Showtimes The Circus resumes -- but has circus left town
NEW YORK (AP) â" What does âThe Circusâ do when the circus has left town?
Thatâs the pithy question that comes to mind upon learning that the Showtime political series opens its seventh season on Sunday, when consumer interest in political news has dropped sharply with the end of Donald Trumpâs presidency.
âThe thing about the circus - thereâs comedy, thereâs drama and there are death-defying acts of physical daring,â said John Heilemann, one of the showâs four reporters. âThose things are still in our politics and we think the drama of American politics is ever-present, has not receded in any way and is just as compelling.â
There was no thought given to ending âThe Circusâ just because one big story had changed, he said.
Heilemann, along with Mark McKinnon, Jennifer Palmieri and Alex Wagner, guide viewers through the three rings each week, explaining the nuances and meaning of political stories. Heilemann spent time in California this week covering Gov. Gavin Newsomeâs recall election, while Palmieri probed vaccine politics in Arkansas.
Americans followed political news like entertainment in 2020, much less so now. So far this year, for example, prime-time viewership is down 33% from last year on Fox News Channel, down 22% on CNN and 18% on MSNBC, the Nielsen company said.
He doesnât intend disrespect toward cable news - heâs a regular commentator on MSNBC - but Heilemann stresses how âThe Circusâ is different. The showâs viewership was up 11% for its sixth season between January and March, compared to pre-election 2020. Between an inauguration, impeachment and insurrection, they werenât lacking for news.
âThe Circusâ this season will explore a political divide that has only seemed to grow wider since Trump left office.
âPeople talk about it on cable,â he said. âBut you donât actually see it on cable. One of the things that we do differently is that we let people actually see it.â
Many people were distracted by personality during the Trump years and werenât actually looking at what was going on in the country, said Palmieri, former communications director for President Barack Obama and Hillary Clintonâs presidential campaign.
One thing Palmieri said sheâs noticed in her reporting is less anger and more concern about the political divide. Many people canât understand why itâs difficult to agree to disagree, and why people with different political beliefs seem to be living in their own realities.
âThatâs not bringing us any closer necessarily, but I think itâs something different, and I think thatâs something people are trying to understand,â she said. âItâs not something you can appreciate unless youâre out in the country talking to people.â
Palmieri said sheâs also chagrined at some of the tactics sheâs seen from political professionals on both sides, always on edge about losing an election.
She believes democracy has been given a second chance during the early months of the Biden administration, when it could easily have gone the other way.
âI feel like this is the biggest question that overhangs not just the show but the Biden presidency,â she said. âIs this an interlude going to a moment ⦠where the rules of democracy continue to erode, or is this the beginning of building back the democratic infrastructure, and I mean small âd,â and the revitalization of democracy?â
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