Maddow: ‘Bad Mistake’ to Let Her Walk Out the Door
Viewers Rally Around Reid as Some See Conspiracy
NABJ Concerned About ‘Industry-Wide Patterns’
Mississippi City Drops Lawsuit Against Newspaper
Apple Shareholders Vote to Keep Diversity Policies
Dead Super Bowl Reporter Had Drug in System
Updated Feb. 25
Homepage photo: Joy Reid on Monday’s final broadcast of “The ReidOut.”
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Right on to a real one. #JoyReid #TheReidOut pic.twitter.com/9kddpWzGmQ
— Roy Wood Jr- Ex Jedi (@roywoodjr) February 25, 2025
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Maddow: ‘Bad Mistake’ to Let Her Walk Out the Door
“On Monday evening, Joy Reid sat beneath the bright studio lights inside MSNBC’s Washington bureau, staring directly into the camera for one final time as host of “The ReidOut,” Oliver Darcy wrote Monday night for his Status newsletter.
“The weight of the moment was palpable — it was the end of the road for her at MSNBC. Clad in a purple ‘ReidOut’-branded jacket emblazoned with the MSNBC logo, she appeared every bit the anchor who had for years defined the progressive cable channel’s 7 p.m. hour, unafraid to address issues head-on. Now, Reid had to address the issue of her own departure directly with her loyal viewers.
“As her final show (video) came to a close, she was joined by Rachel Maddow, Nicolle Wallace, and Lawrence O’Donnell for a special segment celebrating her tenure, a notable display of solidarity from some of MSNBC’s biggest names. They reminisced; they laughed; they expressed disappointment her program was ending; and they reflected on the role Reid had played in shaping the network’s progressive voice.
“Reid lauded Maddow for her praise and returned her compliments by unofficially knighting her as the network’s “fearless leader.”
“Wallace went a step further and even equated Reid’s departure to ‘losing a limb.’
“ ‘And I think that my reaction to the end of ‘The ReidOut” and your departure is despair. And the only thing that chips away at that for me, is that despair is the autocrat’s tool. It’s their most effective weapon. It costs nothing. It’s easy to deploy, it’s contagious. And then it puts in motion all the actions they want. Hopelessness. Isolation. Exasperation. Giving up. And so the only reason I will not wallow in what I feel about you leaving is, is because I think that’s what they want,’ Wallace said.”
Darcy continued, “Then, as the final moments of ‘The ReidOut’ approached, it was time for Reid to say goodbye.
“ ‘A special shout out to our amazing Reiders, our audience — I just love running into y’all in the airport, on these streets, and on social media. I could not love or appreciate you more. Thank you, thank you, thank you, for holding us down,’ Reid said, before urging her fans to follow her on social media and — notably — Substack.
“While news of Reid’s cancellation leaked over the weekend, in truth, her fate had been all but sealed long ago. Last year, when her expiring contract was renegotiated, MSNBC brass only signed her to a one-year extension, I’m told — a clear sign that network executives were keeping their options open rather than making a long-term commitment. That kind of short-term deal is often used as a stopgap to buy time ahead of a possible shakeup, suggesting that leadership was already weighing its options. At the very least, it certainly made Reid more vulnerable.
Breaking my X moratorium to honor my friend Joy Reid. My show, @VelshiMSNBC exists because Joy made Sat and Sunday mornings viable & important. Joy is a builder, a thought leader, a fierce warrior for justice, fairness and equity. Joy is a masterclass in holding power to account.…
— Ali Velshi (@AliVelshi) February 25, 2025
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“Fair or not, Reid had over the years become a lightning rod of right-wing criticism, frequently drawing the ire of Donald Trump’s MAGA movement and offering an easy target to attack MSNBC’s editorial stances. While she had a devoted following, her freewheeling style and outspoken commentary — particularly on social media — often overshadowed the network and irked Comcast and NBCUniversal executives.
“The ouster of Reid, however, has triggered some backlash — both inside and outside of MSNBC. Notably, Maddow took time on her Monday program to reflect that frustration, lauding Reid and skewering the move to cancel her show. Maddow said it has been ‘very, very, very hard’ to digest the choice to oust Reid from the programming lineup, adding that she believes it is a ‘bad mistake to let her walk out the door.’
