Word: cbs
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...with its forced repartee about boutonnieres, is an excruciating experience in midcult hell. For us, the apotheosis of Frasier is not a great cause for celebration. What are we going to do on Thursdays at 9? The alternatives aren't terrible: we could watch Diagnosis Murder, the sublimely hokey CBS drama. We could read Wallace Stevens. But is it possible that there is another option? Could it be that even someone most resistant to Frasier's charms could learn to love it? Well, maybe...
...went on to serve in the House of Representatives from 1990 to 1998, and she was the keynote speaker on behalf of presidential nominee Bob Dole in the 1996 Republican Convention. After stepping down from her House seat, Molinari hosted a short-lived weekend news program on CBS...
...turned out, 1997 was Mondale's year. Her coverage of the 1996 Democratic convention for E! caught the eye of the networks; in November '97, she joined the team at CBS "This Morning," reporting from L.A. She had a grueling schedule, having to be up at 3:30 a.m. and ready to go live on the air two hours later. Then she had to rush over to the E! studios to work on her weekly show. At the same time, Mondale hired an acting coach and started auditioning for sitcoms again. And she began to be linked romantically...
...show is taped at CBS Television City, in the same studio as The Price is Right. The new show is a jazzed-up version of the classic Match Game, which aired in the 60s and from 1973-1982, with host Gene Rayburn. A similar version tried to win audience on ABC but did not succeed...
...they were joined Monday by USA Today, the largest media outlet yet to call for Clinton to step down. But most people, if polls are to be believed, are equally adamant in their support. The President's job approval rating clings onto those mid-60s for dear life, say CBS, NBC and ABC. What's more, the largest percentage of those polls -- between 59 and 67 -- favor neither impeachment nor resignation but a third option: congressional censure, a slap on the wrist. That's the closest there is to a consensus in the country right now, and it could...