The Oprah Winfrey Show | |
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Genre | Talk show |
Created by | Oprah Winfrey |
Presented by | Oprah Winfrey |
Starring | Oprah Winfrey |
Narrated by | Oprah Winfrey |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 24 |
No. of episodes | 4,734 (as of February 26, 2010 | )
Production | |
Location(s) | Chicago, Illinois |
Camera setup | Multiple |
Running time | 45 minutes |
Production company(s) | Harpo Productions |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | Syndicated |
Picture format | 480i SDTV 720p HDTV (ABC and Fox affiliates) 1080i HDTV (CBS and NBC affiliates) |
Audio format | MTS stereo |
Original run | September 8, 1986 | – present
External links | |
Official website |
The Oprah Winfrey Show (often simply referred to as Oprah or just O) is an American syndicated talk show, hosted and produced by its namesake Oprah Winfrey, and is the highest-rated talk show in American television history.[1]
The show is highly influential, especially with women, and many of its topics penetrate into American pop-cultural consciousness. While early episodes of the show followed a Phil Donahue-style exploration of sensationalistic social issues, Oprah eventually transformed her series into one with an image of a more positive, spiritually uplifting experience by featuring book clubs, celebrity interviews, self-improvement segments, and philanthropic forays into world events.
It is currently the longest-running daytime television talk show in the United States, having run nationally since September 8, 1986, for over 24 seasons and nearly 5,000 episodes. On November 19, 2009, Oprah Winfrey's production company announced that the show will be ending on September 9, 2011.[2][3]
The show airs on most ABC-owned stations in the United States (as well as various other stations through CBS Television Distribution, successor to King World), CTV in most Canadian markets,[4] Diva TV in the United Kingdom,[5] TV3 Ireland in Ireland,[6] GNT in Brazil, and Network Ten in Australia.
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The show has its roots in AM Chicago, a half-hour morning talk show airing on WLS-TV in Chicago. Winfrey took over as host in 1983, and within a year took it from last place to first place in the ratings. In 1986, it was relaunched under its current title and was picked up nationally.
The show began broadcasting in high definition in its 2008–09 season, becoming one of the first nationally-syndicated daytime talk shows to do so.[7]
The show is renewed through 2011, but in a 2008 interview with Larry King, Oprah tearfully announced that in 2011, she will not renew her contract, thus ending the show.[8] She has plans on a new talk show to run later on her very own television network, OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network. The show, a production of Harpo Productions, was the last program on the air to be distributed by King World (until the fall of 2009, only the name was mentioned in the Friday show's distribution credits)—the latter company has been absorbed by CBS Television Distribution.
Oprah has been included in Time magazine's shortlist of the best television series of the twentieth century in 1998, and it made the top 50 of TV Guide's countdown of the greatest American shows of all time[9] in 2002.
Winfrey has interviewed a plethora of political and public figures during the past twenty years. In the earlier seasons of the show, rather than offering a simple publicity platform, a celebrity would often be featured after a period of intense media scrutiny, such as when the model Naomi Campbell appeared after there were claims she had a substance abuse problem. She often interviews celebrities on issues that directly involve them in some way, such as cancer or charity work.
Winfrey claims her worst interviewing experience was with Elizabeth Taylor in the fourth season. The actress refused to talk about her marriages and current relationship. Taylor later apologized and returned in a better mood on Winfrey's couch.
Winfrey's interview with Tom Cruise, which was broadcast on May 23, 2005, has also gained notoriety. Cruise — according to The New York Times — "jumped around the set, hopped onto a couch, fell rapturously to one knee and repeatedly professed his love for his new girlfriend, Katie Holmes." This scene quickly became part of American pop-cultural discourse and was heavily parodied in media as diverse as MADtv, Saturday Night Live, Family Guy, Hannah Montana, South Park and the film Scary Movie 4.
Non-celebrity guests are generally individuals who have been involved in an extraordinary situation. Examples of these include an episode in the fourth season which featured Truddi Chase, a woman with supposed Multiple Personality Disorder who reported being violently and sexually abused beginning at the age of two. After introducing Chase, who was there to promote her book When Rabbit Howls, Oprah unexpectedly broke down in tears while reading the teleprompter, relating her own childhood molestation to that of the guest. Unable to control herself, Winfrey repeatedly asked producers to stop filming. Other non-celebrity appearances include guests who are chosen for being particularly un-fashionable and are given a fashion makeover by renowned style advisers Trinny Woodall and Susannah Constantine. In 2009 British couple Gerry and Kate McCann went on the show to aid the search for their missing daughter, Madeline who went missing in Portugal in 2007.
Singer Patti Labelle is the only guest to have appeared on the show for ten times.
Since the 2009-10 season, Winfrey has hosted this segment on her own.
One of the show's features in recent years has been the "Wildest Dreams" tour, which fulfills the dreams of people reported to her by producers, found mostly from viewers who write in to the show, be the dream a new house, an encounter with a favorite performer, or a guest role on a popular TV show.
