• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

The New Co Anchors of Nightline.

mzkhadir

Diamond Member
ABC NEWS NAMES MARTIN BASHIR, CYNTHIA MCFADDEN, AND TERRY MORAN CO-ANCHORS OF "NIGHTLINE"

NEW FORMAT TO LAUNCH NOVEMBER 28, 2005

Martin Bashir, Cynthia McFadden, and Terry Moran have been named co-anchors of ?Nightline,? ABC News President David Westin announced today. The three will assume anchor duties Monday, November 28, 2005 with Mr. Moran in Washington and Ms. McFadden and Mr. Bashir in New York. Ms. McFadden will continue to anchor and report for ABC News ?Primetime,? where she has had a role since 1996, and Mr. Bashir, who joined ABC in 2004, will continue to report for the news magazine ?20/20.? Expanding its format to multiple news topics each night, ?Nightline? will be produced live from its studios in Washington and ABC?s Times Square Studios in New York. Ted Koppel, who has been anchoring the program since its inception in 1980, departs ABC on November 22nd after 42 years at the network.

?Building on the great legacy of ?Nightline? as we go forward to the next era is both a challenge and an exciting opportunity. Cynthia McFadden, Martin Bashir, and Terry Moran bring the combination of intelligence, experience, and perspective that can ensure that Nightline?s future is every bit as bright as its past,? said Mr. Westin.

?I am delighted and honored to be working with such an accomplished team of journalists,? said ?Nightline? executive producer James Goldston. ?These are three of the most talented journalists working in television. They will bring an incisive and distinctive edge to our journalism in the great tradition of ?Nightline?.? Terry Moran, ABC News? Chief White House Correspondent since 1999, is currently the anchor of ?World News Tonight Sunday.? As White House correspondent, he reports on all aspects of the Bush administration for ABC News platforms and has traveled widely covering President Bush?s domestic and foreign trips. As a key member of the ABC team covering the events of September 11th, Mr. Moran has continued to report on all aspects of the war on terror, and in November, 2003 he traveled to Baghdad to report on the U.S.-led occupation and the insurgency against it. In covering Vice President Al Gore?s presidential campaign, Mr. Moran also reported on the subsequent legal battle for the White House.

Cynthia McFadden joined ABC News in February 1994 as the network?s legal correspondent and two years later was named a correspondent for ?Prime Time Live,? for which she has been a co-anchor since September 2004. Throughout her tenure at ABC, Ms. McFadden has reported several news-breaking stories, including a first-hand look at the process leading up to a man?s execution on Louisiana?s death row, and just this month two reports for ?Nightline? on the U.S. government?s attempts to secure loose nuclear materials and weapons domestically and abroad. In the wake of the London Bombings last July, Ms. McFadden traveled to Pakistan for an exclusive interview with President Musharraf, which aired on ?Nightline? and other ABC News platforms. For ?Primetime? also last summer, Ms. McFadden reported and anchored on the lives of children in America with a groundbreaking documentary on the phenomenon of grandmothers raising their grandchildren.

Martin Bashir joined ABC in September 2004 as a correspondent for the newsmagazine ?20/20? for which he has reported international news-breaking stories including the investigation of BALCO founder Victor Conte. He is also well known for the landmark documentary, ?Living with Michael Jackson? and other investigative reports for the BBC and ITV in Britain, including one for an in-depth investigation of one of Britain?s most notorious racially motivated murders. His many honors include a BAFTA Award and two Royal Television Society Program of the Year awards.


from aintitcool.com
 
They have been running 2-3 nights a week with the new format for a while now. I hate them, I generally just delete them from my TiVo (though truthfully I usually just delete nightline anyway, I only watch it when they are covering a topic that interests me). The old format was fine, no idea why they have to turn it into yet another news magazine show. Is half an hour dedicated to one topic really too much for the average viewer? They barely scratch the surface on most of the shows as it is.

 
I agree completely with above; they only have 30 mins, trying to cover more then one topic with any kind of competence is pointless. That along with the absence of Koppel and it looks like Nightline is gone....
 
Back
Top