“ ‘It’s not my call and I understand that,’ Maddow said. ‘But that’s what I think. I will tell you, it is also unnerving to see that on a network where we have two — count them, two — non-white hosts in prime time, both of our non-white hosts in prime time are losing their shows, as is Katie Phang on the weekend. And that feels worse than bad, no matter who replaces them. That feels indefensible. And I do not defend it.’
“In any event, Kutler has stressed to people that the network must play ‘error-free ball,’ a modus operandi that her former boss Jeff Zucker instilled in his executives at CNN. The next four years of Trump in office will present a blizzard of challenges for newsrooms, with executives like Kutler and Lazarus aiming to avoid any unforced errors that could hamper their larger goals. Indeed, SpinCo will certainly need to grow through various M&A deals if it wishes to survive — and such deals will necessitate being on somewhat decent footing with the administration.
“Reid’s style of commentary did not help in that regard, as evidenced by Trump’s Truth Social post following the cancellation of her show. Trump took the opportunity to bash ‘Concast,’ calling Brian Roberts a ‘lowlife chairman’ and saying he ‘finally got the nerve up to fire one of the least talented people in television.’ Trump went on to smear Reid as a ‘mentally obnoxious racist’ who ‘should have been ‘canned’ long ago.” Then — after blasting Alex Wagner, Al Sharpton and Maddow — Trump went on to threaten Comcast as a business.
” ‘This whole corrupt operation is nothing more than an illegal arm of the Democrat Party,’ Trump wrote, in a post that surely grabbed the attention of executives in Philadelphia. ‘They should be forced to pay vast sums of money for the damage they’ve done to our Country. Fake News is an UNPARDONABLE SIN!’ “
“I’ve been through every emotion over the past several days,” Reid said during an appearance on the Win With Black Women podcast. She added that those emotions included “anger, rage, disappointment, hurt. I’m feeling guilt, you know, that I let my team lose their jobs.” (Credit: YouTube)
Viewers Rally Around Reid as Some See Conspiracy
“A day after winning an NAACP Image Award, one of MSNBC’s highest rated shows is done. The cancellation of Joy Reid’s primetime show, The ReidOut, has sparked outrage and confusion among viewers and fans,” Garrison Hayes wrote Monday for Mother Jones.
“Some of them are committed to letting the network know that they aren’t happy by ‘turning the TV off.’ . . .
“On Sunday, more than 10,000 viewers tuned into an impromptu call to action organized by Win With Black Women and We Win With Black Men, digital organizing collectives known for rallying support for high-profile figures like former Vice President Kamala Harris and Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. Reid joined the call, too. ‘I am not sorry and I am so proud of what we did,’ she said of her award-winning show, which ran for five years.
“When we don’t speak up in these moments we continue to allow the line to be moved,” said Robinson.
Mark Mwachiro added for AdWeek, “ ‘I’ve been through every emotion over the past several days,’ Reid said during an appearance on the Win With Black Women podcast on Sunday night. She added that those emotions included ‘anger, rage, disappointment, hurt. I’m feeling guilt, you know, that I let my team lose their jobs.’
“Still dealing with the immediate aftershock of no longer being part of MSNBC and its evening lineup, Reid spoke about the messages of support she has received since the news broke. Fighting back tears, Reid offered a positive perspective on what has transpired, saying: ‘Where I really land and where I’ve landed on today is just gratitude.’
Many viewers saw a conspiracy against people of color, especially as others in and out of the news industry revise their support for diversity, equity and inclusion to please President Donald Trump, who “celebrated the firings on his Truth Social account, specifically calling Reid a ‘mentally obnoxious racist’ in a rant that provided zero evidence to back any of his claims,” as Chris Walker wrote Monday for Truthout.
“MSNBC finalized its revamped schedule on Monday, promoting progressive anchors Jen Psaki and Symone Sanders-Townsend to primetime while booting its largely non-white weekend lineup of hosts off their namesake shows,” Corbin Bolies reported for the Daily Beast under the headline, “New MSNBC Bloodbath of Non-White Anchors After Joy Reid Forced Out.”
“Anchors Jonathan Capehart, Katie Phang, and Ayman Mohyeldin are losing their eponymous weekend shows. Capehart and Mohyeldin will instead be one of multiple hosts of separate editions of The Weekend at 7 a.m. and 6 p.m., respectively, while Phang will remain with the network as a legal correspondent with no anchor slot. Its other Miami-based anchor, José Díaz-Balart, will also lose his show, though he will remain as host of NBC’s weekend edition of Nightly News. “
Benjamin Mullin reported Monday for The New York Times, “The network’s leaders made the change primarily because they thought the viewership figures for Ms. Reid’s show were underwhelming, according to two people with knowledge of the decision.
