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The Morning Exchange

The Morning Exchange (referred to as MX in shorthand) is an American morning television program that aired on WEWS-TV (channel 5) in Cleveland, Ohio from 1972 to 1999.

The Morning Exchange
Also known as
  • The Alan Douglas Morning Exchange (1972)
  • Today's Morning Exchange (1998–1999)
GenreBreakfast television program
Created byDonald L. Perris
William F. Baker
Presented byAlan Douglas (1972)
Don Webster (1972)
Fred Griffith (1972–1999)
Liz Richards (1972–1979)
Joel Rose (1972–1984, 1986–1990)
Jan Jones (1979–1983)
Randi Hall (1984–1986)
Lou Maglio (1984–1993)
David Moss (1985–1993)
Lee Jordan (1987–1993)
Jon Loufman (1990–1994)
Liz Claman (1991–1995)
Connie Dieken (1993–1998)
Mark Johnson (1993–1999)
Robin Swoboda (1998–1999)
Danita Harris (1998–1999)
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons27
Production
Production locationsCleveland, Ohio
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time120 minutes (1972–1998)
60 minutes (1998–1999)
Original release
NetworkWEWS-TV
ReleaseJanuary 3, 1972 (1972-01-03) –
September 10, 1999 (1999-09-10)

A highly rated and influential program, it was commonplace that on a typical day in the 1970s, over two-thirds of all television sets in the Cleveland market were tuned to The Morning Exchange. In 1975, ABC (of which WEWS is an affiliate) recognized the show's success and used MX as a template for their (then new) national morning show – creating Good Morning America.[1]

History edit

The Morning Exchange incorporated many elements that would be used in morning television programs of the present day. It was the first morning show to use a "living room" set and establish the now familiar concept of news and weather segments at the top and bottom of the hour. The remainder of the program time was used to discuss general interest/entertainment topics. In a 2006 interview, Ken Lowe, the CEO of Scripps-Howard Broadcasting said, "The Morning Exchange was a huge risk that Don Perris took at the time. A lot of people thought that he was out of his mind when he suggested a morning show of that nature. Of course, we all know that [the show's format] went on to become [the standard for all of today's network morning shows.]" Fred Griffith, the program's longtime host, talked about the groundbreaking format in another 2006 interview saying, "We talked about death, sexuality, dealing with career choices, how to establish long lasting relationships, we talked about all those kinds of things that are just routine now, but [at the time] we were pioneers."

The show, originally called The Alan Douglas Morning Exchange and premiering on January 3, 1972, was created by Donald L. Perris and William F. Baker as an alternative to the solely news-based morning shows at the time.[2] Originally hosted by Alan Douglas, when the show debuted, a traditional news desk set was used. Don Webster served as the announcer and did some of the show's interviews and Joel Rose read the news.[3] In March 1972, Don Webster briefly left WEWS and was replaced by Liz Richards, who became a co-host and the weather presenter. In July of that year, Douglas left the station and was replaced by Griffith, who had been a member of the station's news department since 1966. The choice of Griffith as a co-host of the show was only meant to be temporary, but Griffith remained a co-host throughout the remainder of the program's history.[4]

In August 1972, the program's producers decided to replace the news desk set with a set that resembled a suburban living room; Griffith, Richards, and Rose would instead recline on couches. Producers felt that this would make viewers feel more relaxed and comfortable. This idea seemed to work, as the format became more relaxed as the hosts developed chemistry on screen. As a result, many viewers felt that the on-air set was an extension of their own living room and that the personalities were a part of their families. MX quickly became extremely popular, with an average of 67% of television viewers tuning in each day.

The format was so successful that ABC used The Morning Exchange as the pilot for its national morning program Good Morning America, which replaced the struggling A.M. America in 1975.[1] The format quickly caught on and soon GMA beat NBC's Today in the ratings. Soon thereafter, both NBC and CBS adopted the format for their morning shows.

On March 16, 1979 in an emotional episode, a tearful Richards left the show in order to care for her children. This followed years of her personal life and her volatile marriage to Cleveland disc jockey Gary Dee spilling over into the headlines on other news outlets.[4] She was replaced by Jan Jones. In 1983, Jones became a consultant for WEWS and left the show.[5] Joel Rose left WEWS-TV in 1984, to devote himself full-time to his talk show on radio station WJW (850 AM, now WKNR), and Randi Hall became the new co-host of the show for a year-and-a-half. Rose would return to the show in 1986 and remain until 1990. The news segment updates were now delivered by either Jenny Crimm or Lou Maglio. Unlike Rose, however, Crimm and Maglio simply read the news and were not co-hosts. In 1987, Lee Jordan became the new co-host, filling the void left by Hall's earlier departure.[2]

From 1976 to 1982 and then again from 1988 until the show's end, Lynda Hirsch provided recaps and previews of soap operas. She developed such a reputation on the show that she was given her own nationally syndicated newspaper column.

