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	<title>Observer &#187; Network Newsrooms Prepare for Plan B &#8230; Sebastian Junger&#8217;s Perfect Desert Storm? &#8230; SNL&#8217;s Hardest Show Yet</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Network Newsrooms Prepare for Plan B &#8230; Sebastian Junger&#8217;s Perfect Desert Storm? &#8230; SNL&#8217;s Hardest Show Yet</title>
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		<title>Network Newsrooms Prepare for Plan B &#8230; Sebastian Junger&#8217;s Perfect Desert Storm? &#8230; SNL&#8217;s Hardest Show Yet</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/10/network-newsrooms-prepare-for-plan-b-sebastian-jungers-perfect-desert-storm-snls-hardest-show-yet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Oct 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/10/network-newsrooms-prepare-for-plan-b-sebastian-jungers-perfect-desert-storm-snls-hardest-show-yet/</link>
			<dc:creator>Jason Gay</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Wednesday, oct. 17</p>
<p>The anthrax cases at NBC and ABC News have raised a number</p>
<p>of troubling questions for news networks around the city. Amid the obvious</p>
<p>human concerns, there's now a practical issue: Where do you do the news if you</p>
<p>can't use the newsroom?</p>
<p> On Friday, Oct. 12, NBC moved its NBC Nightly News with Tom</p>
<p>Brokaw broadcast at Rockefeller Center</p>
<p>downstairs to Studio 1A, the home of Today, when word broke that Mr. Brokaw's</p>
<p>assistant, Erin O'Connor, had contracted the cutaneous</p>
<p>form of anthrax after handling mail intended for the anchor.</p>
<p> It was a strange sight, one that Mr. Brokaw himself noted as</p>
<p>he sternly delivered reports about his own staff from a desk usually occupied</p>
<p>by Today news anchor Ann Curry. Mr. Brokaw and the Nightly News remained at</p>
<p>Studio 1A on Monday, Oct. 15, and Tuesday, Oct. 16. An NBC spokesperson said</p>
<p>they planned to be there until they got the go-ahead to return to their studio.</p>
<p> Elsewhere, news networks re-examined their options should</p>
<p>events-or, as in the case of NBC, a criminal and public-health</p>
<p>investigation-dictate that a news telecast be moved.</p>
<p> For ABC News, such a scenario would play out sooner than</p>
<p>expected. On the afternoon of Oct. 15, an ABC News spokesperson responded to a</p>
<p>hypothetical question by saying that the network had a long-standing</p>
<p>"contingency plan" to move news operations in case of an emergency. The</p>
<p>spokesperson declined to say where the newsroom staff could go, but possible</p>
<p>alternative venues presumably included ABC-Disney properties near the West</p>
<p>66th Street headquarters of World News Tonight</p>
<p>with Peter Jennings, or the Times Square studio used by</p>
<p>Good Morning America.</p>
<p> Several hours later, however, that plan became reality, as</p>
<p>the startling news arrived that the 7-month-old child of an ABC News producer</p>
<p>had contracted the cutaneous form of anthrax after</p>
<p>spending time in the newsroom. Though it was unclear if the child was exposed</p>
<p>to anthrax in the newsroom, the World News Tonight offices and some editing</p>
<p>facilities were shut down immediately for examination, though WNT was able to</p>
<p>broadcast from West 66th Street</p>
<p>on both Monday and Tuesday.</p>
<p> Over at CBS News headquarters on West 57th Street, one</p>
<p>emergency alternative for the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather was the G.M.</p>
<p>Building on 59th Street and Fifth Avenue, home of The Early Show.</p>
<p> "There are a lot of other studios in town, so I suspect if</p>
<p>you had to move, it would be easy enough," said CBS News spokeswoman Sandy Genelius. "But I'd suspect our primary backup would be the G.M.</p>
<p>Building."</p>
<p> Ms. Genelius said that CBS News</p>
<p>had an anthrax scare of its own at the network's Washington, D.C., bureau on</p>
