Rachel
Maddow
by G. Michael Dobbs, Managing
Editor
NEW YORK CITY At 8:30 a.m., Rachel Maddow's workday is done and she admits that she is ready
for bed.
Maddow, the former Pioneer Valley radio personality who left the
area to co-host the nationally syndicated talk program Unfiltered on Air
America, has a new program that started in mid-April, The Rachel Maddow Show. It airs from 5 to 6 a.m.
and Maddow admits the adjustment has been a
challenge.
"You know I'm not yet adjusted at all. I'm
completely out of my mind and I could go to bed right now," she told
Reminder Publications with a laugh in a recent telephone interview.
Unfiltered was by replaced former television shock host
Jerry Springer's new talk program and Maddow was
given a new show and a new time slot.
She described it as being "the front page for Air America."
It is the first show of the day offered on the progressive talk network's
schedule and the format is heavy on news reporting and analysis.
Originally, Maddow thought she
could arrive at the studio at 3 a.m.
to prepare the show, but discovered that she had to arrive at work about 12:15 a.m. to get ready for the
program.
She explained that the newspapers on the East Coast put
their editions online at midnight
so she prepares 11 to 16 stories for her broadcast. She gathers sound bites
from major stories as well. She said the work is doing for her new program is
"more highly structure" than for Unfiltered.
Maddow's style is to mix straight news reporting along with
commentary.
"We got a good show for your day: a sudden growth
of a spine, which is good news, in unexpected quarters of the Democratic
Party," Maddow announced in the opening of her
May 5th program.
At this point, she is not scheduling guests, but is
concentrating on a "rapid fire template" for "people who care
about news."
The only element of Unfiltered that carried over to the
new show is the commentary on the news by comedian Kent Jones.
Maddow said that low ratings were not the cause for Unfiltered's demise, rather it was Springer's
availability as a talk show host and his selection of the 9 a.m. to noon Unfiltered time slot that caused the cancellation.
Maddow explained that many affiliate stations immediately picked up
the Springer show in order to capitalize on his television notoriety.
Springer's radio show is nothing like his television show. Instead it is a
serious liberal talk show.
"I don't have any regrets," Maddow said. "It was easy to sell the Springer show
and really happy to have my own show."
Unfiltered was co-hosted by Maddow,
comedian Liz Winstead, and rapper Chuck D and
featured numerous interviews with newsmakers, authors and commentators each
day.
Saying that the show had an "incredibly loyal"
fanbase, Maddow added,
"The people who liked us, really liked us."
She noted that the show's format of having three hosts
was different than most talk radio.
"We had an ensemble that was very diverse: a
straight black rapper, a feminist comedian and an unknown lesbian activist.
We did a great job," she said.
She said she is grateful for the opportunity to continue
with the network, but she still has figured out if she should maintain her
work-week sleeping schedule through the weekend.
The Rachel Maddow Show is
heard in major markets across the country, but not yet in this area. The show
can be heard on the Internet by logging onto www.airamericaradio
and following the directions on the page for the show.
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