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The program has gone through several formats through the years, with the news-heavy first season making way for a direction where subjects such as a pair of Australian ] twins (who |
The program has gone through several formats through the years, with the news-heavy first season making way for a direction where subjects such as a pair of Australian ] twins (who died in an April 2012 house fire)<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.geelongadvertiser.com.au/article/2012/08/28/346885_news.html|title=Anorexic twins die in house fire|date=28 April 2012|work='']''|accessdate=28 August 2013}}</ref>) were regularly featured in sweeps periods, along with other fringe stories such as ] stories and the ] which had little or nothing to do with entertainment. | ||
In September 2007, ] moved the show, for its fourth season, to New York. Formerly ]-based O'Brien joined Spencer in a new ] studio. The duo hosted from studio space within theShow ] in Manhattan, home of the musical '']'', which has unobstructed views of ], nearby the MTV studio facilities and also within ]. | In September 2007, ] moved the show, for its fourth season, to New York. Formerly ]-based O'Brien joined Spencer in a new ] studio. The duo hosted from studio space within theShow ] in Manhattan, home of the musical '']'', which has unobstructed views of ], nearby the MTV studio facilities and also within ]. |
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omg! Insider | |
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File:Insider omg logo.png | |
Presented by | Kevin Frazier (2011–present) Thea Andrews (2013–present) |
Country of origin | United States |
Production | |
Camera setup | multi-camera |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies | Paramount Television (2004-2006) CBS Paramount Television (2006-2009, uncredited after 2007) CBS Television Studios (2009-present, uncredited) |
Original release | |
Network | syndication |
Release | September 13, 2004 (2004-09-13) – present |
Related | |
Entertainment Tonight |
omg! Insider (formerly named The Insider) is an American entertainment news program covering events and celebrities. It debuted on September 13, 2004 as a spinoff of Entertainment Tonight and started as a popular segment that took viewers "behind closed doors" and gave them "inside" information. Since becoming a separate program, it took a tabloid direction, and has gone through several formats since its 2004 premiere, though since the start of the 2011-12 season it has lost many of the tabloid elements and become more of a straight rundown of entertainment news.
The original theme song (which was changed after the second season, coinciding with a change in distributors) was performed by Richie Sambora.
On January 7, 2013, The Insider changed its name to omg! Insider.
History
The series was initially hosted by Pat O'Brien in Hollywood on the ET Paramount Studios Stage 28 set with Lara Spencer in New York in MTV's 1515 Broadway studio overlooking Times Square. O' Brien remained a host up until March 5, 2008 when O'Brien was replaced with Donny Osmond. O'Brien returned to the series a month later after Osmond declined to become a permanent host. Spencer through the years was a solo host due at times to O'Brien's varied personal problems which forced him to take time off in extended periods to address them.
The program has gone through several formats through the years, with the news-heavy first season making way for a direction where subjects such as a pair of Australian anorexic twins (who died in an April 2012 house fire)) were regularly featured in sweeps periods, along with other fringe stories such as true crime stories and the Nadya Suleman octuplets story which had little or nothing to do with entertainment.
In September 2007, CBS Television Distribution moved the show, for its fourth season, to New York. Formerly Los Angeles-based O'Brien joined Spencer in a new Manhattan studio. The duo hosted from studio space within theShow Minskoff Theatre in Manhattan, home of the musical The Lion King, which has unobstructed views of Times Square, nearby the MTV studio facilities and also within One Astor Plaza.
On September 8, 2008, the program began to air in high definition with the move of both ET and The Insider from Stage 28 to Stage 4 at the CBS Studio Center as a final consequence of the 2006 split of Viacom and CBS. The set's focal point was a large life-size 3D construction of the program's logo, which was formerly used as the main portion of the set where segments took place until the September 2009 retooling of the program into a panel show. The New York aspect of the program was also abandoned, with Spencer relocating to Los Angeles and becoming a solo host, along with Victoria Recano, Steven Cojocaru and Cheryl Woodcock.