<p>Saturday, Oct. 13, where, she said, an envelope was discovered with a powdery</p>
<p>white substance on its outside. The F.B.I. was notified, and an examination</p>
<p>that day showed no signs of anthrax, Ms. Genelius</p>
<p>said.</p>
<p> The Fox News Channel also reportedly received a suspicious</p>
<p>letter with a powdery white substance addressed to Fox News chairman and chief</p>
<p>executive Roger Ailes. (The letter tested negative</p>
<p>for anthrax.)</p>
<p>  a</p>
<p>Fox News spokesperson said the company did have a contingency plan, too, but</p>
<p>declined to give details. However, it is possible that Fox News would go to the</p>
<p>Upper East Side studios of WNYW Channel 5, which News</p>
<p>Corp. owns, or even to Secaucus, N.J.,</p>
<p>the home of News Corp.'s new local channel, WGN/UPN 9.</p>
<p> Washington, D.C.,</p>
<p>was also an option for Fox News, even though much of the network's evening</p>
<p>lineup is taped in New York.</p>
<p>Other network representatives said the D.C. studios could be used should a New</p>
<p>York newsroom operation be disrupted for a longer</p>
<p>period of time. NBC also has the option of using its MSNBC and CNBC studios in New</p>
<p>Jersey.</p>
<p> CNN, of course, has numerous studios outside New</p>
<p>York, in particular the company's sprawling</p>
<p>headquarters in Atlanta. A CNN</p>
<p>spokesperson said that the network is "taking all appropriate precautions. We</p>
<p>have many bureaus we can utilize in case of an emergency."</p>
<p> Isn't this all getting a little incredible and sad? Tonight on CNN, Larry King Live, from sunny Los Angeles-formerly</p>
<p>known as the land of earthquakes and drive-bys, and suddenly a serene-sounding</p>
<p>oasis. [CNN, 10, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Thursday, oct. 18</p>
<p> &amp; ABC News has itself a new international newsman:</p>
<p>Sebastian Junger. Mr. Junger,</p>
<p>of course, wrote a little book a couple years back called The Perfect Storm,</p>
<p>about a fishing boat from Gloucester,</p>
<p>Ma. That thing sold a few copies, didn't it?</p>
<p> Mr. Junger is also something of an</p>
<p>expert on Afghanistan</p>
<p>and especially the Northern Alliance, having spent time</p>
<p>with rebels in the region prior to Sept. 11. That background attracted ABC</p>
<p>News, said Prime Time Thursday executive producer David Doss.</p>
<p> "He has a fascination with the story and the area," said Mr.</p>
<p>Doss.</p>
<p> Mr. Junger left for Pakistan</p>
<p>on Friday, Oct. 12. The hope is that he'll file reports from the field for</p>
<p>Prime Time Thursday and perhaps 20/20 and Nightline.</p>
<p> Mr. Doss said Mr. Junger's crew</p>
<p>will be relatively small, and includes veteran ABC News producer Bert Rudman and one of Mr. Junger's</p>
<p>old pals from his previous visit to the region.</p>
<p> As for Mr. Junger's relative lack</p>
<p>of television experience, Mr. Doss said he wasn't worried. The writer recently</p>
<p>did a special for the National Geographic Channel, and Mr. Doss said the ABC</p>
<p>News staff spent time prepping Mr. Junger for his</p>
<p>assignment.</p>
<p> "I think we're sending a really seasoned professional,</p>
<p>obviously an outstanding reporter and writer," Mr. Doss said. "There is always</p>
<p>a bit of a gamble, but with someone of his background … it seems like a pretty</p>
<p>good bet."</p>
<p> Mr. Junger, of course, is also a</p>
<p>contributing editor to Vanity Fair. A spokesperson for Vanity Fair said that</p>
<p>the magazine was aware of Mr. Junger's deal with ABC</p>
<p>News and had no problem with the arrangement.</p>
<p> Tonight on ABC, see if Mr. Junger</p>
<p>pops up on Prime TimeThursday. [WABC,</p>
<p>7, 10 p.m.]</p>
<p> Friday, oct. 19</p>
<p> &amp; Scattered among all the fancy</p>
<p>network types in the dust of Pakistan</p>
<p>and Afghanistan</p>
<p>are a few local TV news people from around the country. But the only local news</p>