David Moss (now with WJW, channel 8) served as entertainment reporter from 1985 to 1993. In 1990, Jon Loufman (now with CBS affiliate WOIO, channel 19) joined the show and provided weather reports and a number of live shots. In 1993, both Maglio and Moss left the show for new positions at WJW-TV, while Loufman left for WKYC-TV (channel 3) (and later, WJW-TV). Loufman was replaced by Mark Johnson. Later in 1993, Lee Jordan moved from MX co-host to WEWS evening co-anchor (to replace the departing Wilma Smith) and was replaced by former WKYC anchor Connie Dieken.

The Weekend Exchange edit

From 1995 to 1997, the program expanded to include Saturday and Sunday editions entitled The Weekend Exchange. The show was hosted solo by Leon Bibb and was broadcast from a set different from the one used for the weekday edition. The Weekend Exchange consisted solely of interviews conducted by Bibb and did not include any news or weather updates. The format was later reworked into WEWS' weekend public affairs program Kaleidoscope, which is also hosted by Bibb.

Decline edit

WEWS originally chose not to air A.M. America and later Good Morning America, electing to run The Morning Exchange in the 7–9 a.m. timeslot. In 1978, WEWS began airing one hour of Good Morning America from 7 to 8 a.m. and then The Morning Exchange from 8 to 10 a.m. (the Cleveland market's secondary ABC affiliate at the time, Akron-based WAKR-TV, channel 23 – later WAKC and currently Ion Television owned-and-operated station WVPX-TV – carried Good Morning America in its entirety throughout the 1980s and early 1990s).

On September 12, 1994, WJW-TV, as part of a group-wide deal involving the station's then-owner New World Communications,[6] dropped its CBS affiliation and joined Fox. During the transition period, CBS attempted to negotiate a deal with WEWS owner Scripps-Howard to have WEWS and one-time ABC O&O WXYZ-TV in Detroit, Michigan affiliate with the network (Detroit's then-CBS affiliate WJBK-TV was also involved in Fox's group deal with New World). Instead, the company informed ABC of CBS's intentions and convinced ABC to increase the affiliation fee it paid to WEWS, which resulted in a group-wide affiliation pact with the network that triggered, among other deals, Westinghouse's affiliation pact (and later, merger) with CBS. However, in addition to agreeing to stay with ABC, Scripps lost most of the remaining leverage for local schedule control it had for the network. For WEWS, this meant by network mandate, it would also have to agree to broadcast the full two hours of Good Morning America. By 1994, WEWS was the only ABC station remaining among the 25 largest television markets in the country that did not broadcast the full two hours of GMA.

That move proved devastating to The Morning Exchange. Its timeslot was pushed back to 9–11 a.m., missing the commuter rush hour audience. Additionally, the show's original target audience, stay-at-home housewives and mothers, had nearly disappeared since the show's debut, as more women entered the workforce, and those that remained began to regard the show's format as antiquated. In addition, other stations also began increasing the amount of local programming it aired in the early morning hours. Most notably, WJW easily and successfully compensated for the loss of the perennially low-rated CBS This Morning as a result of the Fox switch by expanding its weekday morning newscast to 9 a.m., and later, beyond. The only remaining advantage for WEWS was that ABC's late morning programming at the time, including Home, Mike and Maty, and Caryl & Marilyn: Real Friends, was wholly uncompetitive nationwide, had no ownership stake by ABC, and was easily pushed into the late night graveyard slot, as WEWS did with all three series in favor of MX.

At the end of 1996, WAKR ended its ABC affiliation, leaving WEWS to be the area's only ABC affiliate, but also removing a buffer that allowed the station to direct viewers to pre-empted network programming, placing additional pressure on the station to air ABC programming in pattern.

In 1997 as part of another Scripps/ABC deal, WEWS began airing Live with Regis and Kathie Lee during the 9 a.m. hour, bumping The Morning Exchange to the 10 a.m. to noon slot (the station had been airing Live from 11 a.m. to noon, two hours later than most stations that carry the program, ever since it debuted in national syndication in 1988). In an unusual move, WEWS slotted the syndicated (and at the time, half-hour) Martha Stewart Living program in the middle of the MX broadcast, making it appear as if it was an extended segment of the show.

