Media Life
Homepage



TV This Week

Dan Rather in
hi-def, the lion returns


The audience is small but the promise a big one

Nov 14, 2006

More than two years after Memogate, and the fallout that forced Dan Rather to resign from his longtime post as “CBS Evening News” anchor, Rather is back in the anchor chair.

Tonight “Dan Rather Reports,” a weekly show airing at 8 p.m. Tuesdays, premieres on Mark Cuban’s HDNet, the five-year-old, 24-hour high-definition cable network available in 4 million households. That’s just under half the number that used to watch Rather’s CBS broadcasts.

Rather has several other journalists helping him on his reports but just what those reports will be about is not being revealed. As of last night, HDNet had not announced what the first program would focus on, and clearly the intent is to build anticipation.

Yet from everything Rather is saying, he intends to chase tough investigative pieces, along with high-profile interviews. He says Cuban has instructed him to be fearless.

Rather, who left CBS News earlier this year after nearly four decades, had been reporting for “60 Minutes” when he left. There were bad feelings on both sides after his exit, amid lots of name-calling. Rather said then that he wanted to return to reporting the hard-edged stories that boosted his career during the Vietnam and Watergate years.

He also clearly didn’t want his sad end at CBS to end his career.

Rather has been busy hyping “Reports’” debut. Last week he appeared as an analyst for “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart’s” midterm election coverage. He told the Comedy Central host that Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was easily reelected to the U.S. Senate, had run away with the race like a hobo with a sweet potato pie, drawing a big laugh from Stewart.

But he’s also still trying to clear his name over Memogate. On a regional radio appearance, also last week, Rather insisted once again that the disputed report about President Bush’s national guard duty was accurate. CBS News found that the piece was faulty, based in part on a memo of questionable veracity, and dismissed four staffers for their work on the story.

The question is whether Rather's time has passed. Now 75, he is an icon of a very different political time in America, one seemingly sacked by scandal. He left behind a lot of scars, and many on the right saw him as a front for a leftist agenda. But then again, with Democrats taking over both houses of Congress and the bitter national divide over Iraq, the times may not be so different after all. This may again be Rather's time. 

 

A look at this week’s top TV draws

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14

Time

Network

Program

Description

8 p.m.

ABC

“Dancing with the Stars” (R)

Season finale, part one. With Joey Lawrence gone, it’s down to Emmitt and Mario.

8 p.m.

CW

“Gilmore Girls” (D)

Somebody’s getting married … and somebody already leaked the spoiler to TV Guide, so it’s not a big shocker who.

9:30 p.m.

ABC

“Show Me the Money” (G)

William Shatner as a game show host could be deliciously funny or dangerously over-the-top.

10 p.m.

CBS

“3 Lbs.” (D)

Series premiere. CBS calls in its midseason support as “3 Lbs.” takes the place of “Smith,” which lasted just three weeks in this killer timeslot earlier this year.

10 p.m.

FX

“Nip/Tuck” (D)

The docs flash forward to 2026, where some surprising revelations about the future unfold.

10 p.m.

Discovery

“Everest: Beyond the Limit” (N)

Series premiere. A six-parter about trekking up the great mountain.

12:05 a.m.

ABC

“Jimmy Kimmel Live” (T)

Tracy Morgan talks about “30 Rock” just in time for Thursday’s special super-sized edition.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15

Time

Network

Program

Description

7 a.m.

NBC

“Today” (N)

Random fact: “Today” has placed first for 569 straight weeks in a.m. news.

8 p.m.

ABC

“Dancing with the Stars” (R)

Season finale, part two. Could be record ratings as people tune in to see who won, the ex-running back or the ex-best friend of Zach. (You know, “Saved by the Bell!”)

9 p.m.

ABC

“Day Break” (D)

Series premiere. Whew, now that the show is finally on, maybe ABC will cool it with the every-commercial-break promos. Though there are worse things than looking at Taye Diggs.

9 p.m.

BET

“BET Hip-Hop Awards” (A)

Comic Katt Williams hosts. People tune in to see if Kanye West will lose it again if he loses.

10 p.m.

MTV

“Laguna Beach” (R)

Season finale. The big question: Which season had the most interesting kids, one, two or three?

10 p.m.

TV Land

“I Pity the Fool” (R)

Season finale. If you haven’t sent a Mr. T-mail yet from TV Land’s site, better do it soon.

10 p.m.

NBC

“Medium” (D)

Season premiere. The drama returns for its third year, taking the place of new drama flop “Kidnapped.”

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16

Time

Network

Program

Description

3 p.m.

ABC

“General Hospital” (DD)

Twenty-five years ago, 30 million people watched Laura marry Luke. Today they celebrate two and a half rocky decades by getting remarried.