<p>guy from New York is WABC Channel</p>
<p>7's Jim Dolan.</p>
<p> Mr. Dolan's been in Islamabad,</p>
<p>Pakistan, for about two</p>
<p>weeks. "Jim is one of the most aggressive, smart guys you have ever seen," said</p>
<p>WABC news director Dan Forman. "He's probably one of the few television</p>
<p>reporters in New York that people</p>
<p>actually know by name."</p>
<p> Mr. Forman is there with veteran cameraman Joe Tesauro, Mr. Forman said.</p>
<p> The cost of sending a team to Pakistan</p>
<p>is expensive, especially by local-news-budget standards. Mr. Forman</p>
<p>acknowledged that before the U.S.</p>
<p>attack on Afghanistan</p>
<p>began on Oct. 7, he had considered bringing Mr. Dolan</p>
<p>and Mr. Tesauro back home.</p>
<p> "The action hadn't started yet, and we were starting to feel</p>
<p>that we were just repackaging stuff," he said. "Then [Oct. 7] hit and we were</p>
<p>there on the ground in Islamabad,</p>
<p>when the fur was flying, and I was really proud that we were there."</p>
<p> Mr. Forman said his main concern continues to be Mr. Dolan</p>
<p>and Mr. Tesauro's safety. "I'm anticipating [them]</p>
<p>staying there at least a few more weeks," Mr. Forman said on Oct. 11. "But I</p>
<p>don't know. It could be longer, it could be shorter. I talk to him and Joe and</p>
<p>make sure they're O.K., make sure their families are O.K. with it."</p>
<p> Mr. Forman said that the World</p>
<p>Trade Center</p>
<p>attack and its aftermath have turned the local news business on its ear.</p>
<p> "Everything has changed," he said. "This morning, we were</p>
<p>looking at a press release out of Nassau</p>
<p>County about an insurance scam.</p>
<p>Normally, that would have been a decent story for the day. We look at that and</p>
<p>laugh now."</p>
<p> We laugh, too-but tonight, it's a pained laugh for former</p>
<p>ABC News guy Anderson Cooper, now marooned as the host of Mole II. [WABC, 7, 8</p>
<p>p.m.]</p>
<p> Saturday, oct. 20</p>
<p> $ Shortly before Saturday Night Live began on Saturday, Oct.</p>
<p>13, executive producer Lorne Michaels assembled his cast and crew and told them</p>
<p>that the last three shows had been the hardest he'd ever done. Mr. Michaels</p>
<p>told the SNL-ers he was "incredibly proud" of how</p>
<p>they'd held up under the difficult circumstances. And then he told them all to</p>
<p>go out there and have a good show.</p>
<p> It has been some month for SNL, now in its 27th season.</p>
<p>First was the season premiere on Saturday, Sept. 29, when Mr. Michaels and the</p>
<p>SNL team tried to figure out a way to make comedy in the wake of the World</p>
<p>Trade Center</p>
<p>and Pentagon attacks. (Wisely, they brought in Rudy Giuliani-flanked by members</p>
<p>of the Fire Department, police and E.M.S.-to give them a Mayoral thumbs-up.)</p>
<p> Then there was the frantic Friday of Oct. 12, when SNL's home, 30 Rock, was partially evacuated. The cast was</p>
<p>in rehearsals that morning, and when guest host Drew Barrymore heard the news,</p>
<p>she went back to her hotel.</p>
<p> Mr. Michaels said he called Ms. Barrymore and tried to calm</p>
<p>her down, reassuring her it was safe to come back. He</p>
<p>wasn't the only one who talked to the star, who was naturally a little freaked.</p>
<p> "I talked to her, and I think Penny Marshall talked to her,</p>
<p>and I think Ellen Barkin</p>
<p>talked to her because she was near the hotel Drew was at," Mr. Michaels said.</p>
<p>"Tom [Green, Ms. Barrymore's husband] agreed to fly in [from California]."</p>
<p> Ms. Barrymore eventually decided to return to the set. "She</p>
<p>came back to the studio pretty early in the afternoon, and then she worked</p>
<p>until we all did, until about midnight,"</p>
<p>Mr. Michaels said. NBC chairman Bob Wright also spoke to Ms. Barrymore that</p>
<p>afternoon, he said.</p>
<p> The next night, Ms. Barrymore made reference to her worries</p>
<p>during her opening monologue, when a camera cut to Mr. Green sitting in the</p>