In 1998, major changes occurred to the program: it was retitled Today's Morning Exchange and was soon reduced to one hour, in an attempt to save the declining show. Viewers and ABC had also begun to clamor for The View, which premiered in 1997 to acclaim and success compared to ABC's past late morning programs (and was also under the network's full editorial control), to air in Cleveland at its prescribed time. WEWS had continued to delay The View to late night until January 18, 1999, when it began to air in its proper 11 a.m. time slot, leaving MX with little natural flow between Live! and The View. Fred Griffith was demoted to a field reporter with morning meteorologist Mark Johnson taking his place as co-host, along with former WJW-TV news anchor Robin Swoboda. The resulting show departed significantly from the program viewers were used to, and ratings declined even further.

After only several months, WEWS announced that it would end The Morning Exchange after 27 years. The final week's editions saw Griffith return as host and featured "MX Moments" from throughout the show's run. The last broadcast, which aired on September 10, 1999, included former co-hosts, reporters, and contributors, and live interviews with some of the hosts of morning shows that used the MX format, including Good Morning America.[7] All of the other program's hosts praised MX for being the pioneer in establishing the format used by nearly all morning interview programs.

Post Morning Exchange edit

  • Robin Swoboda, became anchor at WEWS in 1999; she later served as a host on Cleveland Christian music station WFHM (95.5 FM) from 2002 to 2005, and then hosted a MX-style program on Fox affiliate WJW called The Robin Swoboda Show (originally titled That's Life) from 2007 to 2011. From 2012–2014, Swoboda served as co-anchor of WKYC's weeknight 7 p.m. newscast.
  • Liz Claman, served as anchor of the program from 1991 to 1995, is now an anchor/correspondent for the Fox Business Network.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b WEWS history – Case Western Reserve University
  2. ^ a b MX anniversary – News Net 5.com
  3. ^ WEWS 60th anniversary – News Net 5.com
  4. ^ a b Liz Richards profile – Cleveland Seniors.com
  5. ^ Jan Jones profile = Cleveland Women.com
  6. ^ . Chicago Sun-Times. May 23, 1994. Archived from the original on October 11, 2013. Retrieved June 1, 2013.
  7. ^ Fred Griffith profile – Cleveland Seniors.com
  8. ^ Liz Claman bio – Fox business.com

External links edit

  • – Archived announcement of the program's cancellation
  • – Archived section of The Morning Exchange from NewsNet5.com
  • [2] – Funny Boxing Kangaroo on The Morning Exchange