In the move, O'Brien became a Los Angeles-based correspondent for the program, but ten days later on September 18, was dismissed permanently from the program for comments he made in a staff email after a trip to Iowa, where he directed comments specifically at a mid-show daily segment of Spencer's which launched when the new season started. O'Brien proceeded to involve a rundown of the prices and labels of her clothing and accessories, saying that it made the viewers he talked to "vomit". Despite this pointed criticism the segment remained and continued to air at the end of every episode until Spencer's departure, expanding to the point where viewers made a multiple choice on what Spencer would wear on the next episode.
After the departure of O'Brien, the show was hosted by Lara Spencer alone until January 2009, when Samantha Harris joined the program from E! News as a permanent co-host. Harris also provided analysis and commentary as part of her duties as co-host of ABC's Dancing with the Stars until her departure from that series at the start of 2010.
It was announced in December 2012 that CBS Television Distribution inked a deal with Yahoo!'s omg! celebrity/gossip news division; the program changed its title from The Insider to omg! Insider by January 7, 2013.
Changes in format
During September 2009, the program converted to a panel format, featuring a roundtable discussion and debate format (similar to Pardon the Interruption or the "Hot Topics" segment of The View) with three permanent co-hosts and a guest host discussing entertainment topics, although that was also changed to Niecy Nash becoming a fourth de facto host and a rotating fifth guest host slot. This meant that the on-air correspondents were dismissed and stories were compiled by Entertainment Tonight staff or off-camera personnel.
The format was changed once again in September 2010 back to a traditional entertainment newsmagazine format with Spencer and Jacobs co-hosting; currently the program runs second-to-last in syndicated newsmagazines ratings wise behind Extra. Industry analysts had surmised that the change was a precursor to testing Spencer in the traditional ET format without placing her on that show, as current ET female host Mary Hart was to retire from that series at the end of the 2010-11 season; however, Nancy O'Dell succeeded Hart as female anchor at the end of May 2011.
2011 hosting changes
On March 5, 2011, it was announced that Kevin Frazier was named co-anchor of the program, replacing Jacobs, who moved to correspondent duties for ET. Twelve days later on March 17, it was announced that Lara Spencer would leave the program by the start of May to become the lifestyle anchor for Good Morning America Spencer was replaced by Brooke Anderson, a co-host on HLN's Showbiz Tonight. During the week of the royal wedding, Anderson split her reporting duties between CNN and The Insider. Since the beginning of September 2011 the program has been refocused more as a straight entertainment news show, and many of the tabloid elements of the Spencer/O'Brien era have been removed, with the program's website being refocused to be more of a straight competitor to TMZ.
Syndication model
It is syndicated by CBS Television Distribution, often as half of a one-hour news block that includes the show from which it was spun off, Entertainment Tonight.
There were formerly three different versions of the show — a standalone episode not featuring any tie-ins to Entertainment Tonight for stations which do not carry the latter program, and two other versions designed to precede or follow ET with stories from that show mentioned in promotions and vice versa. Recently, only the standalone episode is aired on all stations which carry The Insider, regardless of whether they also carry ET.
