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	<title>Observer &#187; Stu Bloomberg</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Stu Bloomberg</title>
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		<title>Network President Plans to Restore ABC&#8217;s Happier Days</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2002/02/network-president-plans-to-restore-abcs-happier-days/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Feb 2002 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2002/02/network-president-plans-to-restore-abcs-happier-days/</link>
			<dc:creator>Jason Gay</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Susan Lyne, the new president of ABC entertainment, was in a</p>
<p>cheery mood. It was Monday, Jan. 28, and Ms. Lyne, 51, was sitting in her airy</p>
<p>office on West 66th Street, mulling over ratings for the previous night's debut</p>
<p>of Rose Red , a new Stephen King miniseries.</p>
<p>The numbers looked solid: Rose Red</p>
<p>grabbed more than 20 million viewers and also performed well in the 18-to-49</p>
<p>age group, television's most coveted demographic. Ms. Lyne had already given</p>
<p>the news to Mr. King, and now Disney president Robert Iger was on the horn.</p>
<p> "Isn't that niiiice ?"</p>
<p>Ms. Lyne cooed into the phone. She and Mr. Iger chatted about Mr. King, and</p>
<p>talked about The Kingdom , a new drama</p>
<p>series the author is creating for the network. Prior to becoming entertainment</p>
<p>president, Ms. Lyne was in charge of ABC's movies and miniseries, and she had</p>
<p>worked with Mr. King on repeated occasions.</p>
<p> "I always figured one of the things I had to do here was just not</p>
<p>to screw up that relationship," Ms. Lyne said to Mr. Iger, referring to Mr.</p>
<p>King.</p>
<p> She hadn't screwed it up. But Ms. Lyne's network is sure screwed</p>
<p>up. After riding Regis Philbin to ratings dominance in 2000 and early 2001,</p>
<p>ABC's fortunes have fizzled. The network is currently mired behind CBS and NBC,</p>
<p>and tangling with Fox for third place. Drama and comedy development, shortchanged</p>
<p>during the Who Wants to Be a Millionaire</p>
<p>run, is in rough shape; Ms. Lyne-who replaced Stu Bloomberg, himself canned as</p>
<p>ABC's entertainment president in early January-steps aboard an operation</p>
<p>thought to have squandered its best opportunity in years.</p>
<p> At the same time, Ms. Lyne</p>
<p>must negotiate one of the bigger hornets' nests in television. ABC has had four</p>
<p>entertainment presidents in five years-Ms. Lyne, Mr. Bloomberg, Jamie Tarses</p>
<p>and Ted Harbert-and has long been considered a managerially confused shop. With</p>
<p>ABC, the question is always who's really in control: Mr. Iger, Disney chief</p>
<p>executive Michael Eisner or their entertainment president du jour. Said one</p>
<p>industry insider, referring to Ms. Lyne: "She's walking into a multiheaded</p>
<p>hydra where the lines of authority are murky at best."</p>
<p> But Ms. Lyne, a relative newcomer to television who remains</p>
<p>better known in New York as the founding editor of Premiere magazine, figures she can fix ABC by making it a little</p>
<p>classier, and by returning the network to its roots. For years, ABC was a kind</p>
<p>of middlebrow, J.C. Penney network, with a reliable tradition of</p>
<p>family-oriented programming- Happy Days,</p>
<p>Home Improvement , etc.-that may not have won critical acclaim, but</p>
<p>performed ably in the ratings. Though the network did field risky projects- NYPD Blue , Twin Peaks -the ABC sensibility was historically seen as white,</p>
<p>Midwestern and middle-class, younger than CBS, less affluent than NBC's, less</p>
<p>edgy than Fox's.</p>
<p> But in recent years, ABC tried</p>
<p>to remodel itself and get a little sexy. Ms. Tarses, a Wunderkind executive from NBC, was enlisted to develop the edgier,</p>
<p>urbane programs that ABC wanted to help it appeal to a younger, more affluent</p>
<p>audience. Though Ms. Tarses famously flamed out, that strategy remained largely</p>
<p>in place under Mr. Bloomberg, with mixed results. When ABC did develop shows</p>
<p>that appealed to critics- Once &amp; Again ,</p>
