Head TraumaInsiders reveal television's most hated pundits
(Photo: Getty Images) How things have changed. Today, the word pundit pretty much refers to any one of the preening jackals who host (or appear as a regular guest on) the dozens of shouty cable TV programs from which we ostensibly get our "news." "The cable punditry business is an echo chamber in which experience, talent, and knowledge are all secondary to how loud you can yell," says Chez Pazienza, a former producer at CNN's American Morning. "And the louder and more obnoxious you are, the longer your half-life in the chamber is." In an industry that places a premium on big personalities, then, it's no surprise that many of the men (and women, but mostly men) at the top of the heap rub their colleagues the wrong way. "Most people in cable news are assholes," says Tucker Carlson, the former host of CNN's Crossfire. "If they're not assholes, they have dysfunctional sex lives. But they're usually assholes." Of course, some cantankerous behavior is to be expected—it's a deadline-driven, high-stress field in which subordinates and talent alike routinely plow through 16-hour days purely on a temporary adrenaline-and-caffeine high. "The medium itself is so bad. It just brings out the worst in people," says Carlson. "People are constantly on edge. There's a real rawness of emotion present in even the most basic of human interactions." While the foundation-caked network faces typically smile away when the cameras are rolling, the lead-up more often closely resembles a hostage negotiation gone awry than a professional working environment. "Everyone is exhausted and has ADD. People yell and tempers fly. It can create an unfair representation of someone's true persona," says Pazienza. "That being said, there are a lot of genuine jerks." Which raises the obvious question: Who are the most hated news personalities of all? Not hated for their ideological viewpoints, mind you—we're talking about the people who are plainly and wholly disliked by their colleagues and overworked staffs. (Note: so many people suggested barely-relevant conservative stick figure Ann Coulter that we figured we'd mention her here and just move on.) To separate the mildly unpopular from the legitimately detested, we polled a number of current and former producers—the people with the best view of the tantrums and shouting matches—as well as some professional TV reporters and had them dish the dirt. In the interest of being fair and balanced, we also asked for the pundits who are popular and well-liked in their newsrooms. < BACK TO Features |
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