8 p.m.

NBC

“My Name is Earl” (C)

Supersized episode 1: After Randy eats an herbal ointment, he begins seeing Earl and the gang as claymation figures. But will the California Raisins show up?

8:36 p.m.

NBC

“The Office” (C)

Reunited and viewers feel so good: Pam and Jim are back in the same episode after Dunder-Mifflin continues with its consolidation plans in supersized episode 2.

9 p.m.

CBS

“CSI” (D)

Freaky: Twin sisters who were unaware of each other’s existence, a la “The Parent Trap,” are murdered the same night in a decidedly un-Hayley Mills-like twist.

9:20 p.m.

NBC

“30 Rock” (C)

Supersized episode 3: “30 Rock” joins the Thursday lineup with Jack taking Tracy to a celebrity golf tournament. But can its awful ratings improve opposite “CSI” and “Grey’s Anatomy?”

10 p.m.

ABC

“Barbara Walters: 30 Mistakes in 30 Years” (A)

“The View” matriarch dishes on celebrity interviews and their bloopers in this sweeps special.

11:35 p.m.

CBS

“Late Show with David Letterman” (T)

The always-classy, and always funny, Ellen DeGeneres stops by.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17

Time

Network

Program

Description

7:30 p.m.

Speed

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series (S)

The season finale of the series is held in Homestead, Fla.

9 p.m.

CMT

“Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making the Team” (R)

Season finale. Presumably, we find out who made the team.

9 p.m.

7:30 p.m.

College Hoops Classic (S)

Championship game, teams TBD.

10 p.m.

USA

“Monk” (D)

This should explain a lot: Monk’s absentee father shows up for the holidays in a special episode.

11 p.m.

HBO

“Real Time with Bill Maher” (C)

Season finale. The elections are over, the Democrats won … so Bill signs off, too.

11:35 p.m.

CBS

“Late Show with David Letterman” (T)

Because the 2008 election is just around the corner, John Edwards stops by.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18

Time

Network

Program

Description

Noon

ESPN

College Football: Michigan State at Penn State (S)

Will Joe Paterno’s broken bone keep him off the field for a second straight week?

3:30 p.m.

CBS

College Football: Auburn at Alabama (S)

Always a fierce SEC showdown.

8 p.m.

CMT

“Giants” (T)

Series premiere. Each week, a country music great is feted. This week it’s Reba McEntire, whose sitcom is also returning to the CW on Sunday starting tomorrow.

9 p.m.

TBS and HBO

“Comic Relief 2006” (A)

The long-running special returns.

11:30 p.m.

NBC

“Saturday Night Live” (T)

Ludacris hosts and performs.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19

Time

Network

Program

Description

Noon

NBC

Women’s Golf: ADT Championship

Final round of the ADT, which took 32 players, cut that in half after round two, and now has just eight players left in this final round.

1 p.m.

CBS

NFL: Colts at Cowboys (S)

Which Cowboys squad will show up, the one that beat the Panthers or the one that lost to the Redskins?

7 p.m.

CW

“Reba” (C)

Season premiere. Yep, it is back.

8 p.m.

History Channel

“Desperate Crossing: The Untold Story of the Mayflower” (N)

Impress your family with some obscure Pilgrim trivia on Thursday.

8:15 p.m.

NBC

“Sunday Night Football” (S)

In NBC’s second flexible scheduling game, the Broncos face the Chargers.

9 p.m.

Discovery

“Koppel on Discovery” (N)

Ted Koppel’s second Discovery special focuses on “Iran—The Most Dangerous Nation.”

9 p.m.

PBS

“Prime Suspect: The Final Act” (D)

The conclusion of Helen Mirren’s last appearance as Jane Tennison.

A = awards show or special, C = comedy, D = drama, DD = daytime drama, G = game show, K = kids, M = movie, N = news/documentary, R = reality, S = sports, T = talk/variety show.

 



Diego Vasquez is a staff writer for Media Life.




Latest headlines
Less Sparks: 'Idol' finale off 19 percent
Buyers pick ABC to lead in the upfront
Fact is, we've learned to accept spam
Tribute to Jay Leno, in his own words
Rachel, the guy is buds with my boss
Best tube bets this weekend

May sweeps: Fox leads ABC by 0.1 in adults 18-49
Bancroft family on Rupe: We're still not interested
Poll: Iowans trust traditional media for caucus news
Wheeling and dealing: XM courts used car owners
Maury in Montana: TV yakker launches newspaper

IAB: Online ad revenue hits record $16.9B in 2006
Internet radio stations reject royalties compromise
Bud wiser: A-B says failed TV site will fade away
Study: Web's the place to build buzz on entertainment