The downsizining of Marianne Banister

As I wrote in July, the departure of Banister from WBAL-TV after 15 years of co-anchoring a team that always finished first or second in its time period raised big questions about the changing face of television news in Baltimore.

In the last two years, several long-time anchors have signed off the local airwaves, including Sally Thorner at WJZ, and Mary Beth Marsden at WMAR. (Marsden's return to the daily airwaves at WBAL radio is a story in its own right.)

"I want to make this clear: This is not my choice," Banister said in a Sun interview in July. "I'm not retiring. I'm not leaving to 'spend more time with my family.'"

Banister's candor of that interview opened the door for a serious discussion in these pages of whether middle-aged women are being targeted when TV news operations are downsized. The downsizing of news and the role gender plays in that process are worth more than just second thoughts.

( WBAL Photo / December 23, 2011 )

As I wrote in July, the departure of Banister from WBAL-TV after 15 years of co-anchoring a team that always finished first or second in its time period raised big questions about the changing face of television news in Baltimore. In the last two years, several long-time anchors have signed off the local airwaves, including Sally Thorner at WJZ, and Mary Beth Marsden at WMAR. (Marsden's return to the daily airwaves at WBAL radio is a story in its own right.) "I want to make this clear: This is not my choice," Banister said in a Sun interview in July. "I'm not retiring. I'm not leaving to 'spend more time with my family.'" Banister's candor of that interview opened the door for a serious discussion in these pages of whether middle-aged women are being targeted when TV news operations are downsized. The downsizing of news and the role gender plays in that process are worth more than just second thoughts.

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ABOUT THE BLOGGER

David Zurawik has been The Baltimore Sun's TV critic since 1989. His writings on TV and media have appeared in such publications as TV Guide, Esquire magazine and American Journalism Review. He has a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Maryland, College Park, and an M.A. in specialized reporting (on popular culture) from the University of Wisconsin. He is the author of The Jews of Prime Time (Brandeis University Press), a look at 50 years of Jewish characters and identity on network TV. He has also been with WYPR-FM (88.1) radio since 1994 and can be heard Thursday mornings at 7:30 doing a weekly "Take on Television" report.
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