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Donahue (2002 TV series)

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Country of origin
  
United States

Original network
  
MSNBC

Presented by
  
Phil Donahue

Language
  
English

5.9/10
IMDb

Running time
  
60 minutes

First episode date
  
15 July 2002

Genre
  
Talk show

Original release
  
July 15, 2002 (2002-07-15) – February 25, 2003 (2003-02-25)

Nominations
  
Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Talk Show

Similar
  
Hardball with Chris Matthews, Scarborough Country, Tucker, Countdown with Keith Olbermann, Up Late with Alec Baldwin

In 2002, Phil Donahue returned to television to host a show called Donahue on MSNBC.

Contents

Legendary talk show host phil donahue on the silencing of antiwar voices in u s media


Cancellation

Its debut Nielsen ratings were strong, but its audience evaporated over the following months. In late August 2002, it got one of the lowest possible ratings (0.1), less than MSNBC's average for the day of 0.2. On February 25, 2003, MSNBC cancelled the show, citing low viewership. However, that month, Donahue averaged 446,000 viewers and became the highest rated show on the network. Other MSNBC shows, including Hardball with Chris Matthews and Scarborough Country, averaged lower ratings in 2005.

Later, the website AllYourTV.com reported it had received a copy of an internal NBC memo that mentioned that Donahue had to be fired because he would be a "difficult public face for NBC in a time of war". Donahue was a vocal critic of the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. He mentioned the internal memo later in an interview on WILL-AM, a public radio station.

Keith Olbermann, arguably the network's most prominent commentator since Donahue, told TV Guide in 2007 that the cancellation had as much to do with the show's production cost as it did with political orientation.

Legacy

Despite the show's cancellation, Donahue's willingness to dissent played a critical role in getting The Oprah Winfrey Show to rejoin the anti-war movement in November 2002. In September 2002, Winfrey praised Donahue saying "the bottom line is we need you, Phil, because we need to be challenged by the voice of dissent".

References

Donahue (2002 TV series) Wikipedia