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Austin360 blogs > TV Blog > Archives > 2008 > November > 04 > Entry

Tonight’s the night! What to expect on TV’s election results

Are you ready for some results? Barring a mind-blowing disaster, we will find out who our next president will be tonight — possibly as early as 7 p.m.

And millions upon millions of Americans will hear the “calling” of the election on TV. Nearly 65 million viewers watched election returns four years ago. If viewership for the 2008 primary elections and presidential debates are any indication, considerably more millions will be tuned in for tonight’s historic showdown between Democratic Sen. Barack Obama and Republican Sen. John McCain.

All of the cable and broadcast news networks will be dancing around their “magic walls” by 6 p.m. (Central Time). At that very moment, polls will be closed in two battleground states — Indiana and Virginia. If both of those states fall for Obama in a big way, we’ll see the anchors, reporters and pundits begin to salivate over an early call for victory.

At 6:30 p.m., two more big battlegrounds end their voting — Ohio and North Carolina. If McCain takes both of those states, look for insecurity among the folks who previously were prepping for a winner to be announced early. And at 7 p.m., after Florida, Pennsylvania and Missouri wrap things up, the suspense will either be gripping or the end will be clear.

Low-tech fun like Tim Russert’s grease-board, upon which he scrawled “Florida! Florida! Florida!” in 2000 will be replaced by dazzling high-tech gizmos. CNN broke ground with the digital “magic wall” map in the early primaries and apparently is flirting with introducing 3-D holograms of reporters in the field being beamed into the New York studio.

ABC is taking over Times Square for its network coverage, while NBC, as it has done before, is home-based at Rockefeller Center, where the outside Plaza’s ice rink has been tansformed into a U.S. map.

As it was in 2004, the political executives at cable and network news divisions will be favoring accuracy over speed. Nobody wants to be caught calling a state before it’s actually been tabulated. Projections, as we found in 2000, can be deadly wrong. That means an official winner shouldn’t be called before the polls are closed in the West (10 p.m. our time), but if the tally becomes lopsided, it wouldn’t take a genius at home to make a personal call and pop open the bubbly.

You can either flip around, as I’ll be doing, or settle in with one source. Here’s the lineup of, by now, very familiar faces:

Charles Gibson, Diane Sawyer, George Stephanopoulos on ABC

Brian Williams on NBC

Katie Couric on CBS

Jim Lehrer on PBS

Shepard Smith on Fox TV

Brit Hume and Chris Wallace on Fox News Channel

Wolf Blitzer, Anderson Cooper and Campbell Brown on CNN

David Gregory, Chris Matthews and Keith Olbermann on MSNBC

Permalink | Comments (3) | Post your comment Categories: News coverage

Comments

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By L Craig

November 4, 2008 8:03 PM | Link to this

I believe there should be no info released, even of individual states. I worked as a precinct captain in California for several years and the news of states going for one or the other candidate does affect the voters in the Western states. People are discouraged and stay home thinking their choice has already lost, others stay home because their guy has already won, and strangest of all to me, were the people who voted for the winner even if originally supporting the loser, because they wanted to be on the winning side!

By TEE

November 4, 2008 4:24 PM | Link to this

This is all so exciting I can not wait. I will be sitting in front of the tv from 6:00 until I fall asleep tonight. I'm predicting that it will be a long night. I dont believe the election will be a sweep and neither candidate will win by a landslide.

By gitarzan

November 4, 2008 1:30 PM | Link to this

Wouldn't it be more appropriate to not "call" the Eastern states before the Western states are closed for polling?


HOLLOWAY REPLIES:

The winner of the presidency will not be called until all time zones have closed voting. But individual states will be called as the winners in each of those states become obvious. There are certain bellwether states in the Eastern and Central Time Zones that will pretty much reveal the eventual winner, but no network will officially call the election until someone achieves 270 electoral votes.

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