Title: Sarah Palin Turkey Incident: Does TV Interview While Turkeys Are Slaughtered In The Background (VIDEO) Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Nov 21, 2008 Author:none Post Date:2008-11-21 21:05:34 by Yellow Cake Keywords:None Views:664 Comments:23
Palin isn't a dim bulb? I guess it depends on why she performed so poorly with Gibson and Couric. Could she be so smart she wanted to appear mentally impaired? I suppose that might be true.
Nationality: United States Executive summary:CBS Evening News
Katie Couric began her career in television as a low-level assistant at ABC in 1979. Her job, she has said, consisted of brewing coffee, answering phones, and occasionally fetching a ham sandwich for anchorman Frank Reynolds. She left to work as an assignment editor and field reporter at the fledgling Cable News Network, where she covered the 1984 Presidential election, but she was released after a CNN executive was annoyed by her "squeaky voice".
She then worked at local affiliates in Miami and Washington DC, and won a local Emmy for a report she filed on a dating service for handicapped singles. She joined NBC News in 1989, and soon became the network's second-string reporter covering the Pentagon. Meanwhile, producers at Today, the network's morning show, had dealt with Jane Pauley's stubborn insistence on aging by replacing her with younger and prettier Deborah Norville, but audiences found Norville icy and the producers were looking for a replacement by the time Norville took maternity leave in 1991. The ratings went up when Couric was brought in to substitute, and it quickly became clear that Norville would never be coming back. On 5 April 1991, Couric was promoted from substitute to full-fledged host, alongside Bryant Gumbel and later Matt Lauer.
When Couric became pregnant in 1995 she continued working, and her pregnancy was a frequent topic on Today. After her husband's 1998 death from cancer Couric delved frequently into coverage of cancer research and prevention, and gave new meaning to the term "in-depth coverage" when she underwent a colonoscopy on TV -- the process involves inserting a roughly finger-width tube through the rectum so doctors can examine the colon lining. Couric had a similarly personal response to the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School near Littleton, Colorado, writing The Brand New Kid, a rhyming storybook encouraging children not to taunt classmates.
In a 2003 ratings stunt, Couric and NBC's Tonight Show host Jay Leno traded jobs for one day. Leno sat in her semi-newsy chair on Today, awkwardly interviewing newsmakers like Colin Powell, while Couric delivered a funny stand-up monologue on The Tonight Show, then participated in a skit mocking Paula Abdul, and smoothly interviewed Tonight's show-business guests.
After 15 years of stellar ratings on Today, Couric jumped to CBS in 2006, replacing Bob Schieffer as anchor of the CBS Evening News. Women had served as network news co-anchors before Couric, but she is the first woman to regularly anchor an evening newscast without a man beside her.
Her father, John Couric, was a reporter for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the now-defunct United Press Association wire service. He was later in charge of public relations for the National Association of Broadcasters, the TV and radio industry lobby. Couric's sister, Emily Couric, wrote Divorce Lawyers: What Happens in America's Courts after a tumultuous divorce, and later served as a Democratic state Senator in Virginia. She was considered the frontrunner as a candidate for lieutenant governor, but instead died of cancer in 2001. Emily Couric's son, Jeff Wadlow, is a rising Hollywood director whose best-known work is Cry Wolf, the 2005 high school horror movie with Jared Padalecki.
Good heavens. I liken her to a breath of fresh air.
Any woman that can kill and dress out a moose gets my vote. You are jealous cause you cant dress your own sandwich. Typical woman hater. Mommies little boy. hehehehehe