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==Season 10 (2006-2007)==
==Season 10 (2006-2007)==
On [[September 5]], [[2006]], [[Rosie O'Donnell]] made her debut as a co-host. With the new changes in place, September 2006 brought in record ratings. A total of 3.1 million viewers watched that month, the highest total viewership the program has ever seen. The talk show also surged 34% in the advertiser-friendly "women aged 18-49" demographic, and sustained its early season success with its best ever November [[Nielsen Ratings|sweeps]] period.<ref>http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117955333.html?categoryid=1275&cs=1</ref> ''Entertainment Weekly'' magazine in March 2007 cited ''The View'' as doing for daytime TV what the ''Daily Show'' has done for nighttime TV in that it offers viewers a show that deals in genuine opinion and not mere fluff.<ref>http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20013740,00.html</ref>
On [[September 5]], [[2006]], [[Rosie O'Donnell]] made her debut as a co-host. With the new changes in place, September 2006 brought in record ratings. A total of 3.1 million viewers watched that month, the highest total viewership the program has ever seen. The talk show also surged 34% in the advertiser-friendly "women aged 18-49" demographic, and sustained its early season success with its best ever November [[Nielsen Ratings|sweeps]] period.<ref>http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117955333.html?categoryid=1275&cs=1</ref> ''Entertainment Weekly'' magazine in March 2007 cited ''The View'' as doing for daytime TV what the ''Daily Show'' has done for nighttime TV in that it offers viewers a show that deals in genuine opinion and not mere fluff.<ref>http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20013740,00.html</ref>


O'Donnell led the daytime women's chatfest as the moderator steering the opening "Hot Topics" portion of the show. Unlike previous seasons, however, politics and taboo subjects were readily explored with the two comics (O'Donnell and [[Joy Behar]]) quickly finding humor in the news of the day and often giving strong opinions against President [[George W. Bush|Bush's]] policies including the [[Iraq War|war in Iraq]] which was losing support amongst Americans. As a counterpoint to O'Donnell's more [[liberal]] views, [[conservative]] co-host [[Elisabeth Hasselbeck]] would often support the Bush Administration's views and the two would get into an adversarial give-and-take at least until both had made their points.
Along with the high ratings came controversy, and speculation about whether O'Donnell would continue on the show. On [[April 25]], O'Donnell announced, and ABC confirmed, that she would be leaving the show in June 2007 after failing to reach a new contract agreement with ABC executives. O'Donnell claimed in a video blog for her website that while she wanted $10 million for a year contract, ABC wanted her for $6 million per year for a three-year contract.<ref>http://www.rosie.com/blog/2007/04/30/monday-again/</ref> O'Donnell claimed her demands were justified with the increase in revenue the show experienced in the 2006-2007 season. Both parties could not come to an agreement to keep her on the show. O'Donnell and ABC announced [[May 25]], [[2007]] that she would be leaving the show early immediately. O'Donnell stated on her official blog (www.rosie.com) that she would like Whoopi Goldberg to assume her role as moderator after she exits The View in June 2007.<ref>http://www.tmz.com/2007/04/30/roseanne-the-new-rosie/</ref>

Always outspoken, O'Donnell sometimes crossed a line with certain audiences when the comedienne would talk politics or veer into religious discussions, at one time stating "radical Christianity is just as threatening as radical Islam". With O'Donnell on board ''The View'' became water cooler television. Often clips from the show would be recirculated by other media outlets, often surprising ''The View'' co-hosts including O'Donnell. In reaction, she lamented that news outlets were focusing on less important subjects like her comments instead of more important issues.

On [[April 25]] [[2007]], O'Donnell announced she would be leaving the show as a co-host when her contract expires in June because she and the network could not come to terms on the length of a new contract, but that she planned to return as an occasional correspondent.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/26/arts/television/26rosi.html Rosie O’Donnell Says She Will Say Goodbye to ‘The View’ in June]. ''New York Times'' website. Accessed on April 25, 2007.</ref>

After extensive interviews with insiders and industry analysts, the weekend editions of celebrity gossip shows, ''[[Entertainment Tonight]]''{{Fact|date=June 2007}} and ''[[Inside Edition]]''<ref>[http://www.insideedition.com/ourstories/inside_stories/story.aspx?storyid=750 ''What Was Rosie's Real Reason for Leaving "The View?"''] Inside Edition</ref>{{Verify credibility|date=July 2007}} broadcast on Saturday, April 28, reported there was more to the issue than initially was announced. O'Donnell allegedly had decided as early as December, following what she perceived as Walters's half-hearted support during her ongoing controversy with [[Donald Trump]], she would not renew her contract and began holding talks with at least one major studio about producing a new talk show. (On her personal blog, O'Donnell admitted interest in hosting an issues-oriented show with audience participation, a format introduced by [[Phil Donahue]].) <ref>[http://www.nypost.com/seven/04292007/business/comin_up_rosie_business_don_kaplan.htm ''COMIN' UP ROSIE; HOT-TEMPERED O'DONNELL IS HOT COMMODITY, By DON KAPLAN] New York Post</ref>{{Verify credibility|date=July 2007}} Both programs cited a ''[[New York Post]]'' ''[[Page Six]]'' article, a gossip column, detailing O'Donnell's failed attempt to oust Walters from her producer's chair and [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]'s growing concerns with her unpredictable outbursts.<ref> [http://www.nypost.com/seven/04262007/news/nationalnews/rosie_fades_from_view_nationalnews_don_kaplan.htm ''ROSIE FADES FROM 'VIEW'; QUITS AFTER 'FAILING TO OUST BABS''' By DON KAPLAN] New York Post</ref>

On the April 30 episode of ''The View'', Walters announced there was no truth to any published or televised reports without referring to any specific sources. Walters also announced on ''The View'' that O'Donnell would be listed by [[Time Magazine]] as one of their 100 most influential people. Walters wrote the [http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/time100/article/0,28804,1595326_1595332_1616693,00.html article] for Time. On Friday, [[May 25]], [[2007]], it was announced by ABC and O'Donnell that she would not stay until the end of her contract (which is supposed to end on June 21, 2007). She requested early leave on May 25, after an on-air dispute with co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck. ABC granted her request.

=== Controversies ===
''The View'' achieved higher [[ratings]] with O'Donnell's outspoken and candid nature moving the show into a newsworthy spectrum from traditional daytime talk fare. As a big-name talent she drew criticism for her [[opinions]] while keeping the show's "[[word of mouth|buzz factor]] up."<ref name=buzz>[http://www.tvguide.com/tvshows/view/192276 "The Future of The View"] TV Guide, June 3, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-06-05.</ref> The downside of being [[spontaneous]] and putting her views in front of a national audience was that such remarks were often subject of controversy and criticism, especially by conservative commenters and other media outlets, who recirculated comments and clips from the show.