<p> Sports Night , The Job -it had trouble converting them into hits.</p>
<p> Meanwhile, it was hard to</p>
<p>discern what ABC represented. Quirky advertising campaigns with fancy</p>
<p>black-and-white portraits and odd slogans-"TV is bad"-only added to the</p>
<p>confusion. And to date, nobody understands what Bob Patterson was.</p>
<p> "The problem is that ABC really hasn't established itself as a</p>
<p>brand," said Stacey Lynn Koerner, a vice president of broadcast research at</p>
<p>Initiative Media, a company that studies broadcasting trends.</p>
<p> In an interview, Ms. Lyne conceded that mistakes were</p>
<p>made-though, in deference to her predecessors, she noted that such observations</p>
<p>were easy to make in hindsight.</p>
<p> "We needed to have those urban, hip 18- to 34-year-old shows that</p>
<p>appealed to upscale viewers, instead of those meat-and-potatoes shows that had</p>
<p>sort of driven ABC in the past," Ms. Lyne said. "The problem when you do</p>
<p>that-besides the fact that you better hit-is that you run the risk of</p>
<p>alienating your core audience of people who have been watching your network for</p>
<p>a long time."</p>
<p> Of course, ABC's biggest blunder may have been its management of</p>
<p>its biggest hit ever. It was less than two years ago when Mr. Bloomberg and ABC</p>
<p>entertainment chairman Lloyd Braun tromped across the stage at Radio City Music</p>
<p>Hall like conquering Roman emperors at the network's upfront presentation. Millionaire had been averaging 28</p>
<p>million viewers per episode;  ABC had</p>
<p>vaulted into first place.</p>
<p> Then, of course, ABC</p>
<p>proceeded to drain Millionaire for</p>
<p>all it was worth. The show was scheduled four nights a week, but that proved to</p>
<p>be too much; eventually cut back to two episodes for the 2001-02 season, Millionaire's ratings fell dramatically,</p>
<p>and its future status on prime time remains unclear. (A syndicated version of Millionaire, not hosted by Mr. Philbin,</p>
<p>is ready to debut next fall.)</p>
<p> Some believe that ABC's</p>
<p>mishandling of Millionaire has been</p>
<p>overblown; the network knew it had a temporary franchise on its hands, this</p>
<p>thinking goes, and was wise to make as much money as it could as fast as it</p>
<p>could.</p>
<p> But most people, including Ms. Lyne, agree that the network</p>
<p>faltered when it didn't do enough to build upon the Millionaire franchise, and didn't create and promote other</p>
<p>successful shows on its strength.</p>
<p> "You take the benefit while you can," Ms. Lyne said. "The problem</p>
<p>was that we weren't able to launch any more shows from that Millionaire bubble."</p>
<p> And now Ms. Lyne ascends to the president's chair at a time when</p>
<p>network television programming has never been more turbulent. Audiences for</p>
<p>broadcast networks continue to thin, and now that the wave of game and reality</p>
<p>shows seems to have died down, prime time's future is as uncertain as ever.</p>
<p> But Ms. Lyne has her believers, who think she might be the right</p>
<p>executive not only to salvage ABC, but also to correct the recent tide of</p>
<p>prime-time gimmickry. Boosters point to Ms. Lyne's picks when she ran ABC's</p>
<p>movies and miniseries, a list that includes acclaimed projects such as Life with Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows ,</p>
<p> Arabian Nights and Tuesdays with Morrie .</p>
<p> "She's kind of a breath of fresh air in a doomed industry," said</p>
<p>Robert Halmi Sr., the executive producer of miniseries epics including Arabian Nights , whose latest project, Dinotopia , is set to air on ABC in May.</p>
<p>"When everybody else-and also her predecessors at ABC-were running to the</p>
<p>lowest common denominator, Susan went the other way."</p>
<p> Ms. Lyne laughed at the suggestion she might be some kind of</p>
<p>highbrow television savior. "Let's be honest," she said, "we also did the Growing Pains reunion movie. I think</p>
<p>there is a place for high and low entertainment."</p>
<p> And those who have worked with Ms. Lyne said that she is capable</p>
<p>of playing both sides of the taste deck-that she won't be stuffing ABC's</p>
