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Some CNN staffers skeptical of network’s ‘experiment’ giving Anderson Cooper, Jake Tapper a podcast makeover

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Loyal CNN viewers and critics alike were taken by surprise last week at the “experimenting” some of its on-air talent dabbled in.

Anderson Cooper began anchoring his primetime show Wednesday from the newsroom instead of his studio, positioning himself at a table normally used as CNN data guru Harry Enten’s work station, Fox News Digital learned.

Cooper has appeared without a jacket and with rolled-up sleeves while speaking into a large desk microphone. And during a panel discussion, he and his guests discussed the Strait of Hormuz with a physical map on the table, a departure from the interactive map Cooper had used earlier in the week.

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On Friday, Jake Tapper anchored the first hour of “The Lead” from his office similarly accompanied with a large microphone on his desk.

“So, you’re probably wondering what’s going on, why we’re in my office for the first hour of ‘The Lead’ today. So, it’s an experiment,” a tieless Tapper told viewers. “This is my actual desk where I do my actual work, not the desk in the studio. And we thought we would bring you into the space where we and my team do our actual journalism and plan the show every day.”

Tapper showcased his office decor filled with memorabilia from losing presidential campaigns while guests of his sat on the couch adjacent to his desk.

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While Tapper’s experiment lasted only the first hour of Friday’s show, Cooper’s is ongoing — carrying over into this week. 

For some, the image of the large microphones invoked the members of the late CNN icon Larry King or revered broadcaster Edward R. Murrow. But for others, the aesthetic changes were made to have the CNN anchors look more like podcast hosts.

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However, their colleagues say the so-called experiment “didn’t work.”

“Look, I’m all for experimentation. The network has been static for far too long. I applaud the experimentation,” one CNN insider told Fox News Digital. “The question is whether this is the experiment you want to be running? But the good news is that if doesn’t work, you can try something else.”

Regarding CNN’s effort to podcastify their shows, they say talents like Cooper and Tapper don’t fit the mold.

“You need looser personalities, not just looser sets,” the network staffer said.

A second CNN staffer says the changes that were made on Cooper and Tapper’s shows were an attempt by CNN at “being something we aren’t.”

“Podcasts are a place people go not because of the look, but because of the product,” they said. “Joe Rogan, as the obvious example, is all opinion. He’s smart and all those great things, but ultimately he’s not trying to be a journalist.”

“There’s room for that on primetime, on cable, including CNN,” they continued. “But Jake, what he is, is not what podcasts are. Anderson? He has a very successful podcast. But Anderson — the news anchor — that’s a different thing. There is room for many things. TV isn’t podcast, even though podcast has video.”

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Not everyone soured on Cooper and Tapper’s on-air experiment. A third CNN staffer told Fox News Digital they “liked” what the anchors have done. Former CNN editor-at-large Chris Cillizza applauded his ex-employer for trying out different formats.

“Would you rather them keep doing the same old, same old that isn’t working?” Cillizza asked on X.

However, defenders were outnumbered by critics who mocked Cooper and Tapper. Liberal journalist Taylor Lorenz reacted, “This is so funny what the hell are they doing,” while The Bulwark’s Tim Miller joked, “Looking forward to @JohnBerman from the bathroom stall.” 

CNN did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

CNN’s podcast-tinged tweaks come with network on the brink of new ownership, as Paramount’s $111 billion offer to take over Warner Bros. Discovery moves forward. And as a result, Paramount owner David Ellison would oversee two struggling news organizations: CNN and CBS News.

There has been speculation whether Ellison would appoint Bari Weiss, his hand-picked editor in chief of CBS News, to also take over CNN. While broadcast news was something Weiss had no prior experience in, she certainly knows a thing or two about podcasts. 

Weiss entered the podcast world in 2021 as host of “Honestly,” and her digital publication The Free Press, which Ellison acquired for $150 million, produces several other podcasts. But CNN staffers are dreading the prospect of Weiss becoming their new boss.

Likely adding to the anxiety of CNN’s newsroom is the support Ellison has received from the Trump administration. Earlier this month, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth scolded the network for what he called an “unserious” report suggesting the administration underestimated the effect its war with Iran would have on the Strait of Hormuz, saying, “The sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better.”

Ellison vowed CNN will maintain editorial independence if the Paramount takeover happens.

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Bobby Cox, Iconic Braves Manager And World Series Champion, Dead At 84

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Bobby Cox was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2014
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Americans to be evacuated from Hantavirus cruise ship as global health chief travels to quarantine island

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17 Americans will be among the 150 people evacuated from the M/V Hondius cruise ship after an outbreak of a strain of Hantavirus as the World Health Organization’s head tells the public that the trending virus “is not another COVID-19.”

The cruise ship, which will anchor off the coast of Spain’s Canary Islands on Sunday, will be followed shortly after by Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO).

In a lengthy Saturday morning message posted to X, Ghebreyesus assured the globe that the risk Hantavirus poses to public health remains low.

“I know you are worried. I know that when you hear the word ‘outbreak’ and watch a ship sail toward your shores, memories surface that none of us have fully put to rest,” Ghebreyesus wrote.

“The pain of 2020 is still real, and I do not dismiss it for a single moment. But I need you to hear me clearly: this is not another COVID-19. The current public health risk from Hantavirus remains low. My colleagues and I have said this unequivocally, and I will say it again to you now,” he continued.

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Ghebreyesus claimed he would be personally visiting Tenerife, the Canary isle where passengers will arrive after evacuating the cruise ship.

“I intend to travel to Tenerife to observe this operation firsthand, to stand alongside the health workers, port staff, and officials who are making it happen, and to personally pay my respects to an island that has responded to a difficult situation with grace, solidarity, and compassion,” he wrote.

“Your humanity deserves to be witnessed, not just acknowledged from a distance. As I have said many times: viruses do not care about politics, and they do not respect borders. The best immunity any of us has is solidarity,” the WHO head continued.

Despite his assurances, however, Dr. Tedros also warned the public to stay vigilant against the virus which has already claimed three lives on the cruise ship.

“The virus aboard the MV Hondius is the Andes strain of hantavirus. It is serious. Three people have lost their lives, and our hearts go out to their families,” he wrote, though again reiterated that public health risk was low.

The U.S. government is planning on further evacuating the American passengers to a military base in Nebraska for quarantine and monitoring, Fox News Digital previously reported.

President Donald Trump weighed in on the outbreak personally, telling reporters Friday, “We have very good people looking at it. It seems to be okay. They know the virus very well. They’ve worked with it for a long time. They know it very well. Not easy to pass on. So we hope that’s true.”

“Our American passengers, they’re gonna be taken to Nebraska, to a center where they will be monitored. They will be isolated, they’ll check their vital signs, their temperature, their oxygen level, their blood pressure,” Dr. Janet Nesheiwat, a former Trump-tapped nominee for Surgeon General, told Fox News on Saturday.

“If they start to develop any symptoms, we can intervene early. Because as it is right now, there’s no specific treatment for this virus other than supportive care, like oxygen, fluids, hydration, analgesics,” she said.

Fox News Digital contacted the WHO and the CDC for further comment but did not immediately receive a response.

Fox News Digital’s Brittany Miller contributed to this report.

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