==== Kelly Ripa / Clay Aiken ====
On [[November 20]], [[2006]], O'Donnell commented on ''[[Live with Regis and Kelly]]'' co-host [[Kelly Ripa]]'s comment to guest co-host [[Clay Aiken]] when he put his hand over her mouth as if to stop her from talking.<ref name="Inner Tube">{{cite web
| title=Inner Tube
| publisher=[[New York Daily News]]
| date=November 21st 2006
| url =http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv/2006/11/21/2006-11-21_inner_tube.html
| accessdate=2007-07-03}}</ref> Ripa apparently didn't appreciate his action and he observed, "Oh, I'm in trouble." Ripa responded, "No, I just don't know where that hand's been honey." O'Donnell said the comment "struck me as a little odd"<ref name="Rosie Rips">{{cite web
| title= Rosie Rips Ripa For Her Feat Of Clay
| publisher=[[New York Daily News]]
| date=November 22nd 2006
| url =http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv/2006/11/22/2006-11-22_rosie_rips_ripa_for_her_feat_of_clay.html
| accessdate=2007-07-03}}</ref> adding "to me that's a [[homophobia|homophobic]] remark. If that was a [[heterosexuality|straight]] man...if that was a guy that she didn't question his [[sexuality]], she would have said a different thing."<ref name="Orloff">{{cite web
| last =Orloff
| first =Brian
| title= Rosie O'Donnell Chides Kelly Ripa For 'Homophobic' Remark
| publisher=[[People (magazine)]]
| date=November 21, 2006
| url =http://www.people.com/people/article/0,26334,1562002,00.html
| accessdate=2007-07-03}}</ref>
Within minutes Ripa was on the phone and responded to O'Donnell's comments by saying "I have three kids (and) he's shaking hands with everybody in the audience. It's [[common cold|cold]] and [[flu]] season." O'Donnell also added that in three months on the show she's never before said something was homophobic. "I feel for the kid," O'Donnell said of Aiken, who has been dogged by questions about his sexuality.<ref name="Rosie Rips"/><ref name="Hernandez">{{cite web
| last =Hernandez
| first =Greg
| title= American Idol's big gay closet
| publisher=[[The Advocate]]
| date=April 24, 2007, cover story
| url =http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:5QvqVBEGf5cJ:www.advocate.com/currentstory1_w_ektid44063.asp+%22American+Idol%27s+big+gay+closet%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=3&gl=us
| accessdate=2007-07-02}}</ref><ref name="ABC Aiken">{{cite web
| title= Clay Aiken Says Sexuality, Private Life Are Nobody's Business: Pop Star Hopes Fans Will Judge Him on Music, Not Rumors
| publisher=[[ABC News]]
| date=August 21, 2006
| url =http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=2472405
| accessdate=2007-07-03}}</ref> The next night at the [[American Music Awards]] Aiken and co-presenter [[Tori Spelling]] spoofed the incident, with Spelling putting her hand over his mouth and saying "I'll tell you where that hand's been later."

==== Accusations of Anti-Catholicism ====
O'Donnell has been accused of being [[anti-Catholicism]] on occasion. After a [[Supreme Court]] ruling on the [[Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act]] she stated, "You know what concerns me? How many Supreme Court judges are Catholic?", adding "How about [[separation of church and state]] in America?" She went on to say, "If men could get pregnant, [[abortion]] would be a [[sacrament]]." Statements like this led [[conservative]] talk show host [[Laura Ingraham]] to urge her listeners to send protest e-mails to ABC for what she calls O'Donnell's "anti-Catholic bigotry."<ref>[http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=3071697 ABC News]</ref> [[William A. Donohue]], president of the [[Catholic League (U.S.)|Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights]], has accused O'Donnell of engaging in anti-Catholicism on ''The View''. The Catholic League issued a press release stating:

<blockquote>
Ever since O’Donnell joined ''The View'' in September, the show has gotten out of control. On four occasions between September and the end of December, she has lashed out at the Catholic Church. Ditto for [[Joy Behar]]. Their relentless and profoundly ignorant attacks on the Catholic Church and its teachings would never be tolerated by the show’s co-owner, [[Barbara Walters]], if it were [[Judaism]] or [[Islam]] that was under attack. But when it comes to [[Catholicism]], she gives these two ‘raised’ Catholics all the time they want to vent their adolescent [[anger]].<ref>http://www.catholicleague.org/07press_releases/quarter_1/070207_barbarawalters.htm</ref>
</blockquote>

==== Mocking Chinese Language ====
On [[December 5]], [[2006]], O'Donnell made a comment in reference to the [[November 29]], [[2006]] appearance on ''The View'' by [[Danny DeVito]] who had been up and celebrating most of the night. O'Donnell was amazed that the controversy had become such an international media news item,<ref>http://youtube.com/watch?v=UnSuZz3gWuE</ref> and joked that it was being talked about as far away as [[China]]. "You know, you can imagine in China it's like, 'Ching-chong, ching-chong. Danny DeVito. Ching-chong, ching-chong-chong. Drunk. ''The View''. Ching-chong.'"<ref name="E-reallysorry">{{cite news |url=http://www.eonline.com/news/article/index.jsp?uuid=b33c7760-8170-4fca-83b3-ecf82ebb11d0 |title=Rosie Really Sorry for "Ching-Chong" Crack |first=Gina |last=Serpe |date=2006-12-14 |accessdate=2006-12-15 |publisher=E! News}}</ref>

The remarks sparked a backlash, as many interpreted her comments as a "mockery of the [[Chinese language]]."<ref>http://www.aaja.org/news/mediawatch/2006_12_08_01/</ref> O'Donnell responded via her publicist that she is a comedian in addition to being a talk show co-host and that was part of her sense of humor. <ref>http://www.nypost.com/seven/12092006/gossip/pagesix/rosie_to_asians__loosen_up_pagesix_.htm</ref>

On [[December 14]], [[2006]], the next show date, she apologized to the viewers saying, "To say [[ching chong]] to someone is very offensive, and some Asian people have told me it's as bad as the [[nigger|n-word]]. Which I was like, `Really? I didn't know that.'"<ref name="n-word">ABCnews.com. (2006-12-14). [http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory?id=2727198&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312 "Group not satisfied with Rosie's apology by By Erin Carlson, Asssociated Press; ABC News / Entertainment. Retrieved on 2007-06-05.</ref> "To anyone who was offended at my Chinese, [[Asian]], pseudo-[[Japan]]ese, sounded a little [[Yiddish]] accent that I was doing, you know, it was never [my] intent to mock, and I'm sorry for those who felt hurt or were teased on the playground.... But I'm also gonna give you a fair warning that there's a good chance I'll do something like that again, probably in the next week — not on purpose. Only 'cause it's how my brain works."<ref name="n-word">ABCnews.com. (2006-12-14). [http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory?id=2727198&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312 "Group not satisfied with Rosie's apology by By Erin Carlson, Asssociated Press; ABC News / Entertainment. Retrieved on 2007-06-05.</ref><ref>http://hotair.com/archives/2006/12/14/video-rosie-apologizes-for-ching-chong/</ref>
Karen Lincoln Michel, president-elect of Unity: Journalists of Color Inc., said O'Donnell's remarks "really didn't sound like an apology to me." Michel said Unity was awaiting Walters to publicly acknowledge that O'Donnell's remarks were "patently offensive."<ref name="n-word">ABCnews.com. (2006-12-14). [http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory?id=2727198&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312 "Group not satisfied with Rosie's apology by By Erin Carlson, Asssociated Press; ABC News / Entertainment. Retrieved on 2007-06-05.</ref>

On [[February 24]], [[2007]], O'Donnell wrote a more comprehensive apology on her [[blog]]<ref>http://www.rosie.com/blog/2007/02/24/beau-sia/</ref> with respect to this incident as a reply to the featured [[YouTube]] video "an open letter to all the Rosie O'Donnells" by [[Beau Sia]].<ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJCkHu3trKc</ref>

