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Public impeachment hearings begin Nov. 13, Rep. Adam Schiff said Wednesday (Nov. 6), and, not surprisingly, C-SPAN immediately announced plans to cover them gavel-to-gavel. A Fox News Channel spokesperson told Broadcasting & Cable that it will be also covering the hearings "wall-to-wall," ...

Public hearings begin Nov. 13

Public impeachment hearings begin Nov. 13, Rep. Adam Schiff said Wednesday (Nov. 6), and, not surprisingly, C-SPAN immediately announced plans to cover them gavel-to-gavel.

A Fox News Channel spokesperson told Broadcasting & Cable that it will be also covering the hearings "wall-to-wall," specific anchors yet to be determined.

House Intelligence Committee Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) tweeted that the first witnesses will be top Ukraine envoy William Taylor and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs George Kent.

Related: C-SPAN Launches Impeachment Coverage Page

The second hearing will be Nov. 15 with former Ukrainian ambassador Marie Yovanovitch.

Taylor was much in the news Wednesday after transcripts of his closed-door testimony to the committee revealed he felt there had definitely been a quid pro quo--an investigation into the Bidens in exchange for freeing up money for Ukraine--which he said was directed by Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani presumably at the direction of his boss, though he said he had not talked directly with the President.

A representative for PBS, which covered the Nixon impeachment hearings back in the 1970s gavel-to-gavel, or pretty close, and made a pop culture star out of Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C.), said it was still working on its coverage plans at press time. Representatives from the commercial broadcast nets either had not responded by press time or were working on getting an answer.

Related: Support for Trump Impeachment Slips

The hearings will likely be several hours apiece, so cable news nets are more likely to roll with long stretches while broadcast nets are more likely to provide their affiliates with shorter bites, cut-ins, updates and special reports as necessary.


Read full article on Broadcasting & Cable



About WVBA

The West Virginia Broadcasters Association has been representing and serving West Virginia commercial radio and television stations since 1946. We are a member-driven trade association that provides unequaled service and value to stations throughout the state. 

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