Rupert Murdoch uses London visit to try to boost
ratings at talkTV
Effort to revive fortunes of Piers Morgan-fronted
rightwing channel include appointing new boss and expected relaunch
Piers Morgan is being regularly beaten in the ratings
by Nigel Farage at rival rightwing channel GBNews.
Jim
Waterson Media editor
@jimwaterson
Thu 23 Jun
2022 07.00 BST
Rupert
Murdoch’s talkTV has been struggling to attract an audience for its culture-war
output. But staff at the channel are now worried that they have recently gained
one particular viewer: Murdoch himself, who has arrived in London and is taking
an active interest in his station’s fate.
The media
mogul has invested tens of millions of pounds in talkTV, but after just two
months on air, there are fears it could become a costly disaster unless he
makes a rapid intervention, with official viewing figures dipping to zero at
some points during evening broadcasts.
On
Wednesday, the company appointed former Daily Mirror editor Richard Wallace as
the channel’s boss ahead of an expected relaunch, which followed a senior
behind-the-scenes executive quitting last week and Fox News staff being
deputised to help sharpen up the channel.
The company
has plastered presenter Piers Morgan’s face on billboards across the country,
but his monologues and rants about woke culture – including an attempt to
skewer rail union boss Mick Lynch for using a Thunderbirds baddie as his
Facebook profile picture – have so far failed to resonate with audiences.
On Monday
night, the flagship Piers Morgan Uncensored attracted just 64,000 viewers.
Programmes that beat him in the same time slot included a documentary about the
water around Alcatraz on the National Geographic channel and a repeat of 1970s
sitcom The Good Life on Gold.
According
to sources at talkTV, Morgan has suggested Murdoch should make a blowout bid to
hire his former Good Morning Britain colleague Susanna Reid for talkTV. Reid’s
agent did not deny that discussions had taken place, but declined to comment
further. There is no indication that Reid is poised to leave the ITV breakfast
show, although she has been off air in recent days.
Other
talkTV programmes are faring worse, with just 7,000 people watching former Sun
political editor Tom Newton-Dunn’s 7pm news show.
More
embarrassingly, Morgan is being consistently thrashed in the ratings by ex-Ukip
leader Nigel Farage on GB News. The rival rightwing channels are fighting over
the same relatively small pool of viewers, but so far it looks as though GB
News – despite its own disastrous launch – is consistently coming out on top by
appealing to a small core British audience rather than aiming for wider appeal.
Both
outlets are reportedly currently financially unsustainable, with questions over
their long-term future. GB News secured funding from a range of overseas
investors for its first three years, but one major shareholder, US media
company Discovery, is now understood to be looking to exit.
As a
result, the company needs new shareholders willing to suck up the cost of
running a loss-making, ad-funded channel with a recession looming. Sources at
GB News said both its HR director and commercial director have left in recent
weeks.
This has
led to speculation that Murdoch could choose to cut his losses, buy GB News,
and unite the channel with talkTV. He has form for such ruthlessness. In the
early 1990s, soon after it launched, he took his heavily loss-making Sky
satellite broadcasting service and merged it with the similarly stricken rival
British Satellite Broadcasting to create BSkyB.
A News UK
spokesperson played down the prospect of such an outcome and said they were
happy with the current outlook for talkTV, while GB News said it was not aware
of any talks.
Instead, in
a bid to revive viewing figures, talkTV has increasingly starting splashing the
cash on guests. One leftwing journalist was begged to come on air to be grilled
by Morgan; the talkTV guest booker made ever increasing offers, which could in
the end have earned the individual thousands of pounds for a few minutes’ work.
The person declined.
Mid-level
celebrities and people briefly in the public eye have been delighted to earn
over £10,000 for appearing on Morgan’s show.
Despite the
availability of hard cash for people who are willing to be a punchbag for
Morgan’s rants, there have been few of the breakout viral moments that
characterised his earlier stint on Good Morning Britain. Staff at talkTV
reported enormous delight when a trans activist swore at Morgan on air and
walked off the set because clips of the incident lit up Twitter.
talkTV has
lost some senior staff, with more predicted to follow – either for
opportunities elsewhere or as part of a forthcoming clearout and relaunch.
Vivek Sharma, the channel’s executive producer, who was a veteran of ITV’s
daytime lineup, quit last week for a new job. There has been substantial
involvement of staff from Murdoch’s US Fox News channel to try to train
presenters and fix problems with the output.
One
particular issue is talkTV’s dual identity as a big-budget channel bolted on to
an existing radio station, talkRadio. The vast majority of talkTV’s output
consists of filming shows that were already broadcasting on talkRadio, which
had attracted a loyal audience on a small budget.
This has
led to growing tensions between the two teams, with the radio staff feeling
they are being let down by their high-spending TV colleagues. One irate member
of the old talkRadio team pointed out that while the station’s bosses have
issued press releases claiming Morgan’s show is a global success on social
media platforms, it is the old talkRadio content – such as interviews with
conspiracy theorist David Icke – that dominates the most-viewed list on
YouTube.
Still,
talkTV continues to invest in new staff, with job roles available for an
additional forthcoming 10pm television show. Jeremy Kyle is due to host a
programme now that the public outcry over a recent documentary about his former
daytime TV show has died down.
Murdoch
hosted his summer party at the Serpentine gallery in London on Monday night,
where the guests included the prime minister, Boris Johnson. He has already
watched first hand as one of his newspapers, the Times, became embroiled in a
row about deleting a story without explanation. Staff at talkTV are hoping they
aren’t part of a similar vanishing act.
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