==== Donald Trump Feud ====
On [[December 20]], [[2006]], O'Donnell criticized billionaire [[Donald Trump]] for holding a press conference to allegedly use [[Miss USA]], [[Tara Conner|Tara Conner's]] [[scandal]] to "generate publicity for the [[Miss USA Pageant]]" (to which he owns the rights) by announcing he was giving her a second chance.<ref name="Grossberg">{{cite web
| last =Grossberg
| first =Josh
| authorlink =Josh Grossberg
| title=Trump Wants His MTV
| publisher=[[E! Online]]
| date=Fri Jun 22, 2007
| url=http://news.yahoo.com/s/eonline/20070622/en_tv_eo/c98ed4dc2b8a_4542_b260_3e4bc38f4edc
| accessdate=2007-07-08}}</ref> Connor, who had violated pageant guidelines by clubbing and drinking [[underage]],<ref name="Lauer">{{cite web
| last =Lauer
| first =Matt
| authorlink =Matt Lauer
| title=Confessions of a beauty queen
| publisher=[[MSNBC]]
| date=February 3, 2007
| url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16908534/
| accessdate=2007-07-08}}</ref> having "wild nights" and alleged sexual liaisons including kissing and "dirty dancing" with [[Miss Teen USA]] [[Katie Blair]] in public<ref name="Grossberg"/> entered a [[Drug rehabilitation|rehab]] clinic and kept her title. O'Donnell commented that due to Trump's multiple marital affairs and questionable business [[bankrupt]]cies he was not a [[moral]] authority for young people in America. Stated O'Donnell, "Left the first wife, had an affair. Left the second wife, had an affair -- but he's the moral compass for 20-year-olds in America!"<ref name="Trump O'Donnell">{{cite web
| title=Trump, O'Donnell trade blows
| publisher=[[Herald Sun]]
| date=December 23, 2006
| url=http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,20966487-663,00.html
| accessdate=2007-07-08}}</ref>

In response, Trump began a [[mass media|media blitz]]<ref name="Maureen Ryan">{{cite web
| last =Ryan
| first =Maureen
| authorlink =Maureen Ryan
| title=Rosie O'Donnell bids adieu to 'The View'
| publisher=[[Chicago tribune]]
| date=April 27 2007
| url
=http://metromix.chicagotribune.com/tv/mmx-0704250353apr27,0,3154323.story?coll=mmx-television_heds
| accessdate=2007-07-13}}</ref> in which he appeared on various television shows either in person or by phone threatening to sue O'Donnell, calling her mean-spirited names<ref name="Maureen Ryan"/>, threatening to take away her partner Kelli<ref name="Stephen M. Silverman">{{cite web
| last =Silverman
| first =Stephen
| authorlink =Stephen Silverman
| title=Rosie Speaks Out on The View
| publisher=[[People (magazine)]]
| date=December 21, 2006
| url=http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20005257,00.html
| accessdate=2007-07-13}}</ref> and that Barbara Walters regreted hiring her.<ref name="Silverman Jan 3">{{cite web
| last =Silverman
| first =Stephen
| authorlink =Stephen Silverman
| title=Barbara Walters: I Don't Regret Hiring Rosie
| publisher=[[People (magazine)]]
| date=January 03, 2007
| url=http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20005940,00.html
| accessdate=2007-07-13}}</ref> Walters responded that both Trump and O'Donnell are highly [[opinion]]ated people and that Trump has never filed for bankruptcy, but several of his [[casino]] companies did but are now out of bankruptcy. She also denied that she was unhappy with O'Donnell saying "I have never regretted, nor do I now, the hiring of Rosie O'Donnell."<ref name="Silverman Jan 3"/>

==== British Royal Navy personnel seized by Iran ====
On [[March 26]], [[2007]] O'Donnell discussed the [[2007 Iranian seizure of Royal Navy personnel|Iranian seizure of British Royal Navy personnel]] comparing it to the 1964 [[Gulf of Tonkin]] incident that escalated the [[Vietnam War]], implying Britain was provoking war with [[Iran]] stating:<ref>http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,262669,00.html "Should Rosie Be Fired From 'The View'?" ''The O'Reilly Factor'' (transcript), March 30, 2007.</ref>

{{cquote|There were 15 British sailors and marines who apparently went in to Iranian waters and they were seized by the Iranians. And I have one thing to say. [[Gulf of Tonkin Incident|Gulf of Tonkin]]. [[Google]] it.}}

She stood by the statement on [[March 28]], [[2007]], stating on her [[weblog]] that the British had intentionally sent forces into Iranian waters, triggering the hostage crisis as part of a [[false flag]] operation intended to precipitate the invasion of Iran, writing:<ref>http://www.rosie.com/blog/2007/03/28/britis-hostages/</ref>

{{cquote|The British did it on purpose. [They went] into Iranian waters as the U.S. military builds up on the Iranian border. We will be in [[Iran]] before summer as planned.}}

==== Anti-Iraq War comments ====
O'Donnell has been very outspoken about her disdain for the [[Bush administration]]'s policies and the [[war in Iraq]]. She consistently brought up recent military deaths and news about the war as well as lamented the lack of attention US media was giving to either the Iraq war or the Bush administration's actions and policies.

On [[May 1]], [[2007]] during a segment of ''The View'', O'Donnell, prompted by guest co-host [[Ricki Lake]], explained that some members of the armed forces joined because they were fleeing [[poverty]] and wanted to further pursue their education through the [[Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944|G.I. Bill]], adding that there are an increasing number of convicted [[felons]] who currently serve in the US military.<ref name=military>[http://youtube.com/watch?v=UgSPgwh1QX8
|title= Rosie O'Donnell video clip from Tuesday, May 1st, 2007 hosting "The View"</ref> When challenged by co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck, O'Donnell stated she "loved the military" and wanted to see them back home.

On [[May 17]], [[2007]], O'Donnell rhetorically asked, "655,000 Iraqi civilians dead. Who are the [[terrorists]]?" She further explained, "If you were in Iraq and another country, the United States, the richest in the world, invaded your country and killed 655,000 of your citizens, what would you call us?"<ref name=us>[http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/18739523/
|title= 'Scarborough Country' for May 17 2007 </ref> Conservative commentators responded by claiming that Rosie paralleled American troops to terrorists. Elisabeth Hasselbeck and O'Donnell were later involved in a heated argument on [[May 23]], 2007 regarding the U.S. invading Iraq and the resulting [[occupation]].<ref name=terrorists>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ek1K6TYssa4
|title= Rosie O'Donnell VS Elisabeth Hasselbeck on The View 5/23/07</ref>.

