Generally speaking, it's the wave of the future.

There have always been a few of these stories that had a special thing about them.

After a slow start in the first week, The Early Show has offered the heaviest coverage in the last two weeks.

I don't think she's got many great skills as an interviewer, but she is really good, coming from ESPN, at thinking on her feet and reacting to images, ... She brings that sporting background of joking and being part of a gang, and that's exactly the atmosphere they're trying to create.

The only place I've seen an equivalent velocity would be on the tabloid entertainment shows.

The only reason these sorts of stories get the amount of coverage that they do in the first place is that everyone is rooting for a happy ending. People let their optimism for a good headline get in the way of the ... facts.

[Shapiro] ran a holding operation and was never able to put his mark on NBC News, ... NBC News hasn't fallen apart under him, but it hasn't been forward-looking or innovative.

Generally speaking, it's the wave of the future. But the future will not arrive on November 7. This is a stepping stone for the future.