Current on-air staff
News presenters
- Kevin Frazier - presenter (2011–present)
- Thea Andrews - co-presenter (2013–present)
Correspondents
- Mary Kitchen - weekend co-presenter/correspondent (2013–present)
- Michael Yo - weekend co-presenter/correspondent (2013–present)
- Christina McLarty - correspondent (2011–present)
- Kristen Aldridge - correspondent (2013–present)
- Keltie Colleen - correspondent (2013–present)
- Nina Parker - correspondent (2011–present)
- Darren Kavinoky - legal analyst (2009–present)
Former on-air staff
- Matte Babel - special correspondent (2012)
- Lisa Bloom - legal analyst (2010)
- Steven Cojocaru - style expert (2004–2009, later at Entertainment Tonight)
- Nicole Dabeau - TheInsider.com (2011)
- Kathie Lee Gifford - correspondent (2005–2006, now at The Today Show)
- Samantha Harris - weekend presenter/correspondent (2009–2010, later at Entertainment Tonight)
- Chris Jacobs - presenter/correspondent (2009–2011, later at Entertainment Tonight)
- Ananda Lewis - correspondent (2004–2005)
- Debbie Matenopoulos - special correspondent (2011–2012)
- Jill Martin - correspondent (2010–2011, now at Access Hollywood)
- Jennifer Mayerle - special correspondent (2012)
- Jayneoni Moore - fashion correspondent (2012)
- Mary Murphy - Backstory (2010–2012)
- Niecy Nash - celebrity panelist (2009–2010)
- Pat O'Brien - anchor/correspondent (2004–2008)
- Donny Osmond - correspondent (2007–2008; also hosted in place of O'Brien for a short time in 2008)
- Victoria Recano - weekend presenter/correspondent (2004–2009, later at KTLA-TV and TV Guide Network; now back at Inside Edition)
- Thomas Roberts - correspondent (2007–2008, now at NBC News)
- Lara Spencer - presenter/correspondent (2004–2011; now at Good Morning America)
- Theo Von - correspondent (2013)
- Cheryl Woodcock - correspondent (2007–2009)
Distribution Details
- Domestic US 1080i station feed via Galaxy 28 at 4.06 GHz horizontal 29.86 MBd 8PSK 3/4
- Domestic US 480i center-cut station feed via Galaxy 28 at 3.98 GHz horizontal 32.36 MBd QPSK 3/4
- Unofficial South Pacific 576i center-cut international feed via Intelsat 5 at 4.16 GHz horizontal 26.48 MBd QPSK 3/4
Various versions and promos are fed between 1500 and 2000 East Coast Time. With the South Pacific relayed feed having irregular start and end times, also the international feed is PowerVu encrypted for one hour of that time.
The Insider in other countries
- Australia, the program airs only on free-to-air Eleven after midnight repeated on Network Ten alongside Entertainment Tonight in the morning the next day. It no longer airs on Foxtel's pay TV channel Arena.
- India, the program airs on Big CBS Love while Entertainment Tonight airs on Big CBS Prime.
- In the Philippines, the program airs on ETC.
- In the Middle East, the program airs on MBC 4 after Entertainment Tonight.
- In Canada, the program airs on CHCH-TV.
References
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie. "'The Insider' Signs Deal With Yahoo's Omg!, WIll Be Renamed 'Omg! Insider'". Deadline.com. Retrieved 2012-10-24.
- "Anorexic twins die in house fire". Geelong Advertiser. 28 April 2012. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
{{cite news}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|work=
(help) - "Breaking News — Entertainment Tonight and the Insider Move Headquarters to Brand New State of the Art Soundstages at CBS Studio Center". TheFutonCritic.com. 2008-09-08. Retrieved 2012-01-31.
- Dempsey, John (2008-06-08). "Lara Spencer anchors 'Insider' - Entertainment News, TV News, Media". Variety. Retrieved 2012-01-31.
- "Pat O'Brien Fired From "The Insider" Over Staff E-Mail". Huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2012-01-31.
- "Breaking News — Kevin Frazier Named Co-Anchor of "The Insider"". TheFutonCritic.com. 2011-03-07. Retrieved 2012-01-31.
- "Lara Spencer Leaving 'The Insider' for 'GMA' - 2011-03-17 14:50:24 | Broadcasting & Cable". Broadcastingcable.com. Retrieved 2012-01-31.
- "Brooke Anderson Named Co-Anchor of 'The Insider'". Etonline.com. 2011-04-13. Retrieved 2012-01-31.
External links
Celebrity news/news magazine/tabloid news programs in the United States | |
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Broadcast |
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Related |