==== 7 World Trade Center collapse ====
On [[March 26]], [[2007]], in a conversation about the misleading information preceeding US invasion of Iraq, O'Donnell stated that [[7 World Trade Center]] had been imploded, in line with [[9/11 conspiracy theories]].<ref name="DaViLiVe">{{cite web
| last =DaViLiVe
| title=Rosie O'Donnell Opens 9/11 Conspiracy 'View' Debate
| publisher=[[YouTube]]
| date=March 29, 2007
| url
=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L1iIdflPRGw&mode=related&search
| accessdate=2007-07-10}}</ref> When asked by Hasslebeck who she thought was responsible, she commented that she had no idea, but according to the Miami Herald she suggested in her blog that it was done to destroy evidence of the corporate financial scandals at [[Enron]] and [[WorldCom]].<ref name="herald">[http://www.miamiherald.com/358/story/58828.html ''Really, really Rosie'', Glenn Garvin, [[The Miami Herald]], Mar. 31, 2007]</ref> [[Seven World Trade Center]] housed the offices of government agencies like the [[Central Intelligence Agency]],<ref name="Pam Benson">{{cite web
| last =Benson
| first =Pam
| authorlink =Pam Benson
| title=CIA office near World Trade Center destroyed in attacks
| publisher=[[CNN]]
| date=November 4, 2001
| url
=http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/11/04/inv.newyork.cia.office/
| accessdate=2007-07-10}}</ref> the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]], and the [[United States Securities and Exchange Commission]].

O'Donnell said "I do believe that it's the first time in history that fire has ever melted steel. I do believe that it defies [[physics]] that World Trade Center tower 7 &mdash; building 7, which collapsed in on itself &mdash; it is impossible for a building to fall the way it fell without explosives being involved.<ref name="pop">[http://www.popularmechanics.com/blogs/911myths/4213805.html ''Rosie O'Donnell 9/11 Conspiracy Comments: Popular Mechanics Responds'', Popular Mechanics, March 30, 2007]</ref><ref>[http://www.investors.com/editorial/editorialcontent.asp?secid=1501&status=article&id=260148960722560 ''Tokyo Rosie'', Editorial, [[Investor's Business Daily]], Mar 30, 2007]</ref> Although the comments were cheered by the studio audience, conservative talk show hosts [[Bill O'Reilly]] and [[Joe Scarborough]] called for action including firing her.<ref>[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,262669,00.html ''Should Rosie Be Fired From 'The View'?'' ''[[Foxnews]]'', March 30, 2007]</ref><ref>http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17948858/ April 3, 2007 Scarborough Country Transcript</ref>

Within days ''[[Popular Mechanics]]'' posted a response to O'Donnell's statements on its [[website]] "for those interested in what physics and demolition experts have said regarding WTC 7’s collapse, as detailed in our book ''"Debunking 9/11 Myths."'' The potential explanation included that 7 World Trade Center
housed New York City's emergency command bunker, so there were large [[fuel tank]]s throughout the building that fed generators by pressurized lines.<ref name="Popular Mechanics">{{cite web
| title=Rosie O'Donnell 9/11 Conspiracy Comments: Popular Mechanics Responds
| publisher=[[Popular Mechanics]]
| date=March 30, 2007
| url
=http://www.popularmechanics.com/blogs/911myths/4213805.html
| accessdate=2007-07-10}}</ref> The [[National Institute of Standards and Technology]] (NIST) is still investigating the collapse. O'Donnell had planned to have [[David Ray Griffin|Dr. David Ray Griffin]], author of ''Debunking 9/11 Debunking: An Answer to Popular Mechanics and Other Defenders of the Official Conspiracy Theory,''<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/dp/156656686X]</ref> and [[Steven Jones|Dr. Steven Jones]], author of ''Why Indeed Did the World Trade Center Buildings Completely Collapse?''<ref name="Journal of 911">{{cite web
| last =Jones
| first =Steven
| coauthors =Kevin Ryan
| title=Journal of 911 Studies
| publisher=[[Scholars for 9/11 Truth and Justice]]
| date=Volume 3 - September 2006
| url
=http://www.journalof911studies.com/
| accessdate=2007-07-11}}</ref> to refute Popular Mechanics' explanation.


===O'Donnell departure===
===O'Donnell departure===

Revision as of 03:25, 2 August 2007

The View
File:TheViewTitleCard.PNG
The View title card
Created byBarbara Walters
Bill Geddie
StarringBarbara Walters
(1997–present)
Joy Behar
(1997–present)
Elisabeth Hasselbeck
(2003–present)
Whoopi Goldberg
(as of September 4, 2007)
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes2,210, as of January 1, 2007
Production
Executive producersBarbara Walters
Bill Geddie
Running time60 minutes
Original release
NetworkABC
ReleaseAugust 11, 1997 –
Present

The View is a multi-Emmy Award award winning American daytime television talk show on ABC. The concept of The View is to showcase women with a range of perspectives. It features a panel of women as co-hosts: Barbara Walters moderates discussions and is joined by Joy Behar and Elisabeth Hasselbeck; along with a guest host, usually from the entertainment industry. The show opens each day with "Hot Topics", in which the co-hosts provide their commentary on the day's top headlines in politics and entertainment.

The View has had eight co-hosts in its eleven year run, including the current panelists it has also featured Rosie O'Donnell, Meredith Vieira, Star Jones Reynolds, Lisa Ling and Debbie Matenopoulos. Whoopi Goldberg will join the current panel as moderator for the show's eleventh season on September 4.

History

The View premiered on August 11, 1997. It is produced and videotaped at ABC's television studio on West 66th Street in New York City, and is the first and only show[1] on ABC's daytime schedule to broadcast in high definition. It airs live on the east coast Monday-Thursday, and is on tape most Fridays, with Friday's show typically taped on Wednesday or Thursday following that day's live show. The show begins live in the East Coast at 11:00:05 AM (sometimes 11:00:07 AM), and at 10:00:00 AM on the West Coast.

A New York Times review,[2] published ten days after the show premiered, describes what critic Caryn James thought was distinctive about the show:

The idea of women talking to one another on daytime television is not exactly radical. The idea that those women should be smart and accomplished is still odd enough to make The View seem wildly different. It actively defies the bubbleheads-'R'-us approach to women's talk shows....

File:TheViewOriginal.jpg
The original panel of the View; Meredith Vieira, Star Jones, Debbie Matenopoulos and Barbara Walters in 1997.
File:TheViewCurrent.jpg
The panel for The View's eleventh season will include Whoopi Goldberg, Barbara Walters, Joy Behar and Elisabeth Hasselbeck.

After a year on the air, a review of the show from Salon.com[3] attempted to summarize what had made the show a "(very guilty) pleasure" for its mostly female audience:

The View has caught on with viewers because it gives expression to feelings more complicated, and real, than its detractors realize. Like the Rat Pack, it's all about freedom in an uptight world. Vieira, Walters, et al., have confessed to a lot of things on the show that women are supposed to feel guilty about: forgetting to vote, being too lazy to exercise, hating skinny models, letting the kids watch too much TV, admiring Hollywood's latest hunk. And, apparently, they don't care what people think. Look, I'm not holding them up as role models. And I'm not saying they're representative of the death of feminism, or the rebirth of feminism, or anything like that. I just like the way they don't give a damn. If the Rat Pack was Everyman's id, The View is Everywoman's. These chicks do it their way, and are very inspirational to all women.

The show premiered with four co-hosts: Meredith Vieira, Star Jones Reynolds, Debbie Matenopoulos, and Barbara Walters. Walters and Joy Behar initially took turns as the fourth co-host, an approach that at least one TV critic considered disconcerting:[2]

The comedian Joy Behar, who appears on the days when Ms. Walters is off, is truly funny but hasn't blended in yet; at times it seems as if a Joan Rivers clone had parachuted in.

