Will anyone hire keith olbermann?

Will anyone hire keith olbermann?

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Well that didn't last long. Current TV, the languishing cable channel co-founded by Al Gore, fired liberal firebrand Keith Olbermann this week, ending a rocky, eight-month marriage.


While Current claims the mercurial Olbermann flouted its values of "openness, collegiality, and loyalty to our viewers," Olbermann is lamenting his "foolish" decision to


join Current, and says he'll sue. It's not the first time that Olbermann, a veteran of ESPN and MSNBC, has left an employer on spectacularly bad terms. For all his popularity with


liberal viewers, the latest divorce is cementing the perception that the temperamental anchorman is impossible to work with. Will another network take a chance on him? OLBERMANN IS DAMAGED


GOODS: Olbermann's record of "not playing well with his bosses" has become "a running gag," says James Poniewozik at _TIME_. While he has a loyal viewership,


it's improbable that any television network will "hire him again, ever, to do anything." Olbermann complains that the production values at Current were subpar, but the head


honchos at the channel gave him free rein to chart the direction of his show. "At some point, it's not them, it's you." "Olbermann out, Spitzer in at Current


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Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. OLBERMANN IS TOO TALENTED TO REMAIN UNEMPLOYED: Olbermann has a "terrible relationship with actual humans,"


but "a very good relationship with the camera," says David Carr at _The New York Times_. Anchoring a news program is a lot harder than it looks, and "as cable stations


proliferate, the desperate search for people" who can "hold an audience's attention will only become more acute." Think of Olbermann as a "supremely talented


left-handed pitcher with a strong arm — and some obvious control issues." It's a sure bet that "some executives will eventually plug their noses" and sign him up.


"Keith Olbermann: Machine gun for hire" HE NEEDS TO GO TO A BIGGER CHANNEL: Current was too small for Olbermann's outsized presence, says Tim Goodman at _The Hollywood


Reporter_. "His talents [would be] better served in high-profile settings," such as Showtime, HBO, Comedy Central, or even former employer ESPN — "and boy, could that


increasingly useless barge of blather use his presence." He could even play a role in a new sports channel reportedly being developed by Rupert Murdoch. Don't think it's


possible? "I'm afraid your cynicism is clouding your understanding of business." "Keith Olbermann and Current: What went wrong?"