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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Oprah’s departure a test for affiliates

Her show has been huge lead-in to local news

Oprah Winfrey announces during a live Friday broadcast of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” in Chicago that her daytime television show, the foundation of a multibillion-dollar media empire with legions of fans, will end its run in 2011 after 25 seasons on the air. Harpo Productions Inc. (George Burns Harpo Productions Inc.)
Caryn Rousseau And Ryan Nakashima Associated Press

CHICAGO – For more than two decades, Oprah Winfrey has been the inspirational, change-your-life champion who reigned over daytime television much like Johnny Carson once ruled late night.

Now she’s ready to say goodbye, leaving a huge void for broadcast TV even as she raises the possibility of more Oprah than ever when she starts her own cable network.

Winfrey told viewers Friday that she will dim the lights on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” at the close of its 25th season in late 2011.

“I love this show. This show has been my life. And I love it enough to know when it’s time to say goodbye,” she said, holding back tears. “Twenty-five years feels right in my bones, and it feels right in my spirit. It’s the perfect number, the exact right time.”

For the hundreds of network affiliates who depended on Winfrey to deliver millions of viewers every day, Friday’s announcement starts an 18-month clock to find a way to fill the space left behind after the end of the most successful daytime talk show in television history.

Winfrey’s show “is one of daytime television’s very foundations,” said Larry Gerbrandt, an analyst for the firm Media Valuation Partners in Los Angeles. “You could, and stations did, build their schedules around her. They gave it the best time period, leading into their news, and used it to promote other shows.”

Winfrey cautioned viewers that they would hear “a lot of speculation in the press about why I am making this decision,” warning them not to listen to the “conjecture.” But she offered no specifics about her plans for the future, except to say that she intended to produce the best possible shows during the final two years.

Winfrey, 55, is widely expected to start up a new talk show on OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network, a joint venture with Discovery Communications Inc. that was first announced last year. It will replace the Discovery Health Channel and debut in some 80 million homes.

Discovery is pouring resources into OWN to prepare for its January 2011 launch. Chief Financial Officer Brad Singer told analysts this month that Discovery plans to invest $30 million to $40 million in 2009 on programming, staffing and other costs.

Discovery is also lending the venture $100 million, and OWN hired “Oprah” co-executive producer Lisa Erspamer this month as its chief creative officer. Erspamer is expected to move from Chicago to Los Angeles in January.

Winfrey’s move to cable leaves a gap in the afternoon programming at many TV stations, where it leads into the local evening news and is popular with advertisers. At the peak of her ratings in the 1990s, Oprah could almost single-handedly prop up the newscast on WFAA-TV in Dallas, an ABC affiliate, because her fans stayed with the station, said Mike Devlin, the station’s president and general manager.

There are other syndicated shows available – “Live with Regis and Kelly,” “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” “Rachael Ray Show,” “Dr. Phil” and “The Tyra Show” – but none has the reach or influence of “Oprah.”

“There’s always cycles in the television business,” said Emily Barr, the president and general manager at WLS-TV in Chicago.

“We are thrilled to have had this long association with Oprah and we will miss her, but we will also move on and see what else is out there.”