MS Now shakes up lineup ahead of midterm elections
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Progressive cable news network formerly known as MSNBC restructures programming ahead of midterm elections.
AI Summary
MS Now, the progressive cable news channel formerly known as MSNBC, is restructuring its daytime and weekend programming lineup ahead of the fall midterm elections. The changes include scaling back "Morning Joe," its long-running weekday talk program, to three hours on weekday mornings, with anchor Stephanie Ruhle taking on a modified role in the revamped schedule. The network is repositioning itself during a critical election cycle when viewership and political influence are traditionally at their peak. Cable news outlets typically reconfigure their schedules ahead of major electoral events to compete for audience attention and shape political coverage. The specific details of Ruhle's new assignment and the full scope of weekend programming changes were not completed in the excerpt provided.
What's Being Done
MS Now is scaling back 'Morning Joe' to three hours on weekday mornings and modifying Stephanie Ruhle's role in the revamped schedule.
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