<p>audience, wearing a gas mask.</p>
<p> Mr. Michaels said he briefly considered shutting down on</p>
<p>Friday and canceling the Oct. 13 show. "I think everyone there was just</p>
<p>frightened," he said. "When there is anthrax in the building, and people are</p>
<p>lined up to be swabbed with a nasal swab and there's a big crowd, you just</p>
<p>don't know whether what you are doing makes any sense."</p>
<p> But Mr. Michaels said the SNL staff felt better after NBC</p>
<p>president Andy Lack came to the set on Friday and reassured them that they were</p>
<p>safe. They noted that Conan O'Brien had taped his show in Rockefeller</p>
<p>Center that afternoon. The SNL cast</p>
<p>and crew decided to go forward, Mr. Michaels said, adding, "Everyone was</p>
<p>resolute."</p>
<p> Another concern was the studio audience. Mr. Michaels said</p>
<p>he was worried no one would show up, but ticket holders were calling NBC</p>
<p>throughout Friday, wondering if the show would go on and pledging to attend.</p>
<p>When the producer left Rockefeller Center</p>
<p>late on Friday, he noticed that people were sleeping on 49th</p>
<p>Street as always, hoping to score tickets. On</p>
<p>Saturday, the packed house included NBC Entertainment president Jeff Zucker.</p>
<p> Mr. Michaels said that doing the Saturday, Oct. 13, show was</p>
<p>much harder than the season premiere. "I must say that if anyone from our cast</p>
<p>said, 'Listen, I can't do it,' I would have said, 'I understand,'" he said.</p>
<p>"But nobody did."</p>
<p> And the SNL after-party that night?</p>
<p> "The party," said Mr. Michaels,</p>
<p>"was much easier."</p>
<p> Tonight's SNL's a repeat with Lara</p>
<p>Flynn Boyle, Talk magazine's celebrity mascot. [WNBC, 4, 11:35 p.m.]</p>
<p> Sunday, oct. 21</p>
<p> # Tonight on TNT, The American</p>
<p>President. It makes you yearn for the old days, when Presidents worried about</p>
<p>stuff like getting into Annette Bening's pants. [TNT, 3, 8</p>
<p>p.m.]</p>
<p> Monday, oct. 22</p>
<p> b I Love Lucy turns 50 this month.</p>
<p>And man, if you ever get tired of listening to today's TV writers complain</p>
<p>about their grueling lives-15 Ivy Leaguers in Bermuda shorts yakking around</p>
<p>wooden tables, scarfing Yo-Yo's and coming up with</p>
<p>boners for Niles Crane-they should listen to people like Bob Schiller, who was</p>
<p>one of the four people (four!) who wrote for ILL during its seven-year run.</p>
<p> "They got staffs [today] resembling a New</p>
<p>York telephone book!" Mr. Schiller said.</p>
<p> What does Mr. Schiller like on TV these days? Ah, not much.</p>
<p> "I'm an old crank!" he said. "I don't think it's funny."</p>
<p> He said he liked Seinfeld and Sex and the City, the latter</p>
<p>of which he called "acceptable porn."</p>
<p> Mr. Schiller said he wasn't going overboard with the ILL</p>
<p>nostalgia. "If you really wanna know what I'm</p>
<p>thinking, I'm thinking I'm not getting any residuals and it upsets me!" he</p>
<p>cracked.</p>
<p> Tonight, Lucy-mania rages on TV Land. [TVLAND,</p>
<p>85, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Tuesday, oct. 23</p>
<p> % Will someone please spank the producers of Fox Sports? At</p>
<p>the end of the Yankees game on Monday, Oct. 15-when they clinched their 5-3</p>
<p>victory over the A's-cameras caught manager Joe Torre</p>
<p>walking over to the stands, grabbing Rudolph Giuliani and pulling the Mayor</p>
<p>onto the field, presumably to join the celebrating players.</p>
<p> But you didn't see that last part. Just as Mr. Torre and the Mayor began to cross the diamond arm-in-arm</p>
<p>in what was, for obvious reasons, one of the more touching and meaningful</p>
<p>sports moments this city has witnessed in recent years, Fox Sports cut to … a</p>
<p>meaningless promo for the season premiere of The X-Files!</p>
<p> Thanks a lot, boneheads.</p>
<p> Believe it or not, that wasn't even Fox Sports' biggest</p>
<p>blunder of the week. The night before, at the conclusion of the</p>
