense of journalistic objectivity, and he became a hero to liberals battered by the popularity of Fox News Channel and its conservative commentators. Olbermann openly feuded with Fox, often naming personalities like Bill O'Reilly and Glenn Beck "worst persons in the world" for some of their statements.

"Countdown" became MSNBC's most popular show. Instantly, a network that had often floundered in seeking a direction molded itself after Olbermann.

The Cornell graduate first became known for his work on ESPN's "Sportscenter," where he also cultivated a reputation for being talented but difficult to work with. His first MSNBC stint ended in the late 1990s when he quit, complaining his bosses were telling him to talk too much about President Bill Clinton's impeachment scandal.

Olbermann's plans are unclear. He signed a four-year contract with MSNBC two years ago; contract buyouts typically include noncompete clauses that keep a personality off TV for a period of time.

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NEW YORK — Keith Olbermann's exit from MSNBC appeared abrupt to viewers of his show, but the talk-show host and his network were involved "in a relationship that's been failing for a long time,"...
NEW YORK — Keith Olbermann's exit from MSNBC appeared abrupt to viewers of his show, but the talk-show host and his network were involved "in a relationship that's been failing for a long time,"...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
amleth
big fan of humanity - very often disappointed
01:48 PM on 02/02/2011
Everything we hear from NBC regarding its behavior in this incident will be lies.

All of it.
12:00 AM on 02/01/2011
wow... I was unaware....I for one Keith and Rachael....he was a liberal who could articulate his position to the oposition with facts,and give the liberal base a much needed voice....I for one will miss him....
05:43 PM on 01/31/2011
I'm going to miss the biggest fool on TV, I guess I'll have to watch the Ed show to get my laughs, at least I didn't know who would say the most out of touch nonsense any evening now I've only got Ed so it's no contest. I kind of doubt KO will have any takers at any major network, maybe comedy channel.
07:20 PM on 01/29/2011
BOYCOTT COMCAST!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CHARLESTHETENTH
07:48 PM on 01/26/2011
No secret that K.O. was difficult to work with...just ask his staff...don't ask his Boss because in K.O.'s eyes he had no Boss, and that was the problem all along. Took a long time to finally come to a head.Guess you can say he got to big for his britches....got a swell head to boot....His ratings never even came close to B.O. and maybe that could be the reason for his continuous bashing of B.O. ,which was more in self defense than fact. Some may miss the man but just as many won't. His replacement L.O. may have to tone down a bit and that means listening to his Boss, which as the new kid on the block he most certainly will do. Both L.O. and R.M do not seem to be high rating achievers so the Newwork will have to settle for what they get until another B.O. comes their way.
01:37 PM on 01/31/2011
Oh, I don't think Lawrence O'Donnell is going to listen to ANY boss. At least, not to one that he doesn't respect. He went down the list of ALL the people on Keith's show to whom he owes a debt and will miss - and perhaps employ himself. O'Donnell is used to being the boss. He may be more apt to "listen" to advice, but ain't no way he'll let someone "make" him do what he doesn't want to do or agree with. O'Donnell is the equivalent of Olbermann is many ways , but has the extended gravitas of someone who has played inside baseball. AND he takes NO CR** offa anyone.
02:58 AM on 01/25/2011
money money money money
03:34 AM on 01/25/2011
He gives a lot of it away.
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feed the enemy
So drunk with lies he's Mittfaced
01:35 AM on 01/28/2011
Sorry, this was an article about KO, not Beck.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
12:15 AM on 01/25/2011
relationship that's been failing for a long time," an NBC Universal executive said Saturday.
 
Right, because we know the suits never lie.  More evidence of the clue less.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
pinkyboo
03:30 AM on 01/25/2011
Exactly

Plus Keith is not allowed to say anything at this time so we are really only getting one side of the story.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
09:25 PM on 01/25/2011
Convenient for the suits.
08:54 PM on 01/24/2011
Let's put this hype into perspective. The 28th ranked network, MSNBC, has an opinionated entertainer leaving their ranks, period. Not much of an issue from not much of a network. Cut through the smoke and hype and you end up with a media inflated non-event.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
kreichek12
Um, yeah... about that
11:59 AM on 01/25/2011
Oh, I don't know. If it were Glenn Beck or Bill O'Reilly that were forced out, you'd get a similar response from the right.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VirginiaJeff
Waiting for the "Jennifer Government" movie
12:22 AM on 01/28/2011
 