<p>schedule with Masterpiece Theatre –esque</p>
<p>knockoffs.</p>
<p> "She's got high taste and mass taste, and she understands both,"</p>
<p>said Chris Connelly, who succeeded Ms. Lyne as editor in chief of Premiere and now hosts Unscripted, an interview show on ESPN, a</p>
<p>Disney property. At Premiere, Mr.</p>
<p>Connelly said, "we put Cindy Crawford on the cover for Fair Game ; we put Madonna on the cover. We weren't just putting Wings of Desire on the cover. Susan knew</p>
<p>she had a business to run, and she played the game."</p>
<p> There, too, Ms. Lyne's prowess is well-known. Other ex-colleagues</p>
<p>noted her ability during her Premiere days</p>
<p>to woo and finesse high-profile subjects, especially during the magazine's</p>
<p>annual power issue, which Hollywood kingmakers would lobby to make.</p>
<p> "There is no better training for a career in Hollywood diplomacy</p>
<p>than publishing the power issue every year," said Cyndi Stivers, the editor in</p>
<p>chief of Time Out New York , who</p>
<p>worked for Ms. Lyne at Premiere . "She</p>
<p>has a very stiff spine and could take it when they threw their hissy fits, but</p>
<p>she never lost sight of where we were going and how we needed to get there."</p>
<p> That training is likely to help Ms. Lyne not only when she deals</p>
<p>with television producers, agents and talent, but also with her own colleagues.</p>
<p>Asked how she interacts with Mr. Eisner, Mr. Iger and Mr. Braun (who was spared</p>
<p>when Mr. Bloomberg was let go), Ms. Lyne diplomatically said that Mr. Eisner</p>
<p>"has no involvement in the network at this point," but that she intends to</p>
<p>consult regularly with Mr. Iger and Mr. Braun.</p>
<p> The trick for Ms. Lyne, of course, will be keeping everyone happy</p>
<p>and giving herself enough elbow room to make the kind of personal imprint that</p>
<p>the best network presidents-the Grant Tinkers, the Brandon Tartikoffs-made.</p>
<p>Said one industry insider, referring to ABC's top-heavy management: "Picking</p>
<p>shows by committee usually rubs the edges off of programs."</p>
<p> And it remains to be seen how long Ms. Lyne will get to put her imprint</p>
<p>on ABC entertainment. Lately, the job has had all the permanence of a</p>
<p>night-manager shift at Ranch 1.</p>
<p> Ms. Lyne is staying in New York with her family for the</p>
<p>foreseeable future, and will commute to Los Angeles. "Everybody at Disney knew</p>
<p>that the only way I was going to take this job is if I could stay here," she</p>
<p>said. For the next few months she'll be reading scripts and watching pilots,</p>
<p>trying to turn her network around and make that little Mouse happy.</p>
<p> It won't be easy.</p>
<p> "We have a big challenge ahead of us," Ms. Lyne said. "And it's</p>
<p>not going to happen fast, or overnight."</p>
<p> Tonight on ABC, watch Denis</p>
<p>Leary in The Job . The Job is</p>
<p>one of those smarty-pants ABC shows, but no one's walking around town in a</p>
<p>Denis Leary T-shirt or coming up to you and saying, "Hey, did you see The Job last night?" [WABC, 7, 9:30 p.m.]</p>
<p> Thursday, jan. 31</p>
<p> On CBS tonight, The</p>
<p>Price Is Right 30th Anniversary . It won't feel the same- PIP is only fun when we're playing hooky</p>
<p>from work, happily recuperating from the "flu." [WCBS, 2, 8 p.m.]</p>
<p> Friday, feb. 1</p>
<p> Tonight, ABC has The Best Commercials You Have Never Seen (And</p>
<p>Some You Have)  (And this is why Susan Lyne has a fancy new job.)</p>
<p> [WABC, 7, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Saturday, feb. 2</p>
<p> On Showtime tonight, The</p>
<p>Original Kings of Comedy.  Comedian D.L. Hughley is funny in this</p>
<p>movie. He wasn't on his ABC sitcom. [SHOW,</p>
<p>48, 8 p.m.]</p>
<p> Sunday, feb. 3</p>
<p> Say goodbye to play-by-play maestro Pat Summerall</p>
<p>tonight during Super Bowl XXXVI on</p>
<p>Fox. Also say goodbye to your smelly Kurt Warner sweatshirt, as New England</p>
<p>strides to a title. [WNYW, 5, 6 p.m.]</p>
<p> Monday, feb. 4</p>
<p> Tonight on the Fox News Channel-now king of cable</p>
<p>television, having smooshed CNN across the board in January-Bill O'Reilly</p>