Behar soon became a regular co-host, with the panel expanding to five when Walters joined in. The subsequent opening credits for the show, featuring voice-over from Walters, made the show's premise explicit:

I've always wanted to do a show with women of different generations, backgrounds and views: a working mother; a professional in her 30s; a young woman just starting out; and then somebody who's done almost everything and will say almost anything. And in a perfect world, I'd get to join the group whenever I wanted ...[3]

Seasons 1-8 (1997-2006)

The show's youngest co-host has changed twice during the show's history. Debbie Matenopoulos left the show in 1999 when her contract was not renewed. Following Matenopoulos' departure, Lisa Ling was announced as the new co-host beating out Rachel Campos and Lauren Sanchez who competed in an on-air try-out to fill the vacated seat.[4]

Ling departed in 2002 to host National Geographic Explorer. Former Survivor contestant Elisabeth Hasselbeck replaced Ling in 2003 after Hasselbeck, Rachel Campos and Erin Hershey Presley were the finalists in a competition that ended with each of the three getting a week-long on-air tryout.[5].

Season 9 (2005-2006)

The View experienced several host changes through the end of season 9 and the start of season 10.

Vieira's departure

First, Meredith Vieira announced on April 6, 2006 that she was leaving The View in order to replace Katie Couric as the co-anchor of NBC's The Today Show.[6] Several candidates were rumored as possible replacements for Vieira, including Patricia Heaton, Connie Chung and Soledad O'Brien. On April 28, 2006, an announcement was made[7] that former talk show host Rosie O'Donnell would be joining the show at the start of the tenth season in September 2006.

Jones Reynolds departure

The announcement about O'Donnell fueled speculation that Jones Reynolds would leave the show when her contract expired in August. One reason for this speculation was a dispute regarding O'Donnell's public remarks about Jones Reynolds' dramatic weight loss. (Jones Reynolds had publicly stated that the weight loss was a result of diet and exercise, but O'Donnell suggested that she was not being truthful, and that it was a result of gastric bypass surgery).[8]

On June 27, 2006, Jones Reynolds announced her departure from the show on the air. Reynolds said she would remain on the show through July, but the next day Walters announced that Reynolds would no longer be a part of The View except for previously recorded segments. Both ABC and Jones Reynolds have publicly stated that the decision to not renew her contract was not related to the hiring of O'Donnell. In an interview with People magazine, Reynolds claimed the decision to leave was not hers, and that in April producers told her that her contract would not be renewed.[9] According to an interview with the Associated Press, Walters stated that ABC executives had apparently decided not to renew Jones Reynolds' contract as early as the previous fall due to diminished approval for the co-host which was showing up in their market research. Walters said, "We tried to talk them [network executives] out of it, and we tried to give Star time to redeem herself in the eyes of the audience, and the research just kept getting worse." Walters has publicly commented about feeling "betrayed" by Jones Reynolds, since Jones Reynolds unexpectedly made the announcement two days ahead of schedule. "I love Star and I was trying to do everything I possibly could — up until this morning, when I was betrayed — to protect her".[10]

Some media outlets reported that Gayle King, Oprah Winfrey's best friend, might take over for Jones, as she continues to be regularly seen as a co-host.[11] However, King denied the reports in an interview with Access Hollywood.[12] Actress Sheryl Lee Ralph publicly stated her interest in the role, during an interview with The Insider. Jones-Reynolds eventually landed a job with AOL as an "AOL Coach"[13] and subsequently negotiated a deal with Court TV to host her own one-hour talk show.[14]

Following Jones Reynolds' departure in June 2006, the show used guest co-hosts to fill her spot. According to People magazine[15] these guest appearances served as auditions for a replacement host. In an interview with the New York Times, Walters said the show would begin looking for a replacement for Jones Reynolds beginning in the fall of 2006.[citation needed] Walters told AOL that while there was no front-runner, they were committed to the idea that Jones Reynolds’ successor be a member of a minority, so that the panel will be more reflective of society. Walters told AOL that she personally "miss(es) an African-American voice at the table". [16]

Season 10 (2006-2007)

On September 5, 2006, Rosie O'Donnell made her debut as a co-host. With the new changes in place, September 2006 brought in record ratings. A total of 3.1 million viewers watched that month, the highest total viewership the program has ever seen. The talk show also surged 34% in the advertiser-friendly "women aged 18-49" demographic, and sustained its early season success with its best ever November sweeps period.[17] Entertainment Weekly magazine in March 2007 cited The View as doing for daytime TV what the Daily Show has done for nighttime TV in that it offers viewers a show that deals in genuine opinion and not mere fluff.[18]

O'Donnell led the daytime women's chatfest as the moderator steering the opening "Hot Topics" portion of the show. Unlike previous seasons, however, politics and taboo subjects were readily explored with the two comics (O'Donnell and Joy Behar) quickly finding humor in the news of the day and often giving strong opinions against President Bush's policies including the war in Iraq which was losing support amongst Americans. As a counterpoint to O'Donnell's more liberal views, conservative co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck would often support the Bush Administration's views and the two would get into an adversarial give-and-take at least until both had made their points.

Always outspoken, O'Donnell sometimes crossed a line with certain audiences when the comedienne would talk politics or veer into religious discussions, at one time stating "radical Christianity is just as threatening as radical Islam". With O'Donnell on board The View became water cooler television. Often clips from the show would be recirculated by other media outlets, often surprising The View co-hosts including O'Donnell. In reaction, she lamented that news outlets were focusing on less important subjects like her comments instead of more important issues.

On April 25 2007, O'Donnell announced she would be leaving the show as a co-host when her contract expires in June because she and the network could not come to terms on the length of a new contract, but that she planned to return as an occasional correspondent.[19]

After extensive interviews with insiders and industry analysts, the weekend editions of celebrity gossip shows, Entertainment Tonight[citation needed] and Inside Edition[20][unreliable source?] broadcast on Saturday, April 28, reported there was more to the issue than initially was announced. O'Donnell allegedly had decided as early as December, following what she perceived as Walters's half-hearted support during her ongoing controversy with Donald Trump, she would not renew her contract and began holding talks with at least one major studio about producing a new talk show. (On her personal blog, O'Donnell admitted interest in hosting an issues-oriented show with audience participation, a format introduced by Phil Donahue.) [21][unreliable source?] Both programs cited a New York Post Page Six article, a gossip column, detailing O'Donnell's failed attempt to oust Walters from her producer's chair and ABC's growing concerns with her unpredictable outbursts.[22]

On the April 30 episode of The View, Walters announced there was no truth to any published or televised reports without referring to any specific sources. Walters also announced on The View that O'Donnell would be listed by Time Magazine as one of their 100 most influential people. Walters wrote the article for Time. On Friday, May 25, 2007, it was announced by ABC and O'Donnell that she would not stay until the end of her contract (which is supposed to end on June 21, 2007). She requested early leave on May 25, after an on-air dispute with co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck. ABC granted her request.

Controversies

The View achieved higher ratings with O'Donnell's outspoken and candid nature moving the show into a newsworthy spectrum from traditional daytime talk fare. As a big-name talent she drew criticism for her opinions while keeping the show's "buzz factor up."[23] The downside of being spontaneous and putting her views in front of a national audience was that such remarks were often subject of controversy and criticism, especially by conservative commenters and other media outlets, who recirculated comments and clips from the show.

