Sunday, 6 December 2009
"The Oprah Winfrey Show" in two years creates room for a new queen
0 comments Posted by Mahfuz at 21:47The Oprah Winfrey Show

The announced shutdown of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" in two years creates room for a new queen (or king) of daytime television.
Until that day when Winfrey's 7 million or so daily viewers start looking for something else to do, preparing to claim that audience will be one of the biggest competitions in television.
"You haven't had a time period like this open up in 25 years," said Larry Gerbrandt, an analyst for the firm Media Valuation Partners in Los Angeles. "It really gives the players a chance to reshuffle the deck."
Nowhere now in daytime television is there a show with the breadth of Winfrey's, which can feature an interview with singer Whitney Houston about her drug use one day, or Sarah Palin about a contentious campaign the next. She can do a serious hour about domestic abuse, bring Tom Cruise on to jump on her sofa, host a party with the Black Eyed Peas or give away cars to everyone in her audience.
The two shows closest to Winfrey's in the ratings are hosted by her protégés, Dr. Phil and Dr. Oz. Yet "Dr. Phil" has been around a while and the ratings indicate viewers are starting to tire of his form of tough love.
"Dr. Oz" was a breakout hit as a newcomer this fall, but its appeal as a health-oriented show is limited. Winfrey only had him as an occasional guest, and there are questions about how many people want to see him every day.
Both, however, will have restrictions removed from their contracts that prevented their shows from airing at 4 p.m. each day — Winfrey's preferred time slot and generally considered the key time in daytime TV because more people are available to watch, said Bill Carroll, an expert in the syndication market for Katz Television. Winfrey has a financial stake in both shows, so if their audiences increase because she leaves, guess who benefits? Strictly from a business standpoint, then, it seems odd that Winfrey has given signals that appear to be anointing DeGeneres as her chosen successor at the top of the heap. They've traded appearances on each other's shows recently and guess who's posing next to Winfrey on the latest cover of "O, The Magazine"? "Ellen is probably in the best position to move into that role," daytime TV host Jerry Springer said. DeGeneres' breezy show is primarily entertainment-oriented and less varied in topic than Winfrey's. But it has a greater potential to be broader than many of its rivals, and her profile should only increase with her upcoming role on "American Idol." "Guests won't be afraid to go on Ellen," Springer said. "Any edge she might have is neutralized by her humor. She can be light yet she's obviously very bright. If you're looking to sell something, like a book or a political idea, you're not going to get beaten up by going on her show." Television stations that have been reluctant to air DeGeneres' show at 4 p.m. for fear of competing with Winfrey would be much more willing with that roadblock gone, and her syndicators will be pushing to put her in that slot. For all the promising signs for DeGeneres, her show still doesn't have as large an audience as "Dr. Phil" and "Dr. Oz." And she should be wary of another formidable competitor: "Judge Judy." The courtroom program isn't a talk show but is strong in the ratings in the late afternoon. There's no guarantee that Winfrey's old viewers will gravitate toward a talk show, or television at all. Daytime TV ratings have been sinking steadily over the years with more women in the work force, and Winfrey's exit could accelerate the decline. Other competitors are Rachael Ray, an appealing personality whose show now takes a lot of morning slots, and Tyra Banks, who appeals to younger viewers. Meanwhile, a Winfrey protégé, makeover artist Nate Berkus, is readying his own show but there are questions about how limited his appeal would be. "I'm sure there are people on the phone to their agents saying, 'Get me a meeting, I'm the next Oprah,'" Carroll said. "I would advise them to look up (failed daytime host) Jane Pauley's phone number. Wanting to be that and doing that are two different things."
Oprah Winfrey is not going to host her own talk show on Oprah Winfrey Network
0 comments Posted by Mahfuz at 21:35Oprah Winfrey

New York: Oprah Winfrey is not going to host her own talk show on Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN), her new cable network launching in 2011.
Winfrey announced last month she's leaving Oprah in September 2011 to focus on OWN, which will launch in January of that year.
However, the network's CEO, Christina Norman has denied reports that the talk show queen would be launching her own new show.
"Her show, as you know it, is not coming to OWN," the New York Post quoted Norman as telling USA Today.
"She's going to have a significant presence on this network," but won't be doing a cable version of Oprah.
"Pieces of that show, we're going to want to find ways to retain; but I don't think the format exists in anyone's mind right now," she added.
The new network has announced only a few shows hosted by Oprah-regular Lisa Ling, sex therapist Laura Berman, Winfrey's pal Gayle King and professional organiser Peter Walsh (Clean Sweep), who's also an Oprah regular.
Winfrey herself will narrate a profile series called Master Class.
Thursday, 3 December 2009

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Oprah Winfrey's new cable network will feature the media queen in a big way, but fans should not expect her to reprise the talk show that made her famous over the past 25 years, said the CEO of Discovery Communications Inc.
Winfrey will end her reigning daytime broadcast TV talk show in September 2011, and focus on her new Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN), which is 50 percent owned by Discovery.
"That's chapter one. That chapter is ending," Discovery Chief Executive David Zaslav said at the Reuters Global Media Summit in New York on Wednesday. "She will not be doing that show."
Zaslav said Winfrey is already spending significant time on the network and is involved in "all the creative decisions."
He said OWN will feature her in many ways following its launch in 2011, though he did not say what those would be. Initially, the network will be available in at least 80 million homes.
"She'll be on in a meaningful way, with different types of shows, with different types of voices, with a lot of different creativity, but all of it will be different from her show and it will be what she wants to do," he said.
Discovery stands to be perhaps the biggest beneficiary of Winfrey's announcement last month that she plans to pull the plug on her popular TV show.
Walt Disney Co's ABC, which currently carries her show, has not decided how to replace her.
"It's a big win for the cable industry and for us that Oprah will, after September 2011, be available primarily on OWN," Zaslav said. "OWN will really feel the strength of her creativity and presence."
Discovery Communications already owns some of the most popular networks on cable TV, including the flagship Discovery Channel, with hits like "MythBusters" and "Shark Week." In all, Discovery runs over 100 networks in 170 countries.
Saturday, 21 November 2009
Oprah Winfey in tears during her announcement. She is quiting with The Oprah Winfrey Show in 2011. She makes the show then 25 years, this video belongs to TMZ and Harpo