<p>announces he's going to "spot" Connie Chung 500,000 viewers a night. [FNC, 46, 8 p.m.]</p>
<p> Tuesday, feb. 5</p>
<p>Tonight's E! True</p>
<p>Hollywood Story is Olympic figure-skating champion Scott Hamilton.</p>
<p>We're lookin' here, E!, but we can't spot the Hollywood angle. [E!, 24, 8 p.m.] </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Susan Lyne, the new president of ABC entertainment, was in a</p>
<p>cheery mood. It was Monday, Jan. 28, and Ms. Lyne, 51, was sitting in her airy</p>
<p>office on West 66th Street, mulling over ratings for the previous night's debut</p>
<p>of Rose Red , a new Stephen King miniseries.</p>
<p>The numbers looked solid: Rose Red</p>
<p>grabbed more than 20 million viewers and also performed well in the 18-to-49</p>
<p>age group, television's most coveted demographic. Ms. Lyne had already given</p>
<p>the news to Mr. King, and now Disney president Robert Iger was on the horn.</p>
<p> "Isn't that niiiice ?"</p>
<p>Ms. Lyne cooed into the phone. She and Mr. Iger chatted about Mr. King, and</p>
<p>talked about The Kingdom , a new drama</p>
<p>series the author is creating for the network. Prior to becoming entertainment</p>
<p>president, Ms. Lyne was in charge of ABC's movies and miniseries, and she had</p>
<p>worked with Mr. King on repeated occasions.</p>
<p> "I always figured one of the things I had to do here was just not</p>
<p>to screw up that relationship," Ms. Lyne said to Mr. Iger, referring to Mr.</p>
<p>King.</p>
<p> She hadn't screwed it up. But Ms. Lyne's network is sure screwed</p>
<p>up. After riding Regis Philbin to ratings dominance in 2000 and early 2001,</p>
<p>ABC's fortunes have fizzled. The network is currently mired behind CBS and NBC,</p>
<p>and tangling with Fox for third place. Drama and comedy development, shortchanged</p>
<p>during the Who Wants to Be a Millionaire</p>
<p>run, is in rough shape; Ms. Lyne-who replaced Stu Bloomberg, himself canned as</p>
<p>ABC's entertainment president in early January-steps aboard an operation</p>
<p>thought to have squandered its best opportunity in years.</p>
<p> At the same time, Ms. Lyne</p>
<p>must negotiate one of the bigger hornets' nests in television. ABC has had four</p>
<p>entertainment presidents in five years-Ms. Lyne, Mr. Bloomberg, Jamie Tarses</p>
<p>and Ted Harbert-and has long been considered a managerially confused shop. With</p>
<p>ABC, the question is always who's really in control: Mr. Iger, Disney chief</p>
<p>executive Michael Eisner or their entertainment president du jour. Said one</p>
<p>industry insider, referring to Ms. Lyne: "She's walking into a multiheaded</p>
<p>hydra where the lines of authority are murky at best."</p>
<p> But Ms. Lyne, a relative newcomer to television who remains</p>
<p>better known in New York as the founding editor of Premiere magazine, figures she can fix ABC by making it a little</p>
<p>classier, and by returning the network to its roots. For years, ABC was a kind</p>
<p>of middlebrow, J.C. Penney network, with a reliable tradition of</p>
<p>family-oriented programming- Happy Days,</p>
<p>Home Improvement , etc.-that may not have won critical acclaim, but</p>
<p>performed ably in the ratings. Though the network did field risky projects- NYPD Blue , Twin Peaks -the ABC sensibility was historically seen as white,</p>
<p>Midwestern and middle-class, younger than CBS, less affluent than NBC's, less</p>
<p>edgy than Fox's.</p>
<p> But in recent years, ABC tried</p>
<p>to remodel itself and get a little sexy. Ms. Tarses, a Wunderkind executive from NBC, was enlisted to develop the edgier,</p>
<p>urbane programs that ABC wanted to help it appeal to a younger, more affluent</p>
<p>audience. Though Ms. Tarses famously flamed out, that strategy remained largely</p>
<p>in place under Mr. Bloomberg, with mixed results. When ABC did develop shows</p>
<p>that appealed to critics- Once &amp; Again ,</p>
<p> Sports Night , The Job -it had trouble converting them into hits.</p>
<p> Meanwhile, it was hard to</p>
<p>discern what ABC represented. Quirky advertising campaigns with fancy</p>
<p>black-and-white portraits and odd slogans-"TV is bad"-only added to the</p>
<p>confusion. And to date, nobody understands what Bob Patterson was.</p>