morning, exchange, similarly, titled, television, program, that, aired, cnbc, europe, morning, exchange, programme, referred, shorthand, american, morning, television, program, that, aired, wews, channel, cleveland, ohio, from, 1972, 1999, also, known, asthe, . For the similarly titled television program that aired on CNBC Europe see Morning Exchange TV programme The Morning Exchange referred to as MX in shorthand is an American morning television program that aired on WEWS TV channel 5 in Cleveland Ohio from 1972 to 1999 The Morning ExchangeAlso known asThe Alan Douglas Morning Exchange 1972 Today s Morning Exchange 1998 1999 GenreBreakfast television programCreated byDonald L PerrisWilliam F BakerPresented byAlan Douglas 1972 Don Webster 1972 Fred Griffith 1972 1999 Liz Richards 1972 1979 Joel Rose 1972 1984 1986 1990 Jan Jones 1979 1983 Randi Hall 1984 1986 Lou Maglio 1984 1993 David Moss 1985 1993 Lee Jordan 1987 1993 Jon Loufman 1990 1994 Liz Claman 1991 1995 Connie Dieken 1993 1998 Mark Johnson 1993 1999 Robin Swoboda 1998 1999 Danita Harris 1998 1999 Country of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons27ProductionProduction locationsCleveland OhioCamera setupMulti cameraRunning time120 minutes 1972 1998 60 minutes 1998 1999 Original releaseNetworkWEWS TVReleaseJanuary 3 1972 1972 01 03 September 10 1999 1999 09 10 A highly rated and influential program it was commonplace that on a typical day in the 1970s over two thirds of all television sets in the Cleveland market were tuned to The Morning Exchange In 1975 ABC of which WEWS is an affiliate recognized the show s success and used MX as a template for their then new national morning show creating Good Morning America 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 The Weekend Exchange 2 Decline 3 Post Morning Exchange 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe Morning Exchange incorporated many elements that would be used in morning television programs of the present day It was the first morning show to use a living room set and establish the now familiar concept of news and weather segments at the top and bottom of the hour The remainder of the program time was used to discuss general interest entertainment topics In a 2006 interview Ken Lowe the CEO of Scripps Howard Broadcasting said The Morning Exchange was a huge risk that Don Perris took at the time A lot of people thought that he was out of his mind when he suggested a morning show of that nature Of course we all know that the show s format went on to become the standard for all of today s network morning shows Fred Griffith the program s longtime host talked about the groundbreaking format in another 2006 interview saying We talked about death sexuality dealing with career choices how to establish long lasting relationships we talked about all those kinds of things that are just routine now but at the time we were pioneers The show originally called The Alan Douglas Morning Exchange and premiering on January 3 1972 was created by Donald L Perris and William F Baker as an alternative to the solely news based morning shows at the time 2 Originally hosted by Alan Douglas when the show debuted a traditional news desk set was used Don Webster served as the announcer and did some of the show s interviews and Joel Rose read the news 3 In March 1972 Don Webster briefly left WEWS and was replaced by Liz Richards who became a co host and the weather presenter In July of that year Douglas left the station and was replaced by Griffith who had been a member of the station s news department since 1966 The choice of Griffith as a co host of the show was only meant to be temporary but Griffith remained a co host throughout the remainder of the program s history 4 In August 1972 the program s producers decided to replace the news desk set with a set that resembled a suburban living room Griffith Richards and Rose would instead recline on couches Producers felt that this would make viewers feel more relaxed and comfortable This idea seemed to work as the format became more relaxed as the hosts developed chemistry on screen As a result many viewers felt that the on air set was an extension of their own living room and that the personalities were a part of their families MX quickly became extremely popular with an average of 67 of television viewers tuning in each day The format was so successful that ABC used The Morning Exchange as the pilot for its national morning program Good Morning America which replaced the struggling A M America in 1975 1 The format quickly caught on and soon GMA beat NBC s Today in the ratings Soon thereafter both NBC and CBS adopted the format for their morning shows On March 16 1979 in an emotional episode a tearful Richards left the show in order to care for her children This followed years of her personal life and her volatile marriage to Cleveland disc jockey Gary Dee spilling over into the headlines on other news outlets 4 She was replaced by Jan Jones In 1983 Jones became a consultant for WEWS and left the show 5 Joel Rose left WEWS TV in 1984 to devote himself full time to his talk show on radio station WJW 850 AM now WKNR and Randi Hall became the new co host of the show for a year and a half Rose would return to the show in 1986 and remain until 1990 The news segment updates were now delivered by either Jenny Crimm or Lou Maglio Unlike Rose however Crimm and Maglio simply read the news and were not co hosts In 1987 Lee Jordan became the new co host filling the void left by Hall s earlier departure 2 From 1976 to 1982 and then again from 1988 until the show s end Lynda Hirsch provided recaps and previews of soap operas She developed such a reputation on the show that she was given her own nationally syndicated newspaper column David Moss now with WJW channel 8 served as entertainment reporter from 1985 to 1993 In 1990 Jon Loufman now with CBS affiliate WOIO channel 19 joined the show and provided weather reports and a number of live shots In 1993 both Maglio and Moss left the show for new positions at WJW TV while Loufman left for WKYC TV channel 3 and later WJW TV Loufman was replaced by Mark Johnson Later in 1993 Lee Jordan moved from MX co host to WEWS evening co anchor to replace the departing Wilma Smith and was replaced by former WKYC anchor Connie Dieken The Weekend Exchange edit From 1995 to 1997 the program expanded to include Saturday and Sunday editions entitled The Weekend Exchange The show was hosted solo by Leon Bibb and was broadcast from a set different from the one