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Keith Olbermann Details MSNBC Demise On Debut Podcast

But after the death of Tim Russert, things changed at MSNBC according to Olbermann. He said NBC News was then in the hands of “cowards and bullies” like Tom Brokaw and Joe Scarborough.

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In a format similar to his television shows, former MSNBC and Sportscenter anchor Keith Olbermann launched his new podcast Countdown With Keith Olbermann Monday.

In the final portion of the episode, Olbermann began a segment entitled “Things I Promised Not to Tell”, describing his ultimate demise at MSNBC. He detailed how his first show with the network in 1997 was the first to produce profit, before returning to the network in 2003 to launch Countdown. Profits for the political program ballooned to $100 million, Olbermann claimed.

But after the death of Tim Russert, things changed at MSNBC according to Olbermann. He said NBC News was then in the hands of “cowards and bullies” like Tom Brokaw and Joe Scarborough.

“By August of 2008, the Republicans were threatening Brokaw that if he did get me fired from MSNBC coverage of the Presidential election, John McCain would not show up for the debate Brokaw had inherited from the late Tim Russert,” Olbermann said. “So Brokaw went in and threatened –and that’s a nice euphemism — NBC management on behalf of the GOP just to get to host one more debate. Then he boasted about it in The New York Times.”

Olbermann said one of the contract stipulations offered to him to remain with MSNBC, rather than jump ship to CNN, was a position on NBC’s Sunday Night Football. The role would pair him with his former ESPN cohort Dan Patrick. But a meeting with the network’s Jeff Zucker before the 2010 season removed him from the show, and ultimately was a deciding factor in him leaving the network.

“The following portion is a pure hypothetical, which is really better designed for a college course in contract law,” Olbermann said.

“But, if in a case like this hypothetical, the guy doing, let’s say a hypothetical football show wasn’t actually being paid to do the hypothetical football show. If doing that hypothetical football show were a perk, if it were a non-cash payment or it were an incentive to sign a contract rather than to go to some other hypothetical network like CN-hypothetical-N, well then when that hypothetical announcer is taken off that hypothetical football show, the people who hypothetically took him off that football show have hypothetically breached his hypothetical contract and all the sudden the hypothetical company’s hypothetical lawyers are asking the hypothetical announcer how much money it would hypothetically cost them to hypothetically cure a hypothetical breach.”

Later in 2010, during the race to the mid-term elections, he was on the phone with now Senator Krysten Sinema (D-AZ) and she mentioned a few candidates running for office in Arizona who had appeared on Countdown had received death threats and were spending their campaign finances on security. Olbermann was asked if he could donate to the campaigns, so he did. He was suspended by the network. Former Vice President Al Gore, who owned cable channel Current, offered Olbermann a $50 million contract, plus bonuses and an ownership stake in the network, to move Countdown.

He then said, on the record the first time, he wasn’t fired from MSNBC, the show wasn’t cancelled, but he had been negotiating a settlement with MSNBC for breach of contract, while concurrently negotiating with Current.

Olbermann also made other revelations in his podcast debut. Borrowing a segment from his television shows, Olbermann listed off the Worst Persons In The World, including a nugget about the genesis of the Countdown brand at MSNBC.

“In 2003, MSNBC had decided on a new show called Countdown because the President of NBC News (Neal Shapiro) loved the name, and thought it would be cool to start with the least important story and build up to the most important story,” Olbermann shared. “Like, 57 minutes later — because that way — everybody would watch the whole hour.”

Olbermann then revealed he wasn’t the original host Shapiro had in mind for the Countdown brand.

“He was not going to give up on the idea that the perfect host for Countdown was… (former ABC News reporter/anchor) Sam Donaldson. There was an NBC contract with Donaldson’s name on it in circulation when MSNBC executives found out that ABC News had been trying to get out from under their contract with Sam Donaldson.”

MSNBC — Olbermann says– in a way to subvert the will of Shapiro, brought together a focus group put together by political and television consultant Frank Luntz to show the “other guy”, not Donaldson, was the best choice for the show.