<p> "The problem is that ABC really hasn't established itself as a</p>
<p>brand," said Stacey Lynn Koerner, a vice president of broadcast research at</p>
<p>Initiative Media, a company that studies broadcasting trends.</p>
<p> In an interview, Ms. Lyne conceded that mistakes were</p>
<p>made-though, in deference to her predecessors, she noted that such observations</p>
<p>were easy to make in hindsight.</p>
<p> "We needed to have those urban, hip 18- to 34-year-old shows that</p>
<p>appealed to upscale viewers, instead of those meat-and-potatoes shows that had</p>
<p>sort of driven ABC in the past," Ms. Lyne said. "The problem when you do</p>
<p>that-besides the fact that you better hit-is that you run the risk of</p>
<p>alienating your core audience of people who have been watching your network for</p>
<p>a long time."</p>
<p> Of course, ABC's biggest blunder may have been its management of</p>
<p>its biggest hit ever. It was less than two years ago when Mr. Bloomberg and ABC</p>
<p>entertainment chairman Lloyd Braun tromped across the stage at Radio City Music</p>
<p>Hall like conquering Roman emperors at the network's upfront presentation. Millionaire had been averaging 28</p>
<p>million viewers per episode;  ABC had</p>
<p>vaulted into first place.</p>
<p> Then, of course, ABC</p>
<p>proceeded to drain Millionaire for</p>
<p>all it was worth. The show was scheduled four nights a week, but that proved to</p>
<p>be too much; eventually cut back to two episodes for the 2001-02 season, Millionaire's ratings fell dramatically,</p>
<p>and its future status on prime time remains unclear. (A syndicated version of Millionaire, not hosted by Mr. Philbin,</p>
<p>is ready to debut next fall.)</p>
<p> Some believe that ABC's</p>
<p>mishandling of Millionaire has been</p>
<p>overblown; the network knew it had a temporary franchise on its hands, this</p>
<p>thinking goes, and was wise to make as much money as it could as fast as it</p>
<p>could.</p>
<p> But most people, including Ms. Lyne, agree that the network</p>
<p>faltered when it didn't do enough to build upon the Millionaire franchise, and didn't create and promote other</p>
<p>successful shows on its strength.</p>
<p> "You take the benefit while you can," Ms. Lyne said. "The problem</p>
<p>was that we weren't able to launch any more shows from that Millionaire bubble."</p>
<p> And now Ms. Lyne ascends to the president's chair at a time when</p>
<p>network television programming has never been more turbulent. Audiences for</p>
<p>broadcast networks continue to thin, and now that the wave of game and reality</p>
<p>shows seems to have died down, prime time's future is as uncertain as ever.</p>
<p> But Ms. Lyne has her believers, who think she might be the right</p>
<p>executive not only to salvage ABC, but also to correct the recent tide of</p>
<p>prime-time gimmickry. Boosters point to Ms. Lyne's picks when she ran ABC's</p>
<p>movies and miniseries, a list that includes acclaimed projects such as Life with Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows ,</p>
<p> Arabian Nights and Tuesdays with Morrie .</p>
<p> "She's kind of a breath of fresh air in a doomed industry," said</p>
<p>Robert Halmi Sr., the executive producer of miniseries epics including Arabian Nights , whose latest project, Dinotopia , is set to air on ABC in May.</p>
<p>"When everybody else-and also her predecessors at ABC-were running to the</p>
<p>lowest common denominator, Susan went the other way."</p>
<p> Ms. Lyne laughed at the suggestion she might be some kind of</p>
<p>highbrow television savior. "Let's be honest," she said, "we also did the Growing Pains reunion movie. I think</p>
<p>there is a place for high and low entertainment."</p>
<p> And those who have worked with Ms. Lyne said that she is capable</p>
<p>of playing both sides of the taste deck-that she won't be stuffing ABC's</p>
<p>schedule with Masterpiece Theatre –esque</p>
<p>knockoffs.</p>
<p> "She's got high taste and mass taste, and she understands both,"</p>
<p>said Chris Connelly, who succeeded Ms. Lyne as editor in chief of Premiere and now hosts Unscripted, an interview show on ESPN, a</p>
<p>Disney property. At Premiere, Mr.</p>
