Mike Sheehan Fired After 16 Years: Fox's WNYW Cuts a Classic New York Character

NYPD Detective-Turned-WNYW/New York Reporter Mike Sheehan
Way back when then-WNEW introduced the 10 o'clock news to New York City, the shop was known as a real New York newsroom: filled with quirky, gritty, honest-to-God New Yorkers, warts and all. They weren't spit-shined, manicured and pretty, but damn did they know the City. And Channel 5's newscast was worth watching.
A lot has changed, and most of those characters--and the solid, serious, in your face news that made Channel 5 different and so legitimately New York--have been replaced with fresh faces from El Paso and Orlando and beyond. Even the name--the original 10 O'Clock News (and, to my ear, the best damn news open this side of WABC's Cool Hand Luke)--has been reduced to "Fox 5 News at Ten," which could be the name of any newscast in any town.
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And tonight comes word Mike Sheehan is out. As the set got glitzy and the wrinkled faces got shown the door...as the New York accents faded and the station's news turned more and more to American Idol and Lindsay Lohan...Sheehan remained. The NYPD detective who earned his bones breaking cases like Preppy Murderer Robert Chambers was a throwback to the gold old days at 5: an honest to God trenchcoat and pinky ring wearing New York original.
Full disclosure: I worked at WNYW, and my desk faced Mike's. This is a man who can tell a story over a beer like few I've ever known. And I know deep under his gruff Irish exterior, he was proud to do the job he did. Losing his job, as he told the Daily News's Richard Huff tonight, was "a kick in the chest. Sixteen years I've been there. I can't believe it."
But anyone who watches local news in New York--or anywhere--shouldn't be surprised in the least. Longevity is no longer an asset. Years on the job and contacts at One Police Plaza? That got you a big salary and influence back when television stations were powerhouses that could afford such things.
Sheehan told the Richard Huff the station ended its relationship with a letter delivered to his home. This is, sadly, the new normal in our business: nobody tells you to your face. It's a way of doing business that reduces us all, and it's shameful.
Yes, Mike has had his problems, including a recent accident involving a police horse and an arrest for reckless endangerment and operating a vehicle while intoxicated and impaired. Whether that's really why Sheehan got the axe is valid fodder for debate. But believe me, in this environment, people like Mike Sheehan walk tall--too tall--and the networks are moving on.
For years, Mike ended his crime stories with an appeal for folks to "do the right thing" and pick up the phone if they knew anything that could help police. Too bad managers at Fox couldn't do so little as to pick up the phone and give it to him straight.
20 and Out: WNBC Fires Len Berman. Anything, It Seems, to Save a Buck at NBC.
WNBC's Len Berman
"I do not want to retire," Len Berman told Richard Huff at The New York Daily News. But after 20 years as main sports anchor at WNBC, Berman's getting the boot, the latest goliath to fall at a station that was once known far and wide for having assembled a stellar collection of New York journalists, many of them, like Berman, a nationally-known name with his appearances on Letterman and his "Spanning the World" segment. But hey, there's that nasty downside to being a "name." You know, that oversized salary.
So Berman's gone. Not because WNBC's eliminating sports, as some other cash-strapped and struggling local stations are doing. This is all about the money. WNBC news director Vickie Burns writing in a newsroom memo: "Going forward, we remain committed to our local sports franchise and will announce new plans for our coverage soon." You gotta love those "we'll figure out the rest soon memos. It basically tells you the key thing was getting rid of a superstar and his salary. How they'll fill the big man's shoes? Eh. We'll figure it out. The key thing is we just knocked off a legend and saved a TON of cash. You can almost imagine the relieved high-fiving going on among the suits. That wasn't so hard! Maybe we should ditch Sue next?

Spanning the World for 20 Years
On the Daily News website this morning, they've got a poll: "Are you sad to see Len Berman go?" The overwhelming answer: "Yes. He's a New York City icon," with 84%. You'd like to think this was a not all that funny April Fool's joke from Channel 4. And then you remember. It's NBC. No sense of humor. No sense of history.
Sharing is Caring…Then, Firing. Fewer Local News Choppers for Gotham?
2 Stations Cover Madoff Live, Just 1 Chopper Overhead
Sure, in the beginning it sounds like common sense. It seems like good business. Why hover two choppers over Bernie Madoff when one will do? The suits at FOX and NBC were surely satisfied Thursday as the despicable Mr. Madoff made his one-way trip into court in Manhattan, a bevy of birds overhead to capture any fleeting movement that the army of stills and shooters on the ground might somehow miss.