Kelly Ripa / Clay Aiken

On November 20, 2006, O'Donnell commented on Live with Regis and Kelly co-host Kelly Ripa's comment to guest co-host Clay Aiken when he put his hand over her mouth as if to stop her from talking.[24] Ripa apparently didn't appreciate his action and he observed, "Oh, I'm in trouble." Ripa responded, "No, I just don't know where that hand's been honey." O'Donnell said the comment "struck me as a little odd"[25] adding "to me that's a homophobic remark. If that was a straight man...if that was a guy that she didn't question his sexuality, she would have said a different thing."[26] Within minutes Ripa was on the phone and responded to O'Donnell's comments by saying "I have three kids (and) he's shaking hands with everybody in the audience. It's cold and flu season." O'Donnell also added that in three months on the show she's never before said something was homophobic. "I feel for the kid," O'Donnell said of Aiken, who has been dogged by questions about his sexuality.[25][27][28] The next night at the American Music Awards Aiken and co-presenter Tori Spelling spoofed the incident, with Spelling putting her hand over his mouth and saying "I'll tell you where that hand's been later."

Accusations of Anti-Catholicism

O'Donnell has been accused of being anti-Catholicism on occasion. After a Supreme Court ruling on the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act she stated, "You know what concerns me? How many Supreme Court judges are Catholic?", adding "How about separation of church and state in America?" She went on to say, "If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament." Statements like this led conservative talk show host Laura Ingraham to urge her listeners to send protest e-mails to ABC for what she calls O'Donnell's "anti-Catholic bigotry."[29] William A. Donohue, president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, has accused O'Donnell of engaging in anti-Catholicism on The View. The Catholic League issued a press release stating:

Ever since O’Donnell joined The View in September, the show has gotten out of control. On four occasions between September and the end of December, she has lashed out at the Catholic Church. Ditto for Joy Behar. Their relentless and profoundly ignorant attacks on the Catholic Church and its teachings would never be tolerated by the show’s co-owner, Barbara Walters, if it were Judaism or Islam that was under attack. But when it comes to Catholicism, she gives these two ‘raised’ Catholics all the time they want to vent their adolescent anger.[30]

Mocking Chinese Language

On December 5, 2006, O'Donnell made a comment in reference to the November 29, 2006 appearance on The View by Danny DeVito who had been up and celebrating most of the night. O'Donnell was amazed that the controversy had become such an international media news item,[31] and joked that it was being talked about as far away as China. "You know, you can imagine in China it's like, 'Ching-chong, ching-chong. Danny DeVito. Ching-chong, ching-chong-chong. Drunk. The View. Ching-chong.'"[32]

The remarks sparked a backlash, as many interpreted her comments as a "mockery of the Chinese language."[33] O'Donnell responded via her publicist that she is a comedian in addition to being a talk show co-host and that was part of her sense of humor. [34]

On December 14, 2006, the next show date, she apologized to the viewers saying, "To say ching chong to someone is very offensive, and some Asian people have told me it's as bad as the n-word. Which I was like, `Really? I didn't know that.'"[35] "To anyone who was offended at my Chinese, Asian, pseudo-Japanese, sounded a little Yiddish accent that I was doing, you know, it was never [my] intent to mock, and I'm sorry for those who felt hurt or were teased on the playground.... But I'm also gonna give you a fair warning that there's a good chance I'll do something like that again, probably in the next week — not on purpose. Only 'cause it's how my brain works."[35][36] Karen Lincoln Michel, president-elect of Unity: Journalists of Color Inc., said O'Donnell's remarks "really didn't sound like an apology to me." Michel said Unity was awaiting Walters to publicly acknowledge that O'Donnell's remarks were "patently offensive."[35]

On February 24, 2007, O'Donnell wrote a more comprehensive apology on her blog[37] with respect to this incident as a reply to the featured YouTube video "an open letter to all the Rosie O'Donnells" by Beau Sia.[38]

Donald Trump Feud

On December 20, 2006, O'Donnell criticized billionaire Donald Trump for holding a press conference to allegedly use Miss USA, Tara Conner's scandal to "generate publicity for the Miss USA Pageant" (to which he owns the rights) by announcing he was giving her a second chance.[39] Connor, who had violated pageant guidelines by clubbing and drinking underage,[40] having "wild nights" and alleged sexual liaisons including kissing and "dirty dancing" with Miss Teen USA Katie Blair in public[39] entered a rehab clinic and kept her title. O'Donnell commented that due to Trump's multiple marital affairs and questionable business bankruptcies he was not a moral authority for young people in America. Stated O'Donnell, "Left the first wife, had an affair. Left the second wife, had an affair -- but he's the moral compass for 20-year-olds in America!"[41]

In response, Trump began a media blitz[42] in which he appeared on various television shows either in person or by phone threatening to sue O'Donnell, calling her mean-spirited names[42], threatening to take away her partner Kelli[43] and that Barbara Walters regreted hiring her.[44] Walters responded that both Trump and O'Donnell are highly opinionated people and that Trump has never filed for bankruptcy, but several of his casino companies did but are now out of bankruptcy. She also denied that she was unhappy with O'Donnell saying "I have never regretted, nor do I now, the hiring of Rosie O'Donnell."[44]

British Royal Navy personnel seized by Iran

On March 26, 2007 O'Donnell discussed the Iranian seizure of British Royal Navy personnel comparing it to the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident that escalated the Vietnam War, implying Britain was provoking war with Iran stating:[45]

There were 15 British sailors and marines who apparently went in to Iranian waters and they were seized by the Iranians. And I have one thing to say. Gulf of Tonkin. Google it.

She stood by the statement on March 28, 2007, stating on her weblog that the British had intentionally sent forces into Iranian waters, triggering the hostage crisis as part of a false flag operation intended to precipitate the invasion of Iran, writing:[46]

The British did it on purpose. [They went] into Iranian waters as the U.S. military builds up on the Iranian border. We will be in Iran before summer as planned.

Anti-Iraq War comments

O'Donnell has been very outspoken about her disdain for the Bush administration's policies and the war in Iraq. She consistently brought up recent military deaths and news about the war as well as lamented the lack of attention US media was giving to either the Iraq war or the Bush administration's actions and policies.

On May 1, 2007 during a segment of The View, O'Donnell, prompted by guest co-host Ricki Lake, explained that some members of the armed forces joined because they were fleeing poverty and wanted to further pursue their education through the G.I. Bill, adding that there are an increasing number of convicted felons who currently serve in the US military.[47] When challenged by co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck, O'Donnell stated she "loved the military" and wanted to see them back home.

On May 17, 2007, O'Donnell rhetorically asked, "655,000 Iraqi civilians dead. Who are the terrorists?" She further explained, "If you were in Iraq and another country, the United States, the richest in the world, invaded your country and killed 655,000 of your citizens, what would you call us?"[48] Conservative commentators responded by claiming that Rosie paralleled American troops to terrorists. Elisabeth Hasselbeck and O'Donnell were later involved in a heated argument on May 23, 2007 regarding the U.S. invading Iraq and the resulting occupation.[49].

7 World Trade Center collapse

On March 26, 2007, in a conversation about the misleading information preceeding US invasion of Iraq, O'Donnell stated that 7 World Trade Center had been imploded, in line with 9/11 conspiracy theories.[50] When asked by Hasslebeck who she thought was responsible, she commented that she had no idea, but according to the Miami Herald she suggested in her blog that it was done to destroy evidence of the corporate financial scandals at Enron and WorldCom.[51] Seven World Trade Center housed the offices of government agencies like the Central Intelligence Agency,[52] the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.