During her nineteenth season premiere (fall 2004), Winfrey surprised her entire audience by giving them each a Pontiac G6. Winfrey famously exclaimed, "You get a car! You get a car! You get a car! Everybody gets a car!" It was named as one of the greatest television moments in history by TV Guide, and as The Paley Center for Media's most surprising TV moment of all time. Although Winfrey may be given credit for giving the cars away, they were donated to her by General Motors as a publicity stunt. In 2005, Tina Turner guest starred, allowing Desperate Housewives star Felicity Huffman to fulfill her Wildest Dream of singing backup to Turner. Another included a man named David Caruso who lost 300 pounds after weighing 525 pounds. He came on the show in 2003 and told Oprah that one of his wishes was to sit in a Porsche. Minutes later, a white 2004 Porsche Boxster S (worth about $63,000) was given to him. Winfrey named this one of her 20 favorite moments on a special DVD set.
It has been reported that the show averages an estimated 7,[17][18] 14,[19] and 15-20[20] million viewers a day in the United States. It has also been reported at 26 million[21] and 42 million[22][23] a week (5.2 and 8.4 million a day). Viewership for the show has been reported to drop over the years averaging 12.6 million in 91-92,[24] 9 million in 04,[18] 9 million in 05,[21] 7.8 in 06,[21] 7.3 million in 08,[21] and 6.2 million in 09.[24]
The show has been number one in the talk show ratings since its debut. Even with the decline in ratings, the constant competition of her rival (Judge Judy), she still keeps a constant lead over other prime talk shows.[25]
Some of Winfrey's detractors accuse her show of having a liberal slant; she has championed such liberal causes as the living wage, and featured filmmaker Michael Moore multiple times on the show. A controversial episode, which aired in 2005 (though originally aired to little apparent notice in October 2003), saw guests discussing the sexual act of "rimming", igniting criticism. The FCC received a proliferation of complaints from angry parents whose children watched the show in an early-evening slot in many television markets. However, most FCC correspondents were prodded to write by Howard Stern, a noteworthy target of the agency, as well as Jimmy Kimmel, in an attempt to expose an FCC double standard.[26][27]
During the 2008 presidential election cycle, Winfrey was criticized for apparently declining to invite Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin on her show until after the election.[28] Winfrey also did not invite Democratic vice presidential candidate Joe Biden. Also, after endorsing Barack Obama for the 2008 presidential election, Winfrey declared that until the election was over she would not invite any Presidential candidate on her show. Winfrey had featured Obama on the show twice, in 2005 and 2006, prior to his announcement that he was running for President.
In the late 1990s, on a discussion of mad cow disease, Winfrey stated that the disease fears had "stopped me cold from eating another burger!" Texas cattle ranchers considered that quote tantamount to defamation, and promptly sued her for libel. As a result of the legal proceedings, and because the show still had to film new episodes and couldn't go into reruns, the show was forced to move to Amarillo, Texas for a period of approximately one month, and furthermore, because of a gag order, Winfrey was not allowed to even mention the trial on her show. Winfrey was acquitted of all charges.[29][30][31][32] However, the trial and move to Amarillo led to Winfrey meeting Phil McGraw; Winfrey made McGraw a regular guest on her show shortly thereafter, and eventually led to McGraw getting his own show, produced by Winfrey's Harpo Productions.[33]
Winfrey's program has been criticized for featuring alternative medicine advocates, like Suzanne Somers.[34]
In 1997, Winfrey said she was planning to retire, but then renewed her contract through 2002. In 2002, she said she would depart in 2006—the show’s 20th anniversary year—but in 2004 she extended through 2011 after riding a wave of high ratings and a revamped program in 2003. In an appearance on Good Morning America on September 10, 2009, Winfrey told Diane Sawyer that she would make the decision of retiring or renewing her contract before the end of the year.
Discovery Communications chief executive David Zaslav said in early November 2009 that The Oprah Winfrey Show would depart broadcast syndication in fall 2011. Zaslav told analysts, "The current expectation is that after autumn 2011 her show will go off of …syndication, and she will come to OWN," the cable network that Winfrey’s production company is creating in conjunction with Discovery. Harpo Productions denied that Winfrey had made a final decision at that point.[35] However, on November 19, 2009, Harpo announced the show would indeed end in 2011, as noted on-air by Winfrey the following day.[36]
Because of the nature of television syndication, it is not expected that a single program will replace Oprah across the United States. However, some stations are reportedly planning to insert The Ellen DeGeneres Show into Oprah's current timeslot, while a new Rosie O'Donnell-hosted talk show (similar to her 1996-2002 series) has been proposed as well.[37] In addition, ABC, whose O&O station group is the lead carrier of Oprah, had been considering moving its late-morning talk show The View into the Oprah timeslot, either on the ABC network or repackaged for syndication (through Disney-ABC Domestic Television).[38] However, ABC has reportedly since told affiliates it is no longer pursuing such an option.[39]
No Phone Zone[40] is a program created by Oprah Winfrey in March 2010, on how to teach a lesson not to talk or text on their cell phone in their vehicles while they're driving. This program was shown in the beginning and end of The Oprah Winfrey Show. The program was sponsored by Liberty Mutual and Sprint.