<p>Diamondbacks-Cardinals series, after watching Diamondbacks hero Tony Womack in</p>
<p>an emotional embrace with a woman on the field, Fox play-by-play guy Joe Buck</p>
<p>asked Mr. Womack: "Tony, was that your mother giving you a hug?"</p>
<p> Said Mr. Womack: "No, that was my wife."</p>
<p> Yeeeeeeeee-ikes! Tonight on Fox, Dark Angel. Tell Rudy to call a press</p>
<p>conference just for the hell of it, so he can pre-empt it. [FOX,</p>
<p>5, 9 p.m.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wednesday, oct. 17</p>
<p>The anthrax cases at NBC and ABC News have raised a number</p>
<p>of troubling questions for news networks around the city. Amid the obvious</p>
<p>human concerns, there's now a practical issue: Where do you do the news if you</p>
<p>can't use the newsroom?</p>
<p> On Friday, Oct. 12, NBC moved its NBC Nightly News with Tom</p>
<p>Brokaw broadcast at Rockefeller Center</p>
<p>downstairs to Studio 1A, the home of Today, when word broke that Mr. Brokaw's</p>
<p>assistant, Erin O'Connor, had contracted the cutaneous</p>
<p>form of anthrax after handling mail intended for the anchor.</p>
<p> It was a strange sight, one that Mr. Brokaw himself noted as</p>
<p>he sternly delivered reports about his own staff from a desk usually occupied</p>
<p>by Today news anchor Ann Curry. Mr. Brokaw and the Nightly News remained at</p>
<p>Studio 1A on Monday, Oct. 15, and Tuesday, Oct. 16. An NBC spokesperson said</p>
<p>they planned to be there until they got the go-ahead to return to their studio.</p>
<p> Elsewhere, news networks re-examined their options should</p>
<p>events-or, as in the case of NBC, a criminal and public-health</p>
<p>investigation-dictate that a news telecast be moved.</p>
<p> For ABC News, such a scenario would play out sooner than</p>
<p>expected. On the afternoon of Oct. 15, an ABC News spokesperson responded to a</p>
<p>hypothetical question by saying that the network had a long-standing</p>
<p>"contingency plan" to move news operations in case of an emergency. The</p>
<p>spokesperson declined to say where the newsroom staff could go, but possible</p>
<p>alternative venues presumably included ABC-Disney properties near the West</p>
<p>66th Street headquarters of World News Tonight</p>
<p>with Peter Jennings, or the Times Square studio used by</p>
<p>Good Morning America.</p>
<p> Several hours later, however, that plan became reality, as</p>
<p>the startling news arrived that the 7-month-old child of an ABC News producer</p>
<p>had contracted the cutaneous form of anthrax after</p>
<p>spending time in the newsroom. Though it was unclear if the child was exposed</p>
<p>to anthrax in the newsroom, the World News Tonight offices and some editing</p>
<p>facilities were shut down immediately for examination, though WNT was able to</p>
<p>broadcast from West 66th Street</p>
<p>on both Monday and Tuesday.</p>
<p> Over at CBS News headquarters on West 57th Street, one</p>
<p>emergency alternative for the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather was the G.M.</p>
<p>Building on 59th Street and Fifth Avenue, home of The Early Show.</p>
<p> "There are a lot of other studios in town, so I suspect if</p>
<p>you had to move, it would be easy enough," said CBS News spokeswoman Sandy Genelius. "But I'd suspect our primary backup would be the G.M.</p>
<p>Building."</p>
<p> Ms. Genelius said that CBS News</p>
<p>had an anthrax scare of its own at the network's Washington, D.C., bureau on</p>
<p>Saturday, Oct. 13, where, she said, an envelope was discovered with a powdery</p>
<p>white substance on its outside. The F.B.I. was notified, and an examination</p>
<p>that day showed no signs of anthrax, Ms. Genelius</p>
<p>said.</p>
<p> The Fox News Channel also reportedly received a suspicious</p>
<p>letter with a powdery white substance addressed to Fox News chairman and chief</p>
<p>executive Roger Ailes. (The letter tested negative</p>
<p>for anthrax.)</p>
<p>  a</p>