O'Donnell said "I do believe that it's the first time in history that fire has ever melted steel. I do believe that it defies physics that World Trade Center tower 7 — building 7, which collapsed in on itself — it is impossible for a building to fall the way it fell without explosives being involved.[53][54] Although the comments were cheered by the studio audience, conservative talk show hosts Bill O'Reilly and Joe Scarborough called for action including firing her.[55][56]

Within days Popular Mechanics posted a response to O'Donnell's statements on its website "for those interested in what physics and demolition experts have said regarding WTC 7’s collapse, as detailed in our book "Debunking 9/11 Myths." The potential explanation included that 7 World Trade Center housed New York City's emergency command bunker, so there were large fuel tanks throughout the building that fed generators by pressurized lines.[57] The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is still investigating the collapse. O'Donnell had planned to have Dr. David Ray Griffin, author of Debunking 9/11 Debunking: An Answer to Popular Mechanics and Other Defenders of the Official Conspiracy Theory,[58] and Dr. Steven Jones, author of Why Indeed Did the World Trade Center Buildings Completely Collapse?[59] to refute Popular Mechanics' explanation.

O'Donnell departure

File:RosieElisabeth.jpg
Rosie O'Donnell and Elisabeth Hasselbeck in a heated exchange on O'Donnell's last day on The View.

On the May 23, 2007, episode of The View, O'Donnell became engaged in a heated debate with co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck [60]. The debate that day followed on from a discussion earlier in the week in which O'Donnell noted that 655,000 Iraqis have died since the United States invasion and asked "who are the terrorists?"

O'Donnell asserted that Hasselbeck was "cowardly" for not answering whether she believed O'Donnell thinks of American troops as terrorists O'Donnell also complained of how the media would portray her as a "fat, lesbian, loud" bully attacking "innocent pure Christian Elisabeth" whenever they disagreed on air. O'Donnell stated that she believed Republican pundits were misinterpreting her statements, and had asked Hasselbeck if she agreed with them. Hasselbeck claimed that she knew Rosie didn't think that US soldiers were "terrorists" but told O'Donnell that she needed to "defend herself" as it was not her place to defend O'Donnell's controversial statements.

When the debate continued past the five-minute mark, guest co-host Sherri Shepherd tried to cut to commercial break. O'Donnell silenced the effort by saying "No, no, no we're not. No because we have a lot more time." Minutes later Behar endeavored again to end the argument by interjecting "Is there no commercial on this show? What are we on, PBS? Who is directing this show? Let's go to commercial!" The show cut to commercials shortly afterwards, ending the debate.

This was O'Donnell's last broadcast. She asked to be let out of her contract nearly a month before its expiration and was given permission to leave immediately.

Two days later, in a press release, O'Donnell said she bore no ill will towards Hasselbeck and said that she "loves all three women". However, in her blog, O'Donnell stated she had not talked to Hasselbeck, and that she was in shock and "stunned" that Ms. Hasselbeck had brought up Donald Trump, with whom O'Donnell had publicly feuded. She later posted a video on her blog discussing her future relationship with Hasselbeck and in a subsequent blog post stated that "I haven't spoken to Elisabeth, and I probably ever won't". [61] O'Donnell also attempted to restate the controversial comment that had caused the feud with Hasselbeck saying, "the cowards who sent r [our] troops to this war . . . those men r [are] the terrorists."[62] According to ABC News, O'Donnell said that she knew her time on the show was over when she saw the exchange reported in the news media with the split screen effect showing her and Hasselbeck on either side. ABC News also reported that O'Donnell's arguments with Hasselbeck brought the show its best ratings ever.[63]

While the number of viewers was higher than the year before O'Donnell joined the show, in the month following her departure, viewership was down by an average of 232,000.[64]

A variety of different names were floated around as replacements for O'Donnells during the tenth season's final months. Among those reportedly considered to replace O'Donnell were Whoopi Goldberg, Gayle King, Sherri Shepherd, Kathy Griffin, Roseanne Barr and Mario Cantone. On August 1, Barbara Walters ended speculation when she announced that Whoopi Goldberg would be replacing O'Donnell as moderator for the show's eleventh season.

Season 11 (2007-2008)

The View returns for its eleventh season on September 4, 2007. Along with Goldberg it is rumored that another panelist will join the seat replacing the chair vacated by Star Jones Reynolds in 2006. Prior to the offical announcement that Goldberg would be joining the program, various media outlets reported that both Goldberg and Sherri Shepherd would be added to the panel. In Touch magazine reported that a deal for Shepherd to join The View fell through after negotiations went awry over a salary dispute. Along with Shepherd, The View is reportedly also in talks with radio personality Jacque Reid and comedian Kathy Griffin to join the show.

On April 30, 2007, Hasselbeck announced she was expecting her second child and will be on maternity leave during November sweeps, leaving yet another vacancy on the panel for several weeks.

Similar shows

Before The View

  • Leave It To The Girls was a program that aired in various incarnations over four decades. Beginning on radio in 1945, the show began to simulcast on television in 1948. The premise was simple: three celebrity women discussed a relationship topic from a woman’s point of view. A fourth member of the panel was a man, to represent the male point of view. The program ceased production in 1963. However a new version was resurrected in 1981 (under the title Leave It To The Women). This time taboo subjects of the 1980s began to be discussed, in an effort to be more contemporary. The change in subject matter did not help the ratings, and the show ended in 1982.
  • Barbara Walters hosted a similar program during the early and mid-1970s called Not For Women Only. A panel of four experts, moderated by Walters, discussed serious topical issues of the day.
  • Equal Time was a political discussion show from a woman’s point of view featuring commentators and Washington insiders. Two women co-hosted the CNBC program, each representing the liberal and conservative viewpoint. Representing the liberal viewpoint as co-host were Jane Wallace (1993-1994), Dee Dee Myers (1995-1997), and Stephanie Miller (1998-1999). Representing the conservative viewpoint as co-host were Mary Matalin (1993-1996) and Bay Buchanan (1996-1999). Torie Clarke was a regular fill-in when Buchanan was absent.

After The View

The View format has been replicated by other television shows, both in the United States:

  • In 2002, CBS News's The Early Show eliminated the traditional morning-show formula of a male/female anchor team with a weatherman and a newsreader. The revamped version had four hosts: Harry Smith, Hannah Storm, Julie Chen and Rene Syler. CBS tried to hire then View co-host Vieira to head up the broadcast, but she declined.[65]. The four-anchor format lasted for four years, and ratings increased slightly. Despite that, CBS was still not satisfied with the numbers. In December 2006, anchor Rene Syler announced her departure from the program in what is expected to be a series of changes to the four-person team.

And abroad:

  • Loose Women is a popular British talk show presented by four women in the afternoon on ITV1 that debuted in 1999, with a very similar concept to The View.
  • Kalam Nawaem, (roughly translated to mean "Sweet Talk") is an Arabic version of The View that first aired in 2002. It airs on the MBC network and has four female co-hosts who discuss a variety of topics some which are considered taboo in the Middle East.
  • The Catch-Up a Australian version of The View with similar format which debuted in February 2007, only to be cancelled 4 months later due to poor ratings [66]

Awards

The View's longtime director Mark Gentile received a Daytime Emmy Award in its first year and again in 2004. The show's producers shared the "Outstanding Talk Show" Emmy in 2003 with The Wayne Brady Show.