“So far this year, Ms. Reid’s program has lagged far behind ‘The Ingraham Angle,’ the rival show on Fox News, in total viewership at that hour. But during that period, it has outperformed a rival program on CNN, ‘Erin Burnett OutFront,’ in total viewership. Both shows on Fox and CNN have outperformed Ms. Reid’s program in the key advertising demographic, according to Nielsen data.”
Bolles of the Daily Beast wrote, “The changes also [signal] MSNBC’s desire to lean into its progressive voice for its older viewers (its viewers’ median age is 70, according to The Wall Street Journal), even as [executive Mark] Lazarus has reportedly wanted to appeal to more Republicans.”
But Zoe G. Phillips wrote Monday for the Hollywood Reporter, “MSNBC continues, however, to have the most diverse lineup across all of cable news, and Alicia Menendez will be the first Latina in MSNBC primetime when The Weekend moves to the 7 p.m. slot.” [Added Feb. 25]
- Danielle Belton blog: Joy-Ann Reid Is the Latest Victim of ‘The Great Regression’
- Jack Dunn, Variety: Rachel Maddow Sounds Off on Major MSNBC Line-Up Changes and Exit of Joy Reid: ‘I Think It Is a Bad Mistake to Let Her Walk Out the Door’
- Marc Lamont Hill: NIGHT SCHOOL: The REAL Reason MSNBC Canceled Joy-Ann Reid’s Show; Philly Eagles Spurn White House? (video)
- Ted Johnson, Deadline: Joy Reid Devotes Final MSNBC Show To Ways To Resist During Donald Trump’s Presidency: “Fascism Isn’t Just Coming, It’s Already Here”
- William Vaillancourt, Daily Beast: MSNBC Stars ‘Break the Rules’ With Emotional Tributes to Joy Reid
NABJ Concerned About ‘Industry-Wide Patterns’
The National Association of Black Journalists said Tuesday that it “met with NBCUniversal’s head of diversity yesterday to discuss concerns about recent changes that have affected the Black voices seen and heard on air every day. While NBCUniversal leadership has assured us they are committed to elevating Black voices, we are disappointed by the removal of Joy Reid from her slot. Reid is a longtime journalist and host of The ReidOut, a major political commentary program.
“While we congratulate Symone Sanders-Townsend, Michael Steele and Alicia Menendez on their new roles in Reid’s former time slot, we remain concerned about industry-wide patterns in which Black talent is disproportionately affected by corporate changes. We have also learned that other journalists and commentators representing diverse communities have been removed from their slots.
“As we continue examining this issue and working with NBCUniversal on their commitments to diversity, we urge news leaders across the board to recognize that removing Black voices affects how networks shed light on issues of great importance to our communities. Reducing those voices also limits the diversity of content and viewpoints. Networks must also ensure that more Black journalists by trade have opportunities to contribute. We urge all news platforms to add rather than subtract from the diversity of their talent — both on-camera and behind the scenes.”
After the 2020 protests that followed the police killing of George Floyd, NBCUniversal News Group Chairman Cesar Conde set a goal of having a 50 percent diverse work force across his division. However, MSNBC and some other Comcast properties are to be spun off into a new company and will no longer be part of the News Group.
- Stacy M. Brown, National Newspaper Publishers Association: Black Journalists, Activists Condemn MSNBC for Firing Joy Reid
- Candace McDuffie, The Root: Black Journalists Honor, Defend Joy Reid as Donald Trump Gloats Over Her MSNBC Firing
Judge Crystal Wise Martin sworn in by her mother, retired Judge Patricia Wise, in 2019. (Credit: via the Mississippi Office of the Courts.
Mississippi City Drops Lawsuit Against Newspaper
A Mississippi city dropped its defamation lawsuit Monday “against a newspaper that had its editorial criticizing local leaders removed by a judge in a case that sparked widespread outrage from First Amendment advocates,” Andrew Demillo reported Monday for the Associated Press
Within 24 hours, the editorial reappeared on the homepage of the newspaper, the Clarksville Press Register, but it has since been taken down until the judge signs off on the restoration, “just to be safe,” Wyatt Emmerich, president of Emmerich Newspapers, the parent company of the paper, told Journal-isms Tuesday.