Could the Baddest Bird in Gotham Be Grounded?
When WNBC's Chopper 4 needed to refuel, Channel 4 never lost a second of live overhead pictures--in HD--thanks to new BFF WNYW, with its sleek SkyFOX HD sharing live images with both stations. "It's a great plan to share assets and save money," a FOX spokesperson told the New York Daily News' Richard Huff. Well, yes. But talk to the local newsers who fly those birds, they'll tell you what's good for business almost certainly means somebody will lose their job.
"If the plan works out, one of the stations' helicopters would be grounded completely and the two stations would share the remaining copter's costs," Huff reports. It's exactly what's already happened in markets like Phoenix and Chicago, where "sharing" quickly morphed into "eliminating."
"NY Nightly News" May Move to WNBC's Cable Channel
Chuck Scarborough/Daily News Photo
The revamped news lineup at WNBC/NY may be getting revampier, according to a report in today's NY Daily News. Richard Huff reports the Chuck Scarborough-helmed 7 p.m. "New York Nightly News" could be cable-bound in the next month, moving onto the yet-to-be-formally-named-or-described-but-definitely-24-hour-channel that WNBC has been planning as a key part of its evolution into a "content center."
Huff reports: "As part of programming the new network, expected to launch next month, Ch. 4's 7 p.m. newscast may slide over to the so-far-called NY Channel and become a "signature" show, the Daily News has learned."
Sources also tell the News the 7 p.m. show will expand to an hour, and Scarborough will continue in his role as main anchor of Channel 4's 6 and 11 p.m. newscasts.
What the remaining 23 hours will look like on the tentatively-titled "NY" channel remains unclear, though it won't be an all-news competitor to Time-Warner's NY1.
LATEST LAYOFFS: WCBS/NY Cuts Rodgers, Discepolo

Ducis Rodgers/WCBS Photo
NY Daily News TV writer Richard Huff quotes a source at WCBS/NY this morning, saying Channel 2 has pink slipped sports director Ducis Rodgers and morning sports anchor John Discepolo, leaving the CBS O&O with a sports team of precisely one: Sam Ryan. Huff says station officials refused comment, but Huff's source credited the cuts to "cost cutting."
The layoffs (Rodgers' last day is reportedly Thursday, with Discepolo ending his Channel 2 run on Friday) come just days after Huff's column
arguing that local tv sports itself is an endangered species.
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Local TV Newsers: Has Sports Run Out the Clock?
Richard Huff at the NY Daily News puts it bluntly to local tv sports anchors and reporters: "That's it. Goodnight. Go home." As stations' budgets contract and reporters are cut from payrolls, Huff argues the money committed to a daily sportscast is not well spent: "When die-hard sports fans are glued to ESPN - with tickers at the bottom of the screen giving them all the results - along with all-sports Web sites, what exactly do local sportscasters bring to the table?
Very little, if you think about it.
Generally speaking, local sports anchors update box scores and intro highlights."
As we've reported, KVVU/Las Vegas just decided to drop weeknight sportscasts altogether, saving sports for weekends and special events. George Michael unplugged the Sports Machine in DC.
And if you take a moment today to drift over to the sports office in your newsroom today and take the talent's temperature, you'll notice an icy fear. They feel time running out. Anchors who once had extended segments in weeknight newscasts now struggle to get in a minute of scores, and most have had the experience of hearing, scripts in hand, IFB in ear, pancake on face, "Sports is dead!" as a breaking news story forced news producers to take back the few seconds sports was allotted to make room for live chopper pictures of that rolled-over bakery truck.
So, come on sportsters... what's the argument for survival? Can a regional cable sports net cover high schools as well as you can? Can ESPN really do what you do?
Latest Layoffs: Gutting a Once Great Station; NBC New York Cuts 3 More
Amazing. In the same week when WNBC reminds viewers that it actually can compete on the big story, the station waits until Friday to bury a far more telling news item: three more experienced New York vets cut at the "content center." The Daily News' Richard Huff broke the story overnight on nydailynews.com:
"A day after WNBC/Ch. 4 scooped its rivals in covering the Hudson River plane crash, the station fired three of its most familiar names.
Market veterans Jay DeDapper, Kendra Farn and Carol Anne Riddell were let go Friday.
"Their contracts were not renewed," said a station spokeswoman.
They are the latest in a long string of on-air layoffs for the once dominant station, which in recent years has seen its news ratings fall. "
DeDapper, a veteran New York City political reporter, now apparently out of a job at NBC's flagship just hours before one of the biggest political stories of our lifetime. Who will "NBC New York" have in Washington? Who will it have in Brooklyn? Who will it have who can even remember what WNBC once was? Chuck, Sue,... and who?

Jay DeDapper/WNBC
"Miracle on Hudson:" WNBC Leads Local Newsers with Story
WNBC/NYC, often criticized in recent years for falling behind on breaking news ("where's 4?") and still adjusting to its new evolution into a "content center," delivered old-school style when the big breaker hit the river Thursday afternoon. "Ch. 4 was first on with a report of the crash, and had the first footage from the scene. The others followed shortly," reports Richard Huff in the Daily News.
If you've got a take on the NYC local newsers' performance on the story, please share it.