CNN taps Piers Morgan to fill Larry King slot
After months of speculation, Piers Morgan, the British
newspaper editor best-known to U.S. audiences as a judge on NBC's
"America's Got Talent," has finally completed talks to take over Larry
King's weeknight talk show on CNN.
CNN, hoping to bolster its flagging prime-time lineup, has settled on Morgan after delicate and wide-ranging negotiations that cleared numerous obstacles, from the host's visa status to his role as a judge on NBC's summer staple "America's Got Talent," which he is expected to continue.
King, for years the anchor of CNN's nightly programming, announced he was retiring from "Larry King Live" earlier this year. He's expected to wrap the show in December, with Morgan starting early next year.
In Morgan, CNN is getting a brash former tabloid editor with a remarkable capacity for reinvention and a keen sense of the power of fame.
"Piers has made his name posing tough questions to public figures, holding them accountable for their words and deeds," Jon Klein, the president of CNN/US, said in a statement. "He is able to look at all aspects of the news with style and humor with an occasional good laugh in the process. He is a natural fit with Anderson Cooper, Eliot Spitzer and Kathleen Parker in our prime time line-up, and the ideal choice to update the storied tradtiion of newsmaker talk on CNN."
Morgan said in a CNN news release: "I am thrilled to be joining CNN, and very much looking forward to bringing my own style of interviewing to the world's biggest, and best, TV news organization."
“Morgan's style of questioning, especially on matters of bereavement or illness, is akin to firing tear gas,” the UK’s The Observer wrote in June, noting that even former Prime Minister Gordon Brown grew teary when he was subjected to a Morgan interview.
He appears irritated when celebrities just want a platform to promote their latest project, telling The Guardian, “I hate that chat show thing with people plugging their music or their movie in seven-minute slots. People find them boring.”Real estate impresario Donald Trump, who cast Morgan in the 2008 celebrity edition of “The Apprentice,” which he won, said the Brit has more of an instinct to go for the jugular than King. That’s a characteristic he’s going to have to temper a bit on CNN, Trump added.
“When you do a show five or six nights a week, you can’t kill everybody, because you’re not going to get anybody to come on the show,” he said. “But Piers will have a great take on it….He’s going to know just how far to go.”
Such skills may help CNN draw attention back to its prime time lineup, which has suffered severely at the hands of competitors Fox News and MSNBC. At one time, King's program was a regular stop for presidential candidates and top celebrities. But ratings for "Larry King Live" have eroded in recent years, along with those for Anderson Cooper and other CNN stars.
The network has increasingly found itself an also-ran in the cable news race. During August, CNN shed 46% of its prime-time viewers compared with a year ago, according to the Nielsen Co. MSNBC and Fox, which have shifted to opinion and away from hard news during prime time, were also down but by much smaller amounts.
-- Scott Collins and Matea Gold









I'm glad CNN didn't take Larry King's advice and pick Ryan Seacrest as his replacement. Any advice from King should be disregarded.
Posted by: phoenixandrew | September 08, 2010 at 09:24 AM
Well, I enjoy Piers on America's Got Talent, but if his tabloid background rears its ugly head, I won't watch. I'm sick of the tabloidization of American television. British news "talent" has done serious damage to journalism both here and abroad. Morgan used to work for the sickest mind in news, Rupert Murdoch. Morgan would do well to forget he ever knew Murdork, the most evil man in journalism. Now's the time to reclaim actual skills in interviewing by treating each subject with charity, humanity and decency. After all, first and foremost they're human beings.
Posted by: SoCalGal | September 08, 2010 at 09:24 AM
C'mon CNN!!!??? How about hiring an AMERICAN!!! I'm fed up with all this 'outsourcing' crap...hire an American..we need the jobs!!!
Posted by: Big Dude | September 08, 2010 at 09:57 AM
I hope he leaves his "what's wrong with America" attitude in Britain. That will not go over well here and he won't last long if he does that. I stopped watching This Week the moment they put Amanpour in the chair.
Posted by: sue | September 08, 2010 at 10:06 AM
I think he is fair, maybe leans a little on the glass half empty. He is the first to always hit the bell when Americas Got Talent is showcasing poorly. I don't mind listening to him if you like a stiff upper lip Brit. What happened to all the good old American entertainers? Have we run low? We have the Brits running American Idol and SYTYCD and Americas Got Talent. Is there a message here?
Posted by: bettye198 | September 08, 2010 at 11:44 AM
I like this article.
Posted by: Monica | September 08, 2010 at 01:03 PM
well, i suppose it makes some kind of sense - take one figure of fun and replace him with another, only from across the pond. so it might play exotic. in the uk, he's known as piers moron. check out his great tabloid editorial work for proof...
Posted by: Paul Byrne | September 08, 2010 at 02:08 PM
Why did they have to replace Larry King with some British guy? aren't there any good, qualified Americans out there they could have chosen? The British never hire any Americans to host their shows over there in the UK, so why should we give them all the good TV shots over here in the U.S. I think that Charlie Rose or Tavis Smiley would have been excellent choices to replace Larry King. I think they're both being wasted at PBS.
Posted by: mrck | September 09, 2010 at 04:50 PM