“Now how do I know that? I was the other guy!” Olbermann revealed. “Presto! Frank’s focus group somehow came back with that exact conclusion. The offer to Donaldson was withdrawn. Coincidence, no doubt.”

Countdown with Keith Olbermann is a daily podcast partnership between Olbermann and iHeartMedia.

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Report: More Than a Third of Twitter’s Top 100 Advertisers Have Exited

CNN’s Oliver Darcy shared the reporting done by the Washington Post that more than a third of the top 100 Twitter advertisers have abandoned the platform.

Eduardo Razo

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One of Elon Musk’s most significant challenges, as he now owns Twitter, lies on the financial side as the Tesla CEO attempts to make the social media stay afloat or at least somewhat profitable. 

However, CNN’s Oliver Darcy shared the reporting done by the Washington Post in his “Reliable Sources” newsletter that more than a third of Twitter’s top 100 advertisers have abandoned the platform.

With advertisers exiting, the lack of ad revenue is one of the most significant dangers to Twitter since it accounted for approximately 90 percent of its income last year.

The reporting also reveals that the pausing of ad campaigns is getting under Musk’s skin. The new Twitter owner lashed out at brands again Tuesday for “starving” the company of revenue. 

Musk also strongly suggested he never really created a “content moderation council” due to advertisers who “broke the deal” they allegedly had with him when they began exiting the platform after he “agreed to this condition.”

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Elon Musk: Ownership of Twitter Isn’t ‘Right-Wing Takeover’

Tesla CEO Elon Musk spoke with those who are still with the company, reassuring them that his ownership isn’t a “right-wing takeover.”

Eduardo Razo

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Last week saw Twitter have another mass exodus of staffers and Tesla CEO Elon Musk spoke with those who are still with the company, reassuring them that his ownership isn’t a “right-wing takeover.”

Furthermore, Musk stated that he doesn’t plan on moving the platform to Texas despite many suggesting he do so since, for him, it would send a wrong message. 

“If we want to move the headquarters to Texas, I think it would play into the idea that Twitter has gone from being left-wing to right-wing, which is not the case,” Musk said (h/t The Verge). “This is not a right-wing takeover of Twitter. It is a moderate-wing takeover of Twitter.”

However, Musk is open to the idea of having dual headquarters, one in San Francisco and another in Texas, but for now, his objective appears to be stabilizing the company after a rocky transition. 

Musk indicated he might be done with slashing employees, telling employees to refer potential staffers for engineering and sales positions.

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Blaze TV Hosts React To Controversy With Elon Musk, Twitter

Blaze TV hosts are reacting to the ongoing controversy involving Twitter as the company has seen mass layoffs under Elon Musk.

Ryan Hedrick

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Blaze TV hosts are reacting to the ongoing controversy involving Twitter. Last week, CBS News said it was halting its activity on the platform amid layoffs and resignations at the company. 

Jeff Fisher joined Pat Gray and Steve Burguiere aka Stu, on the “Glenn Beck Show ” Monday to discuss some of the latest developments involving Twitter including owner Elion Musk banning conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. 

Burguiere said it’s strange to see how left-leaning pundits have demonized Elon Musk following his acquisition of Twitter. 

“This guy should be a liberal icon,” stated Burguiere. “We lose sight of this because he says things about free speech that I guess is exclusively a right-wing issue.” 

Burguiere said that Musk should be able to do anything that he wants with Twitter considering the amount of money he invested to purchase the company. 

“This whole thing that he’s the icon of free speech, I don’t know if that’s true,” added Burguiere. 

Musk announced recently that conspiracy theorist Alex Jones received a permanent ban on Twitter for his involvement in denying that the Sandy Hook massacre took place.

“He (Musk) has been a hard no on Alex no matter what,” said Fisher. 

“He has apologized for it,” Burguiere said. “He’s also been sued for billions of dollars over it.” 

“The thing about Alex Jones is that some of us don’t like what he said,” Gray remarked. “But, who cares, that’s what you call free speech.”

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