

The network attempted to appeal to younger viewers by literally gleaning "stories" from someone's Facebook news feed, and trying to do docusoaps about YouTube stars and social media.
Headline news channel trial#
Zucker also decided to de-emphasize trial coverage due to a 'downmarket' perception of the audiences they attracted, though social media hasn't taken that change positively in any way. The focus of the network is now more well away from news you're more likely to run into a Forensic Files rerun than anything else.

Towards the end of 2013 however with Jeff Zucker firmly in charge of CNN, he inexplicably put the former head of Nickelodeon Albie Hecht in charge, who immediately canceled some shows, let some people go, and added even more pre-recorded shows to the weekend schedule, including a health block called Upwave, which immediately bombed because it was put on Sunday night, the lowest viewed night in cable news where everyone else is watching anything but that (CNBC had a diabetes education show in the same timeslot for years with the same ratings woes). The Anthony template was repeated in early 2013 with the trial of Arizona's Jodi Arias, then George Zimmerman's trial in Florida.

The Casey Anthony trial took over the entire network over the spring and summer of 2011, taking Adored by the Network to its most absurd extreme. With the retirement of the final old-line Headline News anchor, Chuck Roberts in 2010, the final strings from the old format were broken, and now the rolling news block features most of the elements of the evening portion of the schedule.
Headline news channel tv#
Time Warner also created an artificial format change in 2009, as HLN's sister network Court TV was rebranded to TruTV with a reality format, and most of their trial coverage bumped over to HLN, a change pretty much done in 2013, as TruTV's "trial coverage" existed for only a couple hours after court opens in the east (making it pointless to cover trials west of the Rockies on that program) it was finally put out of its misery in the summer of 2013. Network Decay was setting in at the network (which would be renamed HLN, after its EPG abbreviation, in 2008), but the shift was proving to be a success, earning the network higher ratings than it ever did as well as reducing the amount of celebrity coverage on CNN. It also started airing live programs in Prime Time (moving the rolling news coverage back to daytime) and putting a greater focus on celebrity news, violent crimes and missing white women. This forced a slow shift in direction for the network. However, the change was likely justified as many viewers started getting basic news without elaboration from the Internet, and the network began to lose audience and purpose as they realized that only an older audience needed the data-packed half-hour format as time went on. In 2005, the network responded to these criticisms by scaling back the amount of on-screen information. This change earned the network much lampooning and criticism, being called a "jumbled mess" by USA Today. This was best demonstrated in quick promos aired on other Turner networks in the early 90s- we see a really boring looking show, before an announcer points out "You could be watching the news right now." and a remote switching the image to Headline News.Īfter Time Warner bought Turner Broadcasting (the channel's original owner), a few revamps were done one in 1999 when the 30-minute newscast was split into four for different dayparts note First Watch from 6AM-12PM, Second Watch from 12PM-6PM, Third Watch from 6PM-12AM, and Late Watch from 12AM-6AM each "watch" was respectively color-coded as yellow, green, red and blue, and another in 2001, which changed the logo, graphics and music, and introduced a "border" around the anchor which contained excessive amounts of information and took up most of the screen. Its original focus was a 30-minute newscast called Headline News which filled viewers in on the day's most prominent stories in a half-hour "wheel" format resembling the news radio stations found in large urban areas, repeated on a 24-hour loop, thus allowing viewers to catch up on a day's worth of news in just half an hour, any time of the day (something that is very useful in places like airports and bars). The channel was established as CNN2 in 1982, partly in order to double-team ABC and Westinghouse's Satellite News Channel (which had a similar format) out of existence, and changed its name to CNN Headline News the following year, although use of the word "CNN" in the title was always fairly intermittent. HLN is a 24-hour news network that was spun off from CNN, though the "news" part is currently questionable.
