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CNBC axes Shepard Smith’s nightly newscast after two years

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                Shepard Smith appears on The Fox News Deck before his “Shepard Smith Reporting” program in January 2017, in New York. CNBC is canceling Smith’s nightly newscast after two years, with its new president saying he wanted to focus on the network’s core strength of business news, announced today. Smith landed at CNBC after abruptly leaving Fox News Channel in 2019.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Shepard Smith appears on The Fox News Deck before his “Shepard Smith Reporting” program in January 2017, in New York. CNBC is canceling Smith’s nightly newscast after two years, with its new president saying he wanted to focus on the network’s core strength of business news, announced today. Smith landed at CNBC after abruptly leaving Fox News Channel in 2019.

NEW YORK >> CNBC is canceling Shepard Smith’s nightly newscast after two years, with its new president saying he wanted to focus on the network’s core strength of business news.

Smith, who is leaving the network, will have his last telecast sometime later this month. He did not have any immediate comment.

Smith landed at CNBC after abruptly leaving Fox News Channel in 2019, establishing a general interest news show that aired at 7 p.m. Eastern on weeknights.

CNBC said Smith’s show attracted the richest audience of any evening program on cable news — usually a huge selling point. But there clearly weren’t enough viewers.

His show has averaged 222,000 viewers this year, down slightly from 2021, the Nielsen company said. For the last three months of 2020, “The News with Shepard Smith” had 280,000 viewers.

By contrast, Fox News’ Jesse Watters had 3.4 million viewers in the same time slot on Tuesday and MSNBC’s Joy Reid had 1.3 million, Nielsen said.

Smith was lured to CNBC by previous chief executive Mark Hoffman. But Hoffman was replaced in September by KC Sullivan, who announced Smith’s exit in a memo to staff today.

“I believe we must prioritize and focus on our core strengths of business news and personal finance,” Sullivan wrote.

He said a business news show will launch in the same time period early next year, but offered no other details.

The CNBC chief said that “at a time when misinformation and disinformation is rampant, ‘The News’ succeeded in providing audiences with the clearest understanding of the facts.”

Smith worked at Fox from its inception in 1996 until 2019, quitting after a run-in with Fox’s ascendant opinion host, Tucker Carlson. For several years he had anchored a 7 p.m. show on Fox, but it had been moved to the afternoon.

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