Beats a story about the Kardashians.
07:33 PM on 01/24/2011
Mr.Griffin, you and msnbc should take a bath! You smell like dirty politics.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
12:16 AM on 01/25/2011
Try disinfectant.
06:56 PM on 01/24/2011
Attn.  KEITH OLBERMANN FANS!!!
Keith posted that he will be tweeting exactly at
8PM tonight, Monday Jan. 24, 2011.
Google: twitter+keitholbermann
06:11 PM on 01/24/2011
Sniff. I deleted Keith from my DVR tonight. We still have Rachel, and after the amazing job she did on Bill Maher, I'm ever grateful.
05:28 PM on 01/24/2011
Re Keith: I don't think massive intelligence or high ratings dictates that one can have a huge ego, be rude to co-workers, throw little temper fits, openly show their disdain for their bosses, and be rewarded for it. Rachel Maddow is every bit as intelligent as Keith (if not more so), and proves that one can interview guests with whom she disagrees in a very civil manner. She's not the arrogant, theatrical, theater prone personality that Keith is...but she does have a style I prefer, and I like Cenk very much. I think MSNBC will do just fine without Keith and I'm sure Keith will show up eventually in a format in which he can be his own boss and call all the shots. He needs that freedom apparently.

For those who refuse to watch MSNBC because Keith is gone, that's fine. Those that would NOT watch MSNBC BECAUSE of Keith, are now free to tune in (and that DOES include xx number of liberals and progressives).
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
impatient
02:49 PM on 01/25/2011
Where are you getting this from? I reread the article to see if I had missed something, but there is no mention there of being rude to co-workers, throwing temper fits, etc.. I thought Keith Olbermann was often a lone and excellent voice of reason. As much as I love Rachel Maddow, she has a tendency to get so bogged down in the details of her topic that her work becomes less entertaining and less memorable than Keith Olbermann's equally informative pieces.

So really, give credit where credit is due. We are unlikely to find as excellent a reporter (and I believe he was a reporter far more than a pundit) as Keith Olbermann any time soon.
06:47 PM on 01/25/2011
Google Keith Olbermann+temper or ego. There are so many different reports of his antics. He is very good at what he does, but he's also (according to all the bosses he left behind) a colossal pain in the butt very often. I give him credit, but as I said, I don't think great talent is a license for bad, ego-centric behavior; behavior that other behavior who probably work as hard but aren't as talented, would be fired for.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris Matthews 1
No! Not THAT one!
05:27 PM on 01/24/2011
To those prepared to boycott over this Keith Olbermann/MSNBC issue, I have one question: How does this help us keep our (liberal/progressive) voices in the media? KO is gone for the moment. Boycotting only hurts Rachel Maddow, Ed Shultz, and Lawrence O'Donnell. It will also hurt Chris Hayes, Markos Moulitsas, Cenk Uygur, and Melissa Harris Lacewell(?). We need to keep the voices we have alive. Not watching them will lead to them getting axed as well. Without KO, none of the people I mentioned would be on TV as they are now. Don't let KO's exit/termination/whatever the heck happened impact the imprint he left us. Don't let his work be in vain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kellym33
09:52 PM on 01/24/2011
Ya gotta point!
maxfax
Taa - dah!
12:19 AM on 01/25/2011
Don't boycott, demand a decision reversal, at least of their demand for his tv silence for the next whatever months it is.  They did the same thing to Conan, the suits sure make ignorant decisions at NBC.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris Matthews 1
No! Not THAT one!
11:01 AM on 01/25/2011
It's a standard no-compete clause that's negotiated in every release from a contract. I don't like it, but that's big business for you.
04:36 PM on 01/24/2011
My take on this was that he was tired of the corporate fight...and wanted to leave on a different time line....and they took it away from him....so however this started... he was pushed out at the end.

And will be sorely missed by me and mine.
03:48 PM on 01/24/2011
Mr. Olbermann's show was wonderful. His "Special Comment" segment- glorious. The question to ask is: Why was Comcast allowed to proceed with this merger? Why did a Democratic President, his appointed Commissioners, his Justice Department- approve of this merger? We are in serious trouble in this country, and we need to wake up. De-regulation is gobbling up all of our rights to
speak freely and to receive facts on any given issue. Anti-Trust? Is there such a thing in
this country anymore?
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mynameispaul62
Republicans are out of ideas.
01:16 AM on 01/25/2011
Discontinue your cable service. I did it long ago ... I DO NOT miss it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
impatient
02:56 PM on 01/25/2011
My cable bill is bundled with my phone bill and my internet access. and I suspect the bills are going to increase. But Comcast has 70% of internet cable provider business, so the competitors are going to fall by the wayside......

I knew there was trouble afoot when they started the Xfinity thing to try to squeeze Netflix out. These guys are scary.....