NBC looks to Lester Holt for debate win after 2016 mishaps

Lester Holt in spotlight as moderator of first debate
Lester Holt in spotlight as moderator of first debate

There is a great deal at stake at the first presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. One of those things -- not nearly so significant as who will be the most powerful person in the world, certainly, but unquestionably there -- is the reputation of a news network.

On Monday night, executives at NBC will be looking to Lester Holt, the anchor of "NBC Nightly News" and the debate's moderator, to deliver a much-needed win for their network, which has suffered through some of the most embarrassing storylines of the 2016 campaign.

"Matt Lauer" and "The CNBC Debate" have become shorthand for the most poorly handled major media events of the cycle. MSNBC's "Morning Joe" has also been a sore spot, first criticized for being too pro-Trump, and then for putting on display the very public falling out.

Though NBC itself is not the organization putting on the debate, Holt's presence on the stage is an indirect reminder of NBC's most high-profile controversy of the last two years: Brian Williams' firing from Nightly News after he was caught lying about his experiences covering the Iraq War. (Holt replaced Williams as anchor of "NBC Nightly News.")

Fairly or unfairly, NBC's recent missteps have overshadowed the strong political journalism that takes place on a daily basis on MSNBC, nightly basis on NBC Nightly News and weekly basis on NBC's "Meet The Press," and that has buoyed their ratings and their brand. And while there are much greater things at stake on Monday night than NBC's reputation in 2016, that reputation is on the line all the same.

The first campaign-related blow to the network came last October, when CNBC conducted what was widely viewed as the low-water mark of the Republican primary debate process. The moderators -- Carl Quintanilla, Becky Quick, John Harwood, and a bevy of contributors -- were slammed for losing control of the debate and asking unfocused and ill-informed questions.

The CNBC Debate was such a mess that the Republican National Committee decided to suspend its partnership with NBC for February's Super Tuesday debate, despite the fact that CNBC and NBC News are two different divisions of NBCUniversal. (That debate instead went to CNN.)

"While debates are meant to include tough questions and contrast candidates' visions and policies for the future of America, CNBC's moderators engaged in a series of 'gotcha' questions, petty and mean-spirited in tone, and designed to embarrass our candidates," RNC Chairman Reince Priebus wrote at the time. "What took place... was not an attempt to give the American people a greater understanding of our candidates' policies and ideas."

Blacklisted from the Republican debates and not included in the Democratic lineup, NBC faced the prospect of a debate-less primary season. But weeks before the New Hampshire primaries, NBC pushed for (and won) an additional Democratic debate. That debate, moderated by Chuck Todd and Rachel Maddow, was widely seen as a success.

Meanwhile, however, another controversy was brewing at MSNBC. For months, "Morning Joe" co-host Joe Scarborough had been using his show to defend and promote his friend Donald Trump. By February, his friendship with Trump had become a source of widespread discomfort among NBC News journalists.

In addition to praising Trump on his show, Scarborough had talked openly about calling the candidate and giving him political advice. He and his co-host Mika Brzezinski even visited Trump's hotel room after the New Hampshire primary (for what MSNBC described as "background discussions" with Trump and his staff). In an interview on "Morning Joe" the next day, Trump told the co-hosts, "You guys have been supporters, and I really appreciate it... Not necessarily supporters, but believers."

Scarborough and Trump's friendship fell apart in the spring after Scarborough took a more critical stance on the candidate -- "He basically said we weren't his friends anymore," Scarborough recently told GQ. (There has been some effort recently to rebuild bridges -- last week, Scarborough and Brzezinski visited the GOP nominee at Trump Tower and discussed the possibility of conducting another interview.)

But the scrutiny surrounding Scarborough and the CNBC debate pales in comparison to the scathing reviews that followed Matt Lauer's performance as moderator of NBC's Commander-in-Chief forum on September 7.

Lauer -- the co-host of NBC's Today show, and one of the network's marquee talents -- was pilloried by political observers, media critics and the general public for relentlessly pressing Hillary Clinton on her private emails and letting Trump skate by without being challenged on lies and lack of specifics.

"In an event aboard the decommissioned aircraft carrier Intrepid, the 'Today' host was lost at sea," New York Times television critic James Poniewozik wrote in one of the more scathing critiques. "Seemingly unprepared on military and foreign policy specifics, he performed like a soldier sent on a mission without ammunition, beginning with a disorganized offensive, ending in a humiliating retreat."

One NBC executive told CNNMoney the event had been a "disaster."

It's likely that these controversies are far from Holt's mind as he prepares for Monday night's debate. He has spent weeks doing research, crafting questions, preparing for every possible scenario. The awesome responsibility of his task -- as a journalist and a citizen -- probably eclipses the concerns of his network executives. Nevertheless, it is the backdrop against which NBC enters Monday's night debate.

The good news, for NBC, is that Holt is seen as perhaps uniquely capable and qualified to be a debate moderator. As his colleagues describe him, he is one of the most focused and hardworking personalities in television news, with 35 years experience and, in all that time, not a controversy to speak of.

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