<p>Fox News spokesperson said the company did have a contingency plan, too, but</p>
<p>declined to give details. However, it is possible that Fox News would go to the</p>
<p>Upper East Side studios of WNYW Channel 5, which News</p>
<p>Corp. owns, or even to Secaucus, N.J.,</p>
<p>the home of News Corp.'s new local channel, WGN/UPN 9.</p>
<p> Washington, D.C.,</p>
<p>was also an option for Fox News, even though much of the network's evening</p>
<p>lineup is taped in New York.</p>
<p>Other network representatives said the D.C. studios could be used should a New</p>
<p>York newsroom operation be disrupted for a longer</p>
<p>period of time. NBC also has the option of using its MSNBC and CNBC studios in New</p>
<p>Jersey.</p>
<p> CNN, of course, has numerous studios outside New</p>
<p>York, in particular the company's sprawling</p>
<p>headquarters in Atlanta. A CNN</p>
<p>spokesperson said that the network is "taking all appropriate precautions. We</p>
<p>have many bureaus we can utilize in case of an emergency."</p>
<p> Isn't this all getting a little incredible and sad? Tonight on CNN, Larry King Live, from sunny Los Angeles-formerly</p>
<p>known as the land of earthquakes and drive-bys, and suddenly a serene-sounding</p>
<p>oasis. [CNN, 10, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Thursday, oct. 18</p>
<p> &amp; ABC News has itself a new international newsman:</p>
<p>Sebastian Junger. Mr. Junger,</p>
<p>of course, wrote a little book a couple years back called The Perfect Storm,</p>
<p>about a fishing boat from Gloucester,</p>
<p>Ma. That thing sold a few copies, didn't it?</p>
<p> Mr. Junger is also something of an</p>
<p>expert on Afghanistan</p>
<p>and especially the Northern Alliance, having spent time</p>
<p>with rebels in the region prior to Sept. 11. That background attracted ABC</p>
<p>News, said Prime Time Thursday executive producer David Doss.</p>
<p> "He has a fascination with the story and the area," said Mr.</p>
<p>Doss.</p>
<p> Mr. Junger left for Pakistan</p>
<p>on Friday, Oct. 12. The hope is that he'll file reports from the field for</p>
<p>Prime Time Thursday and perhaps 20/20 and Nightline.</p>
<p> Mr. Doss said Mr. Junger's crew</p>
<p>will be relatively small, and includes veteran ABC News producer Bert Rudman and one of Mr. Junger's</p>
<p>old pals from his previous visit to the region.</p>
<p> As for Mr. Junger's relative lack</p>
<p>of television experience, Mr. Doss said he wasn't worried. The writer recently</p>
<p>did a special for the National Geographic Channel, and Mr. Doss said the ABC</p>
<p>News staff spent time prepping Mr. Junger for his</p>
<p>assignment.</p>
<p> "I think we're sending a really seasoned professional,</p>
<p>obviously an outstanding reporter and writer," Mr. Doss said. "There is always</p>
<p>a bit of a gamble, but with someone of his background … it seems like a pretty</p>
<p>good bet."</p>
<p> Mr. Junger, of course, is also a</p>
<p>contributing editor to Vanity Fair. A spokesperson for Vanity Fair said that</p>
<p>the magazine was aware of Mr. Junger's deal with ABC</p>
<p>News and had no problem with the arrangement.</p>
<p> Tonight on ABC, see if Mr. Junger</p>
<p>pops up on Prime TimeThursday. [WABC,</p>
<p>7, 10 p.m.]</p>
<p> Friday, oct. 19</p>
<p> &amp; Scattered among all the fancy</p>
<p>network types in the dust of Pakistan</p>
<p>and Afghanistan</p>
<p>are a few local TV news people from around the country. But the only local news</p>
<p>guy from New York is WABC Channel</p>
<p>7's Jim Dolan.</p>
<p> Mr. Dolan's been in Islamabad,</p>
<p>Pakistan, for about two</p>
<p>weeks. "Jim is one of the most aggressive, smart guys you have ever seen," said</p>
<p>WABC news director Dan Forman. "He's probably one of the few television</p>
<p>reporters in New York that people</p>
<p>actually know by name."</p>
<p> Mr. Forman is there with veteran cameraman Joe Tesauro, Mr. Forman said.</p>
<p> The cost of sending a team to Pakistan</p>
<p>is expensive, especially by local-news-budget standards. Mr. Forman</p>