used for the weekday edition The Weekend Exchange consisted solely of interviews conducted by Bibb and did not include any news or weather updates The format was later reworked into WEWS weekend public affairs program Kaleidoscope which is also hosted by Bibb Decline editWEWS originally chose not to air A M America and later Good Morning America electing to run The Morning Exchange in the 7 9 a m timeslot In 1978 WEWS began airing one hour of Good Morning America from 7 to 8 a m and then The Morning Exchange from 8 to 10 a m the Cleveland market s secondary ABC affiliate at the time Akron based WAKR TV channel 23 later WAKC and currently Ion Television owned and operated station WVPX TV carried Good Morning America in its entirety throughout the 1980s and early 1990s On September 12 1994 WJW TV as part of a group wide deal involving the station s then owner New World Communications 6 dropped its CBS affiliation and joined Fox During the transition period CBS attempted to negotiate a deal with WEWS owner Scripps Howard to have WEWS and one time ABC O amp O WXYZ TV in Detroit Michigan affiliate with the network Detroit s then CBS affiliate WJBK TV was also involved in Fox s group deal with New World Instead the company informed ABC of CBS s intentions and convinced ABC to increase the affiliation fee it paid to WEWS which resulted in a group wide affiliation pact with the network that triggered among other deals Westinghouse s affiliation pact and later merger with CBS However in addition to agreeing to stay with ABC Scripps lost most of the remaining leverage for local schedule control it had for the network For WEWS this meant by network mandate it would also have to agree to broadcast the full two hours of Good Morning America By 1994 WEWS was the only ABC station remaining among the 25 largest television markets in the country that did not broadcast the full two hours of GMA That move proved devastating to The Morning Exchange Its timeslot was pushed back to 9 11 a m missing the commuter rush hour audience Additionally the show s original target audience stay at home housewives and mothers had nearly disappeared since the show s debut as more women entered the workforce and those that remained began to regard the show s format as antiquated In addition other stations also began increasing the amount of local programming it aired in the early morning hours Most notably WJW easily and successfully compensated for the loss of the perennially low rated CBS This Morning as a result of the Fox switch by expanding its weekday morning newscast to 9 a m and later beyond The only remaining advantage for WEWS was that ABC s late morning programming at the time including Home Mike and Maty and Caryl amp Marilyn Real Friends was wholly uncompetitive nationwide had no ownership stake by ABC and was easily pushed into the late night graveyard slot as WEWS did with all three series in favor of MX At the end of 1996 WAKR ended its ABC affiliation leaving WEWS to be the area s only ABC affiliate but also removing a buffer that allowed the station to direct viewers to pre empted network programming placing additional pressure on the station to air ABC programming in pattern In 1997 as part of another Scripps ABC deal WEWS began airing Live with Regis and Kathie Lee during the 9 a m hour bumping The Morning Exchange to the 10 a m to noon slot the station had been airing Live from 11 a m to noon two hours later than most stations that carry the program ever since it debuted in national syndication in 1988 In an unusual move WEWS slotted the syndicated and at the time half hour Martha Stewart Living program in the middle of the MX broadcast making it appear as if it was an extended segment of the show In 1998 major changes occurred to the program it was retitled Today s Morning Exchange and was soon reduced to one hour in an attempt to save the declining show Viewers and ABC had also begun to clamor for The View which premiered in 1997 to acclaim and success compared to ABC s past late morning programs and was also under the network s full editorial control to air in Cleveland at its prescribed time WEWS had continued to delay The View to late night until January 18 1999 when it began to air in its proper 11 a m time slot leaving MX with little natural flow between Live and The View Fred Griffith was demoted to a field reporter with morning meteorologist Mark Johnson taking his place as co host along with former WJW TV news anchor Robin Swoboda The resulting show departed significantly from the program viewers were used to and ratings declined even further After only several months WEWS announced that it would end The Morning Exchange after 27 years The final week s editions saw Griffith return as host and featured MX Moments from throughout the show s run The last broadcast which aired on September 10 1999 included former co hosts reporters and contributors and live interviews with some of the hosts of morning shows that used the MX format including Good Morning America 7 All of the other program s hosts praised MX for being the pioneer in establishing the format used by nearly all morning interview programs Post Morning Exchange editRobin Swoboda became anchor at WEWS in 1999 she later served as a host on Cleveland Christian music station WFHM 95 5 FM from 2002 to 2005 and then hosted a MX style program on Fox affiliate WJW called The Robin Swoboda Show originally titled That s Life from 2007 to 2011 From 2012 2014 Swoboda served as co anchor of WKYC s weeknight 7 p m newscast Liz Claman served as anchor of the program from 1991 to 1995 is now an anchor correspondent for the Fox Business Network 8 References edit a b WEWS history Case Western Reserve University a b MX anniversary News Net 5 com WEWS 60th anniversary News Net 5 com a b Liz Richards profile Cleveland Seniors com Jan Jones profile Cleveland Women com Fox Gains 12 Stations in New World Deal Chicago Sun Times May 23 1994 Archived from the original on October 11 2013 Retrieved June 1 2013 Fred Griffith profile Cleveland Seniors com Liz Claman bio Fox business comExternal links editMorning Exchange To Go Off The Air Sept 10 NewsNet5 com June 29 1999 Archived announcement of the program s cancellation 1 Archived section of The Morning Exchange from NewsNet5 com 2 Funny Boxing Kangaroo on The Morning Exchange Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Morning Exchange amp oldid 1174245575, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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