“Chancery Judge Crystal Wise Martin issued the restraining order against the Press Register last week in connection with a Feb. 8 editorial titled ‘Secrecy, Deception Erode Public Trust,’ ” Demillo wrote. “The piece criticized the city for not sending the newspaper notice about a meeting the City Council held regarding a proposed tax on alcohol, marijuana and tobacco. . . “
As the case made national headlines, an editorial in Mississippi Today sounded a common theme: “Someone needs to read the First Amendment to Judge Crystal Wise Martin.”
The races of Martin and Clarksdale Mayor Chuck Espy were not mentioned in the news stories, although in some, their photos were used. Each comes from a prominent Black family in the Mississippi Delta. Espy is the son of Henry Espy, former mayor, and is a nephew of former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Mike Espy. Martin is the daughter of Patricia Wise, a chancery judge for nearly 30 years. The daughter began her judicial career in 2019, elected to her mother’s seat. [Added Feb. 25]
- Earlier story: Miss. Judge Enrages Believers in 1st Amendment
“For over 35 years, people here have found community in Diverse Network Associations,” Apple says. (Credit: Apple)
Apple Shareholders Vote to Keep Diversity Policies
“Apple shareholders on Tuesday voted to keep the iPhone maker’s diversity policies, shutting down a conservative think tank’s proposal,” William Gavin reported Tuesday for Quartz.
“The technology giant had defended its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices ahead of its annual meeting. In a prepared statement, Apple cited its established compliance program and a desire to create a ‘culture of belonging where everyone can do their best work.’
“Apple said its practices have been instrumental to its success over the years. The tech giant’s market capitalization is $3.7 trillion, making it the most valuable company in the world.
“ ‘We believe that how we conduct ourselves is as critical to Apple’s success as making the best products in the world,’ Apple said in a statement.
“The company is one of a few targeted by the self-described conservative think tank the National Center for Public Policy Research, which claimed that DEI ‘poses litigation, reputational and financial risks” to companies and their shareholders. The group estimated that “likely over 50,000” workers were potentially discriminated against because of Apple’s policies, according to a proxy filing.
“About 20% of companies in the S&P 100 have retreated from DEI commitments, Bloomberg News reported.” [Added Feb. 25]
- Associated Press: Which US companies are pulling back on diversity initiatives?
- Conor Murray and Molly Bohannon, Forbes: Apple Shareholders Reject Ban On Diversity Initiatives — Here Are All The Companies Cutting DEI Programs
- Joanna Partridge, Guardian: Apple to fix iPhone dictation bug that replaces word ‘racist’ with ‘Trump’ (Feb. 26)
(Credit: Facebook)
Dead Super Bowl Reporter Had Drug in System
Adan Manzano, the Kansas City sports reporter who was found in his hotel room while in New Orleans to cover the Super Bowl, had an antidepressant in his system, Michelle Hunter reported Tuesday for NOLA.com, and Danette Colbert, who has previously been accused of drugging men to steal from them, was ordered held without bail after a preliminary hearing.
“In the order to hold Colbert without bail, Jefferson Parish Criminal Magistrate David Wolff called her a flight risk,” Hunter reported.
” ‘I find that she is a danger to society. Apparently, random victims that come across her wind up being victims of crime,’ he said.
Manzano, 27, “a father of one from Topeka, Kansas, and a reporter for Telemundo, was found dead in his room at the Comfort Suites” in suburban Kenner, La., “on Feb. 5 after his colleagues asked for a wellness check when he missed a meeting.
“Surveillance video recovered by investigators, including the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, showed Colbert drinking with Manzano on Bourbon Street in New Orleans before she drove him back to his hotel. Video at the hotel shows her with Manzano in the lobby and heading into his room, according to [Kenner Police Detective Jeffrey] Fitzmorris.
“No one else entered the room, and Manzano never left, according to police.
“During Tuesday’s hearing, Fitzmorris told the court that a preliminary toxicology screening performed during Manzano’s autopsy found the depressant benzodiazepine in his system.
“The class of drugs — which includes alprazolam, the generic version of the anti-anxiety drug Xanax — can induce respiratory depression, coma, and possible death, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. . . .”