<p>acknowledged that before the U.S.</p>
<p>attack on Afghanistan</p>
<p>began on Oct. 7, he had considered bringing Mr. Dolan</p>
<p>and Mr. Tesauro back home.</p>
<p> "The action hadn't started yet, and we were starting to feel</p>
<p>that we were just repackaging stuff," he said. "Then [Oct. 7] hit and we were</p>
<p>there on the ground in Islamabad,</p>
<p>when the fur was flying, and I was really proud that we were there."</p>
<p> Mr. Forman said his main concern continues to be Mr. Dolan</p>
<p>and Mr. Tesauro's safety. "I'm anticipating [them]</p>
<p>staying there at least a few more weeks," Mr. Forman said on Oct. 11. "But I</p>
<p>don't know. It could be longer, it could be shorter. I talk to him and Joe and</p>
<p>make sure they're O.K., make sure their families are O.K. with it."</p>
<p> Mr. Forman said that the World</p>
<p>Trade Center</p>
<p>attack and its aftermath have turned the local news business on its ear.</p>
<p> "Everything has changed," he said. "This morning, we were</p>
<p>looking at a press release out of Nassau</p>
<p>County about an insurance scam.</p>
<p>Normally, that would have been a decent story for the day. We look at that and</p>
<p>laugh now."</p>
<p> We laugh, too-but tonight, it's a pained laugh for former</p>
<p>ABC News guy Anderson Cooper, now marooned as the host of Mole II. [WABC, 7, 8</p>
<p>p.m.]</p>
<p> Saturday, oct. 20</p>
<p> $ Shortly before Saturday Night Live began on Saturday, Oct.</p>
<p>13, executive producer Lorne Michaels assembled his cast and crew and told them</p>
<p>that the last three shows had been the hardest he'd ever done. Mr. Michaels</p>
<p>told the SNL-ers he was "incredibly proud" of how</p>
<p>they'd held up under the difficult circumstances. And then he told them all to</p>
<p>go out there and have a good show.</p>
<p> It has been some month for SNL, now in its 27th season.</p>
<p>First was the season premiere on Saturday, Sept. 29, when Mr. Michaels and the</p>
<p>SNL team tried to figure out a way to make comedy in the wake of the World</p>
<p>Trade Center</p>
<p>and Pentagon attacks. (Wisely, they brought in Rudy Giuliani-flanked by members</p>
<p>of the Fire Department, police and E.M.S.-to give them a Mayoral thumbs-up.)</p>
<p> Then there was the frantic Friday of Oct. 12, when SNL's home, 30 Rock, was partially evacuated. The cast was</p>
<p>in rehearsals that morning, and when guest host Drew Barrymore heard the news,</p>
<p>she went back to her hotel.</p>
<p> Mr. Michaels said he called Ms. Barrymore and tried to calm</p>
<p>her down, reassuring her it was safe to come back. He</p>
<p>wasn't the only one who talked to the star, who was naturally a little freaked.</p>
<p> "I talked to her, and I think Penny Marshall talked to her,</p>
<p>and I think Ellen Barkin</p>
<p>talked to her because she was near the hotel Drew was at," Mr. Michaels said.</p>
<p>"Tom [Green, Ms. Barrymore's husband] agreed to fly in [from California]."</p>
<p> Ms. Barrymore eventually decided to return to the set. "She</p>
<p>came back to the studio pretty early in the afternoon, and then she worked</p>
<p>until we all did, until about midnight,"</p>
<p>Mr. Michaels said. NBC chairman Bob Wright also spoke to Ms. Barrymore that</p>
<p>afternoon, he said.</p>
<p> The next night, Ms. Barrymore made reference to her worries</p>
<p>during her opening monologue, when a camera cut to Mr. Green sitting in the</p>
<p>audience, wearing a gas mask.</p>
<p> Mr. Michaels said he briefly considered shutting down on</p>
<p>Friday and canceling the Oct. 13 show. "I think everyone there was just</p>
<p>frightened," he said. "When there is anthrax in the building, and people are</p>
<p>lined up to be swabbed with a nasal swab and there's a big crowd, you just</p>
<p>don't know whether what you are doing makes any sense."</p>
<p> But Mr. Michaels said the SNL staff felt better after NBC</p>
<p>president Andy Lack came to the set on Friday and reassured them that they were</p>
