
This is just an article about optimization google index tags. My tags optimization time is Meet The Press. Because yesterday I see Meet The Press was ranked first in Google trends.
What is Meet The Press ?
By Wikipedia
Meet the Press[5][6] is a weekly American television news/interview program produced by NBC. It is the longest-running television show in worldwide broadcasting history, having made its television debut on November 6, 1947.[7] It has been hosted by eleven moderators; the current host is David Gregory, who assumed the role in December 2008.[8]
Meet the Press and similar shows specialize in interviewing national leaders on issues of politics, economics, foreign policy and other public affairs. These shows help fulfill the obligations of the networks to provide a public service to the community.
Meet the Press is the highest-rated of the American television Sunday morning talk shows.[9]
The Moderators
Moderators
The following is the list of moderators for Meet the Press:[1]
| Martha Rountree | 1947 – 1953 |
| Ned Brooks | 1953 – 1965 |
| Lawrence E. Spivak | 1966 – 1975 |
| Bill Monroe | 1975 – 1984 |
| Roger Mudd / Marvin Kalb (co-moderators) | 1984 – 1985 |
| Marvin Kalb | 1985 – 1987 |
| Chris Wallace | 1987 – 1988 |
| Garrick Utley | 1989 – 1991 |
| Tim Russert | 1991 – 2008 |
| Tom Brokaw | 2008 |
| David Gregory | 2008 – Present |
History
Meet the Press began on radio in 1945 as American Mercury Presents: Meet the Press[13], a program to promote The American Mercury, a magazine that Lawrence E. Spivak had bought in 1944. Before the program aired, Spivak asked the journalist Martha Rountree, who had worked in radio and had worked for Spivak as a roving editor for the magazine, to critique the plans for the new radio show. Based on her advice, Rountree created a new radio program that she called The American Mercury, on October 5, 1945.[2]
On November 6, 1947 while still on the Mutual Broadcasting System, it was subsequently reincarnated on the NBC television network and renamed Meet the Press. The radio version also adopted the new name. Although some sources credit Mr. Spivak with the program's creation[1][7], Ms. Rountree developed the idea on her own, and Spivak joined as co-producer and business partner in the enterprise after the show had already debuted.[2]
Meet the Press was originally presented as a 30-minute press conference with a single guest and a panel of questioners. Its first hostess was its creator Martha Rountree, to date the program's only female moderator. She stepped down November 1, 1953, and was replaced by Ned Brooks, who remained as moderator until December 26, 1965. Spivak became the moderator on January 1, 1966, moving from his role as a permanent panelist. Mr. Spivak retired on November 9, 1975, and he was replaced by Bill Monroe, who stepped down on June 2, 1984.
The program then went through a series of hosts as it struggled in the ratings against ABC's This Week with David Brinkley. Roger Mudd and Marvin Kalb (as co-moderators) followed Monroe for a year, followed by Chris Wallace in 1987 and 1988, and Garrick Utley from 1989 through December 1, 1991.
Locations (outside of DC studios)
- 1988 Republican and Democratic conventions[21]
- 1989 United States-Soviet Summit on the island of Malta[21]
- 1989 Economic Summit of Industrialized Nations in Paris.[21]
- 1990 Helsinki Summit[21]
- 1992 Republican and Democratic conventions[21]
- 1993 Clinton-Yeltsin Summit in Vancouver[21]
- January 30, 1994– Atlanta, Georgia (Super Bowl, Buffalo Bills went for and lost their 4th straight game; Russert publicly prayed on-air with his father)[22]
- September 16, 2001– Camp David, Maryland (interview with then-Vice President Dick Cheney in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks)
- January 18, 2004– Polk County, Iowa (24 hours before the Iowa caucuses)[23]
- January 25, 2004– Bedford, New Hampshire (48 hours before the New Hampshire primary)[24]
- February 1, 2004– Milwaukee, Wisconsin (interview with Howard Dean)[25]
- February 8, 2004– Oval Office (interview with then-President George W. Bush[26]
- July 25, 2004– Boston (2004 DNC, Barack Obama made an appearance on the show as he was going to give the keynote address)[27]
- August 29, 2004– New York city (2004 RNC)[28]
- October 31, 2004– New York city (2 days befeore the 2004 Election[29]
- October 8, 2007– Des Moines, Iowa (interview with John Edwards[30]
- November 11, 2007– Des Moines, Iowa (interview with Barack Obama)[31]
- December 30, 2007– Des Moines, Iowa (interview with Mike Huckabee, 2 days before the 2008 Iowa caucuses[32]
- January 6, 2008– New Hampshire (2 days before the New Hampshire primaries)
- January 13, 2008– South Carolina (interview with Hillary Clinton during her presidential campaign)[33]
- January 20, 2008– New York city (roundtable discussion)[34]
- January 27, 2008– Tampa, Florida[35]
- June 29, 2008– Jackson Hole, Wyoming (Western Governors' Association annual meeting) [36] and Simi Valley, California (Reagan Library)[37]
- July 27, 2008– London, England (Barack Obama's overseas trip)[38]
- August 10, 2008– Beijing, China (Olympics)[39]
- August 24, 2008– Denver, Colorado (Democratic National Convention)[40]
- August 31, 2008– St. Paul, Minnesota (Republican National Convention)[41]
- September 7, 2008– Wilmington, Delaware (Senator Joe Biden's appearance on the show)
- October 26, 2008– KWWL Studios Waterloo, Iowa (John McCain's campaign stop)
- December 7, 2008– Chicago, Illinois (Barack Obama's appearance on the show. While the show was taped in Chicago, Brokaw introduced and ended the show in D.C.)[43]
- June 14, 2009– Wilmington, Delaware (Vice-President Joe Biden's appearance on the show)
Meet The Press | Meet Press | The Press | Meet The Press TV Talkshow | John McCain On Meet The Press | What 's Meet The Press ? |



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