<p>Connelly said, "we put Cindy Crawford on the cover for Fair Game ; we put Madonna on the cover. We weren't just putting Wings of Desire on the cover. Susan knew</p>
<p>she had a business to run, and she played the game."</p>
<p> There, too, Ms. Lyne's prowess is well-known. Other ex-colleagues</p>
<p>noted her ability during her Premiere days</p>
<p>to woo and finesse high-profile subjects, especially during the magazine's</p>
<p>annual power issue, which Hollywood kingmakers would lobby to make.</p>
<p> "There is no better training for a career in Hollywood diplomacy</p>
<p>than publishing the power issue every year," said Cyndi Stivers, the editor in</p>
<p>chief of Time Out New York , who</p>
<p>worked for Ms. Lyne at Premiere . "She</p>
<p>has a very stiff spine and could take it when they threw their hissy fits, but</p>
<p>she never lost sight of where we were going and how we needed to get there."</p>
<p> That training is likely to help Ms. Lyne not only when she deals</p>
<p>with television producers, agents and talent, but also with her own colleagues.</p>
<p>Asked how she interacts with Mr. Eisner, Mr. Iger and Mr. Braun (who was spared</p>
<p>when Mr. Bloomberg was let go), Ms. Lyne diplomatically said that Mr. Eisner</p>
<p>"has no involvement in the network at this point," but that she intends to</p>
<p>consult regularly with Mr. Iger and Mr. Braun.</p>
<p> The trick for Ms. Lyne, of course, will be keeping everyone happy</p>
<p>and giving herself enough elbow room to make the kind of personal imprint that</p>
<p>the best network presidents-the Grant Tinkers, the Brandon Tartikoffs-made.</p>
<p>Said one industry insider, referring to ABC's top-heavy management: "Picking</p>
<p>shows by committee usually rubs the edges off of programs."</p>
<p> And it remains to be seen how long Ms. Lyne will get to put her imprint</p>
<p>on ABC entertainment. Lately, the job has had all the permanence of a</p>
<p>night-manager shift at Ranch 1.</p>
<p> Ms. Lyne is staying in New York with her family for the</p>
<p>foreseeable future, and will commute to Los Angeles. "Everybody at Disney knew</p>
<p>that the only way I was going to take this job is if I could stay here," she</p>
<p>said. For the next few months she'll be reading scripts and watching pilots,</p>
<p>trying to turn her network around and make that little Mouse happy.</p>
<p> It won't be easy.</p>
<p> "We have a big challenge ahead of us," Ms. Lyne said. "And it's</p>
<p>not going to happen fast, or overnight."</p>
<p> Tonight on ABC, watch Denis</p>
<p>Leary in The Job . The Job is</p>
<p>one of those smarty-pants ABC shows, but no one's walking around town in a</p>
<p>Denis Leary T-shirt or coming up to you and saying, "Hey, did you see The Job last night?" [WABC, 7, 9:30 p.m.]</p>
<p> Thursday, jan. 31</p>
<p> On CBS tonight, The</p>
<p>Price Is Right 30th Anniversary . It won't feel the same- PIP is only fun when we're playing hooky</p>
<p>from work, happily recuperating from the "flu." [WCBS, 2, 8 p.m.]</p>
<p> Friday, feb. 1</p>
<p> Tonight, ABC has The Best Commercials You Have Never Seen (And</p>
<p>Some You Have)  (And this is why Susan Lyne has a fancy new job.)</p>
<p> [WABC, 7, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Saturday, feb. 2</p>
<p> On Showtime tonight, The</p>
<p>Original Kings of Comedy.  Comedian D.L. Hughley is funny in this</p>
<p>movie. He wasn't on his ABC sitcom. [SHOW,</p>
<p>48, 8 p.m.]</p>
<p> Sunday, feb. 3</p>
<p> Say goodbye to play-by-play maestro Pat Summerall</p>
<p>tonight during Super Bowl XXXVI on</p>
<p>Fox. Also say goodbye to your smelly Kurt Warner sweatshirt, as New England</p>
<p>strides to a title. [WNYW, 5, 6 p.m.]</p>
<p> Monday, feb. 4</p>
<p> Tonight on the Fox News Channel-now king of cable</p>
<p>television, having smooshed CNN across the board in January-Bill O'Reilly</p>
<p>announces he's going to "spot" Connie Chung 500,000 viewers a night. [FNC, 46, 8 p.m.]</p>
<p> Tuesday, feb. 5</p>
<p>Tonight's E! True</p>
<p>Hollywood Story is Olympic figure-skating champion Scott Hamilton.</p>
<p>We're lookin' here, E!, but we can't spot the Hollywood angle. [E!, 24, 8 p.m.] </p>
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