Obama at 100 Days: Presidental Press Conference to Cost Networks Millions

Fox move to dump Obama presser blurs line between ad sales and civic duty.

ByABC News
April 28, 2009, 3:45 PM

April 29, 2009— -- Fox's decision not to air President Obama's press conference Wednesday night sheds light on the behind-the-scenes process by which the major TV networks decide to preempt their regular programming at the president's request -- a decision which costs them millions of dollars.

Fox is the only one of the major networks to skip the event -- Obama's third prime time press conference to be held on his hundredth day in office -- opting instead to show the drama "Lie to Me."

The conference, scheduled to air at 8 p.m. ET, will not just be held during prime time, but during the important sweeps period, costing the networks each millions of dollars in ad revenue.

It will air on ABC, CBS, NBC and the cable-news networks including Fox News and Fox Business.

Executives at each of the broadcast networks said they are increasingly sensitive about the White House's now routine requests for airtime, given the state of the economy and a decrease in ad revenues.

Profits at the networks have been sliding in the recession. Walt Disney Co. (which owns ABC and this Web site), NBC Universal, Fox and CBS are expected to post profit declines of 35 to 50 percent in the first quarter of this year, according to analysts who follow the companies. That's on top of a bad fourth quarter, when revenue dropped steeply at all the networks.

Some executives said they had made their concerns known to the White House. They all agreed to speak only on background or off the record.

"When the White House makes a formal request for time, the networks have traditionally cooperated," said an executive at one of the networks.

"It's a negotiation. But, there is a feeling among some networks that the White House has gone too far or asked too much. There is a sense the White House will request more time and with each request the bar for the networks gets higher," the executive said.

According to a Fox statement, the network will "be alerting viewers with an on-screen graphic at the top of the 8 PM (ET) hour that the press conference is available on Fox News Channel and the Fox Business Network."

Ratings for presidential events on the Fox network tend to be lower than the other networks and the company's cable channels outperform the broadcast during such events, said a person familiar with Fox's decision.

One source said Fox would lose $2 million to $3 million by airing the news conference instead of its regular programming.