Holt Stepping Down at ‘NBC Nightly News’
First Black Solo Anchor on Network Evening Program
Up at MSNBC: Psaki, Velshi; Down: Wagner, Phang, Diaz-Balart
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Lester Holt anchors “NBC Nightly News” on Friday. (Credit: YouTube)
First Black Solo Anchor on Network Evening Program
Lester Holt, anchor and managing editor of “NBC Nightly News” for a decade and the first African American solo anchor on a nightly network news program, announced Monday that he is stepping down from the broadcast at the beginning of the summer.
“Holt will continue to be a fixture at the network with a full-time role at ‘Dateline,’ where he has been the principal anchor for almost 15 years, according to a memo shared with network staff Monday,” Daniel Arkin reported for NBC.
“NBC News did not immediately name Holt’s successor.”
“After 10 years, 17 if you include my years on the weekends, the time has come for me to step away from my role as anchor of ‘Nightly News,’ ” Holt told colleagues. “It has truly been the honor of a lifetime to work with each of you every day, keeping journalism as our true north and our viewers at the center of everything we do,” Holt said in a memo to staffers Monday.
“But before we play the walk off music, I have another announcement. I’m excited to report I will be continuing as anchor of ‘Dateline NBC,’ but for the first time in a full time capacity whereby I will be expanding my footprint on the broadcast and crafting ‘Dateline ‘hours on subjects I care deeply about. I am thrilled to be able to work more closely with my enormously talented friends at Dateline as the broadcast continues to grow and attract new viewers in new places.”
While Holt did not emphasize his race on air, he told Journal-isms when he was named in 2015 that he has “a strong sensitivity” about the story of race and that “It’s a story that, among others, we’ll be going at aggressively.” He also said then that he expected to pay more attention to how technology affects our lives, and that Asian American and Latino journalists are in the NBC pipeline who could one day follow him into the anchor chair.
The National Association of Black Journalists added to Holt’s many honors in 2016 when it named him Journalist of the Year.
When Holt accepted the award at a reception at NBC’s New York headquarters, then-NABJ president Sarah Glover said, “He has done so much – the journalism excellence that he exudes day after day is the gold standard. We thank you for shining a light on great journalism and for leading the way.”
Holt said at the occasion, “Our diversity in newsrooms simply makes us better. When we sit in our editorial meetings every afternoon at ‘Nightly News,’ that diversity of race, culture and sexual identity – all of those things come into place when we start discussing news of the day and everybody can bring something to the table. That just simply makes us better journalists. So, I want to applaud NABJ for what the organization continues to do, it’s incredibly vital.”
Holt also discussed there the Black anchors who came before him, mentioning Max Robinson, Carole Simpson, Bryant Gumbel and Bernard Shaw. “These are people that opened the doors for people like me to walk through and therefore it’s incumbent on all of us to remember that many of us are the products of great mentors.”
A younger Lester Holt reports for Chicago’s WBBM-TV in 1991. (Credit: YouTube)
Racial protest gave many of them a boost, including Holt. “A native Californian who had worked in Los Angeles and New York, Holt started in Chicago in 1986 after the Operation PUSH-led boycott of WBBM, over issues of minority representation and coverage, seriously damaged its standing among viewers,” Steve Johnson wrote in 2013 for the Chicago Tribune. “So did subsequent management stabs at a more tabloid-style newscast.
More recently, after the protests over the police killing of George Floyd in 2020, NBCUniversal News Group Chairman Cesar Conde set a goal of having a 50 percent diverse work force across his division.
In Chicago, “Holt teamed with Linda MacLennan to front the flagship 10 p.m. news in 1995. While they were a polished, professional team, nothing the station could do would improve the ratings.”
But that was then. Today, Geoff Bennett is co-anchor of the “PBS News Hour” and Maurice DuBois is the new co-anchor of the “CBS Evening News.” Both are Black men.
Brian Steinberg wrote Monday for Variety, “Holt has been a calming presence at NBC News, where his unflappable and low-key demeanor helped the news division move forward after a period of tumult. He took over ‘Nightly’ duties after his predecessor, Brian Williams, was removed following scrutiny of claims the latter made about the details of a reporting trip to Iraq.
“Holt has tried to stretch new muscles, always conscious that traditional TV viewers, once wed to watching evening news after coming home from work on a set in the living or family room, were interacting with such content in different ways. ‘A year or two from now, people might be watching us on their toaster,’ Holt told Variety in 2015, ‘and we’ve got to be there to put butter on the bread.”