Since 1999, the show's hosts have received Emmy nominations every year, although they have not won.

Criticism

While some people feel The View is an intelligent show, there are others who feel it is trivialized gossip.[citation needed] Specific criticisms include the belief that hosts are either selected for or told to portray a certain personality instead of being genuine, that Walters is old and out of touch, that Jones Reynolds was pretentious and hypocritical, that the panelists spend too much time talking about trivial, superficial subjects such as celebrity babies and not enough time on important topics like politics and social issues, and that the discussions veer too much into the area of toilet humor and titillation.[citation needed]

Because of this perceived lowest-common-denominator appeal and triviality of some topics, "The View" has often been likened to a "Hen House" full of clucking chickens [citation needed], an image that was parodied by both the sketch comedy program MADtv and the animated comedy series Family Guy. Saturday Night Live parodied Walters' original introduction to the show's hosts as "a working mom, a sassy black woman like I’ve seen on TV and a total idiot".[67] Near the end of the skit, Ana Gasteyer (in character as Cokie Roberts) warned Walters (played by Cheri Oteri) that "this show will sink you like a stone."

Accusations of bias

The View has been accused of a variety of forms of bias over the years.

While diverse in terms of host age and backgrounds, the show has been criticised by many conservatives for what is seen as a liberal bias and a lack of diversity in political views. [citation needed] However, the show has had several conservative guest hosts (e.g., Ann Coulter, Dennis Miller, Kathie Lee Gifford) and regular co-host Hasselbeck is an outspoken pro-life conservative.[68] In the April 9, 2007, issue of People magazine, Hasselbeck stated that she and O'Donnell get along well off-stage, that they e-mail frequently, and that she credits O'Donnell with inspiring her to speak out more on the program.

On January 21, 2003, Jennifer O'Neill was a guest on the show promoting her "Silent No More" campaign with the goal of reducing teenage abortions. Having had an abortion herself, O'Neill spoke about her personal experience. Conservatives believed she was handled harshly by hosts and ridiculed by actress Katey Sagal in the following segment.[69]

Joy Behar has said that conservatives are "so annoying", but that she would likewise take on liberals if they were in power.[70] Nevertheless, conservative bloggers contend that Hasselbeck is the only conservative on the show, as opposed to the liberal presence of Behar and O'Donnell.[citation needed]

There also have been accusations of religious and racial bias levied against the program. Rosie O'Donnell has made the statement that "radical Christianity is just as threatening as radical Islam in a country like America." [71] William A. Donohue, president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, accused Behar and O'Donnell of several instances of anti-Catholic bigotry and accused Walters of tolerating it. [72] [73]

O'Donnell also was criticized for racial insensitivity by simulating the Chinese language in a show segment in December 2006,[74] for which she apologized, but claimed she is a comedian, and meant no offense by her joking.[75]

International Broadcasts

  • In Australia, the program is shown each weekday on the W. Channel on cable television, on a 1-day delay. The episodes are also repeated in blocks over the weekend.
  • In Canada the show is available on ABC affiliates and on the CTV broadcast network in simulcast with ABC.

Trivia

  • The show was originally called The View From Here. However, there was already a program airing in Canada with the same name, and ABC execs decided to change the name to simply The View.
  • Their first day on-air was August 11, 1997 with Tom Selleck as their first guest; Regis Philbin was the first guest in their pilot episode.
  • The co-hosts used to sit around a full-circle table. However, it was very difficult to interact with the audience with half of them having their backs against the audience; the table was quickly changed.
  • Their set was actually a leftover set from a cancelled soap opera, The City. ABC didn't commit to their own set until their fifth season.
  • Since the show's premiere, The View has been the subject of numerous parodies. One such was a recurring skit on Saturday Night Live in the late 90s, portraying Jones Reynolds (Tracy Morgan), Vieira (Molly Shannon), Behar (Ana Gasteyer) and Walters (Cheri Oteri) as jealous older women and Matenopoulos (played by Claire Danes, Cameron Diaz, Sarah Michelle Gellar and by Matenopoulos herself) as a simple-minded bimbo who was consistently being punished for making stupid comments. In 2005, MADtv parodied the show in a sketch, exaggerating the women's speech as simultaneous bickering and featuring Michael McDonald as a farmer treating the women as hens, tossing chickenfeed on the ground and producing eggs from the women's seats. The role of Walters was played by Stephnie Weir. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Fonz from the animated show Family Guy, was another parody where the women were heard clucking like chickens, with Jones Reynolds laying an egg. They were also parodied in The Simpsons with the show being called "Afternoon Yak" where the members of Afternoon Yak resemble the hosts of The View. The studio audience has also been compared to seals, as there are many breaks for applause during the show.
  • Hustler magazine featured a cartoon with the women spreading their legs with the producer commenting that this is the real "view".
  • Executive producer Geddie has evolved into an on-air foil, especially for Walters and, before her departure, Vieira. Sometimes he is asked to answer factual questions, other times brought in for a male point of view. Nevertheless, he rarely joins the hosts on stage.
  • In an episode of Family Guy, Peter, after discovering his feminine side, tells a woman at a party, "I don't care how many letters we've gotta write. The View should be on for three hours. I mean, you just get going, and then BOOM! It's News at Noon."

References and footnotes

  1. ^ [1] From 10 a.m. to the evening hours, Swanni says only two shows on ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC are in high-def. In addition to The Young & the Restless, ABC airs The View in high-def on weekdays at 11 a.m. ET.
  2. ^ a b Feet on the Ground, Heads Without Bubbles, an August 21, 1997 review from The New York Times
  3. ^ a b August 1998 review of the show from Salon.com
  4. ^ "Good View" (html). eonline.com. 1999. Retrieved 1999-05-03. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  5. ^ http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,12985,00.html The View Eyes Elisabeth], a November 2003 story about Hasselbeck's selection from E! Online
  6. ^ Vieira Selected as Couric's Successor at Today, an April 2006 Los Angeles Times article
  7. ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/28/AR2006042800002.html
  8. ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/category?blogid=7&cat=534
  9. ^ http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/tv/1401AP_TV_The_View_Reynolds.html
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  22. '^ ROSIE FADES FROM 'VIEW'; QUITS AFTER 'FAILING TO OUST BABS By DON KAPLAN New York Post
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  40. ^ Lauer, Matt (February 3, 2007). "Confessions of a beauty queen". MSNBC. Retrieved 2007-07-08.
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  43. ^ Silverman, Stephen (December 21, 2006). "Rosie Speaks Out on The View". People (magazine). Retrieved 2007-07-13.
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  45. ^ http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,262669,00.html "Should Rosie Be Fired From 'The View'?" The O'Reilly Factor (transcript), March 30, 2007.
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  52. ^ Benson, Pam (November 4, 2001). "CIA office near World Trade Center destroyed in attacks". CNN. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
  53. ^ Rosie O'Donnell 9/11 Conspiracy Comments: Popular Mechanics Responds, Popular Mechanics, March 30, 2007
  54. ^ Tokyo Rosie, Editorial, Investor's Business Daily, Mar 30, 2007
  55. ^ Should Rosie Be Fired From 'The View'? Foxnews, March 30, 2007
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  59. ^ "Video of the debate".
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