<p>safe. They noted that Conan O'Brien had taped his show in Rockefeller</p>
<p>Center that afternoon. The SNL cast</p>
<p>and crew decided to go forward, Mr. Michaels said, adding, "Everyone was</p>
<p>resolute."</p>
<p> Another concern was the studio audience. Mr. Michaels said</p>
<p>he was worried no one would show up, but ticket holders were calling NBC</p>
<p>throughout Friday, wondering if the show would go on and pledging to attend.</p>
<p>When the producer left Rockefeller Center</p>
<p>late on Friday, he noticed that people were sleeping on 49th</p>
<p>Street as always, hoping to score tickets. On</p>
<p>Saturday, the packed house included NBC Entertainment president Jeff Zucker.</p>
<p> Mr. Michaels said that doing the Saturday, Oct. 13, show was</p>
<p>much harder than the season premiere. "I must say that if anyone from our cast</p>
<p>said, 'Listen, I can't do it,' I would have said, 'I understand,'" he said.</p>
<p>"But nobody did."</p>
<p> And the SNL after-party that night?</p>
<p> "The party," said Mr. Michaels,</p>
<p>"was much easier."</p>
<p> Tonight's SNL's a repeat with Lara</p>
<p>Flynn Boyle, Talk magazine's celebrity mascot. [WNBC, 4, 11:35 p.m.]</p>
<p> Sunday, oct. 21</p>
<p> # Tonight on TNT, The American</p>
<p>President. It makes you yearn for the old days, when Presidents worried about</p>
<p>stuff like getting into Annette Bening's pants. [TNT, 3, 8</p>
<p>p.m.]</p>
<p> Monday, oct. 22</p>
<p> b I Love Lucy turns 50 this month.</p>
<p>And man, if you ever get tired of listening to today's TV writers complain</p>
<p>about their grueling lives-15 Ivy Leaguers in Bermuda shorts yakking around</p>
<p>wooden tables, scarfing Yo-Yo's and coming up with</p>
<p>boners for Niles Crane-they should listen to people like Bob Schiller, who was</p>
<p>one of the four people (four!) who wrote for ILL during its seven-year run.</p>
<p> "They got staffs [today] resembling a New</p>
<p>York telephone book!" Mr. Schiller said.</p>
<p> What does Mr. Schiller like on TV these days? Ah, not much.</p>
<p> "I'm an old crank!" he said. "I don't think it's funny."</p>
<p> He said he liked Seinfeld and Sex and the City, the latter</p>
<p>of which he called "acceptable porn."</p>
<p> Mr. Schiller said he wasn't going overboard with the ILL</p>
<p>nostalgia. "If you really wanna know what I'm</p>
<p>thinking, I'm thinking I'm not getting any residuals and it upsets me!" he</p>
<p>cracked.</p>
<p> Tonight, Lucy-mania rages on TV Land. [TVLAND,</p>
<p>85, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Tuesday, oct. 23</p>
<p> % Will someone please spank the producers of Fox Sports? At</p>
<p>the end of the Yankees game on Monday, Oct. 15-when they clinched their 5-3</p>
<p>victory over the A's-cameras caught manager Joe Torre</p>
<p>walking over to the stands, grabbing Rudolph Giuliani and pulling the Mayor</p>
<p>onto the field, presumably to join the celebrating players.</p>
<p> But you didn't see that last part. Just as Mr. Torre and the Mayor began to cross the diamond arm-in-arm</p>
<p>in what was, for obvious reasons, one of the more touching and meaningful</p>
<p>sports moments this city has witnessed in recent years, Fox Sports cut to … a</p>
<p>meaningless promo for the season premiere of The X-Files!</p>
<p> Thanks a lot, boneheads.</p>
<p> Believe it or not, that wasn't even Fox Sports' biggest</p>
<p>blunder of the week. The night before, at the conclusion of the</p>
<p>Diamondbacks-Cardinals series, after watching Diamondbacks hero Tony Womack in</p>
<p>an emotional embrace with a woman on the field, Fox play-by-play guy Joe Buck</p>
<p>asked Mr. Womack: "Tony, was that your mother giving you a hug?"</p>
<p> Said Mr. Womack: "No, that was my wife."</p>
<p> Yeeeeeeeee-ikes! Tonight on Fox, Dark Angel. Tell Rudy to call a press</p>
<p>conference just for the hell of it, so he can pre-empt it. [FOX,</p>
<p>5, 9 p.m.</p>
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