“In 2020, he launched a ‘Kids’ Edition’ of ‘Nightly.’ During some broadcasts, Holt talked to Sesame Street characters about mental health awareness, and looked at the birth of a rare antelope at the Oregon Zoo. He has also tinkered with the ‘Nightly’ ‘closing, delivering in somber national moments something more reflective and nuanced than the typical anodyne sign off. One day before the 2020 presidential election, he told viewers, ‘democracy is messy, but we’ve got to let it work,’ particularly for ‘our children, who you know are watching us.’ During Holt’s tenure, ‘Nightly’ also tried to focus on news in different parts of the country, including Florida and California, and not just on events in New York and Washington, D.C.”
Steinberg also wrote, “Holt’s exit is the latest in a parade of departures of senior TV-news personnel in recent months as the industry grapples with new economic pressures brought about by the rise of streaming, and contends with a harsh climate for media outlets in the early days of the second Trump administration. Chuck Todd, the veteran political director and ‘Meet the Press’ moderator, left NBC News in January, and Andrea Mitchell, the longtime international affairs and politics reporter, recently ended her decades-long tenure on MSNBC’s daytime schedule. Hoda Kotb recently left her duties at NBC News’ ‘Today.”’
Apart from his NBC duties, Holt has continued to play bass guitar with his rock band, the Rough Cuts, founded during a holiday party for “Dateline” staff in 2017. “The band plays classic rock and more modern fare,” Michael Malone reported in 2023 for nexttv.com
From left,Jan. 30: Jonathan Capehart, Jen Psaki, Symone Sanders Townsend and Luke Russert. (Credit: X)
Up: Psaki, Velshi; Down: Wagner, Phang, Diaz-Balart
Jen Psaki will anchor a nightly weekday show in prime time, replacing Alex Wagner; “The Weekend” co-hosts will be replaced by a new trio of anchors that includes Jonathan Capehart, a host on MSNBC and columnist; Ali Velshi’s program will expand to three hours on the weekends, and the Miami-based “José Díaz-Balart Reports” and “The Katie Phang Show” will be canceled, according to news reports on an MSNBC announcement Monday.
“The network also plans to introduce an evening edition of ‘The Weekend’ hosted by a different group of anchors including MSNBC host Ayman Mohyeldin,” Benjamin Mullin reported for The New York Times.
Rebecca Kutler, MSNBC’s president, confirmed in a memo Monday that Joy Reid, host of “the ReidOut,” is leaving the network, to be replaced by the trio that currently co-hosts “The Weekend,” which airs Saturday and Sunday mornings: Symone Sanders Townsend, a political commentator and former Democratic strategist; Michael Steele, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee; and Alicia Menendez, an anchor on the network.
Former #MSNBC host Joy Reid breaks down crying over getting fired from her show pic.twitter.com/nnG8A3hDqo
— Tariq Nasheed 🇺🇸 (@tariqnasheed) February 24, 2025
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“ ‘We supported and defended real history, the 1619 Project, diversity, equity and inclusion and access to books for our children and students,” Ms. Reid said in her statement. ”And we did it all with a smile and a sense of humor.’ ”
Kutler said of Reid in her memo, “We thank her for her countless contributions over the years. Her work has been recognized with several esteemed honors, including most recently, the 2025 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding News Series.”
Mullin continued, “The network’s leaders made the change primarily because they thought the viewership figures for Ms. Reid’s show were underwhelming, according to two people with knowledge of the decision. So far this year, Ms. Reid’s program has lagged far behind ‘The Ingraham Angle,’ the rival show on Fox News, in total viewership at that hour. But during that period, it has outperformed a rival program on CNN, ‘Erin Burnett OutFront’ in total viewership. Both shows on Fox and CNN have outperformed Ms. Reid’s program in the key advertising demographic, according to Nielsen data.”
“As a result, the channel will stop producing shows out of Miami, with José Díaz-Balart Reports and The Katie Phang Show (pictured) both ending production.”
“Díaz-Balart will continue as one of the weekend anchors for NBC Nightly News, while Phang will remain with MSNBC as a legal correspondent. As a result of the dayside changes, Ana Cabrera will expand an hour and anchor weekday Ana Cabrera Reports from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Chris Jansing will shift to anchor Chris Jansing Reports from 12 to 2 p.m. Katy Tur will add an hour to Katy Tur Reports from 2 to 4 p.m. “
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