đ¨TOO BIG TO FILL? Jen Psakiâs Risky Leap Into Rachel Maddowâs Throne Backfires Spectacularly as MSNBCâs Ratings Plummet and Executives Panic Behind Closed Doors

đ¨TOO BIG TO FILL? Jen Psakiâs Risky Leap Into Rachel Maddowâs Throne Backfires Spectacularly as MSNBCâs Ratings Plummet and Executives Panic Behind Closed Doors
When MSNBC announced that Jen Psaki would take over the prized 9 p.m. slotâonce the domain of liberal media titan Rachel Maddowâthe move was marketed as a confident stride into a ânew progressive future.â But just days after its premiere, Psakiâs new show, The Briefing, is looking less like a breakthrough and more like a primetime implosion.
A Legacy Too Heavy?
Rachel Maddow didnât just dominate cable newsâshe defined it for a generation of viewers. Her presence at 9 p.m. was more than a habit; it was a nightly ritual. So when she scaled back her appearances in 2022 and eventually stepped away from her nightly post, the vacuum she left behind was always going to be dangerous to fill.
But few expected the transition to unravel this quickly.
Initial Nielsen ratings for The Briefing were, in the words of one MSNBC executive, âalarming.â Psakiâs debut episode drew just 1.1 million viewers, a steep drop from Maddowâs average of 2.3 million. And while Psakiâs former weekend show Inside with Jen Psaki had modest success, the primetime audience has proven far less forgiving.
âSheâs a strong communicator, but 9 p.m. is a battlefield,â said a media insider familiar with the networkâs internal panic. âViewers donât want a classroom lecture; they want a compelling narrative, a reason to stay glued. And so far, Psaki isnât delivering that.â
Why the Collapse?
Several factors are being blamed for the early stumble:
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Lack of Fireworks: Psakiâs calm, measured delivery may have worked behind the White House podium, but in the fierce primetime arena, her analytical tone feels muted. âPeople want drama, passion, or at least something unpredictable,â one media analyst commented. âRight now, The Briefing feels like a Zoom meeting.â
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A Format That Fizzles: Unlike Maddowâs long-form monologues and deep dives that had fans hooked, Psakiâs show attempts to balance interviews, commentary, and policy explainers. The result? A lack of a clear identity. Is it news? Is it analysis? Is it entertainment? Even devoted MSNBC fans are unsure.
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Social Media Backlash: Twitter and TikTok users have already begun mocking the show, dubbing it âJen & the Snooze.â Clips of awkward pauses, tepid monologues, and painfully safe interviews have gone viralâbut not in a good way.
Internal Pressure Mounts
Behind the scenes, MSNBC executives are scrambling. Leaks from insiders suggest that emergency meetings have been held to âreassess strategy,â with some pushing for a complete overhaul of the format. Others are even suggesting a shortened run for The Briefing if numbers donât improve by the end of the summer.
One source bluntly stated: âThey thought sheâd be Rachel 2.0. What theyâve got is NPR on Ambien.â
The network is also reportedly considering bringing in more seasoned TV producers to âinject adrenalineâ into the show. Among the floated ideas: live audience segments, celebrity political guests, and even thematic nights modeled after Maddowâs investigative storytelling.
Conservative Media Pounces
Unsurprisingly, right-wing outlets are gleeful.
Fox Newsâ Jesse Watters took a shot during his monologue: âLooks like America preferred being lectured by Psaki behind the podium, not at them in their living rooms.â
Meanwhile, The Daily Caller ran a headline that read: âMSNBCâs Psaki Proves Thereâs No Substitute for MaddowâUnless You Like Watching Paint Dry.â
Itâs clear that conservatives, who long resented Psakiâs White House dominance, are now enjoying her ratings woes as a kind of schadenfreude-fueled spectacle.
Whatâs Next for Psaki?
Jen Psaki remains composedâat least publicly.
On her most recent episode, she addressed the criticism with a smile: âChange is hard. But the news doesnât stop, and neither will we.â
But sources say sheâs privately aware of the stakes. Thereâs talk of booking âbigger names,â pivoting toward more cultural commentary, and even inviting political adversaries for head-to-head debates in an effort to spark buzz.
Whether these changes will salvage The Briefing is uncertain. In an era where attention spans are short and viewers demand immediacy, Psakiâs slow-burn approach may be too late to ignite.
Is the Maddow Mold Unbreakable?
More broadly, Psakiâs falter raises deeper questions for MSNBC.
Did the network rely too much on Rachel Maddowâs star power without cultivating a true bench of talent? And can any one hostâno matter how qualifiedâreplicate the rare magic Maddow brought to that hour?
Media analyst Kara Swisher put it this way: âThey tried to fit someone into Maddowâs mold. But that mold was custom-made. You donât just âreplaceâ Rachel Maddow. You pivot. Or you fail.â
Final Thoughts
Jen Psakiâs rise to cable stardom was built on credentials, charisma, and calm. But the primetime slot demands more than pedigreeâit demands presence, unpredictability, and connection.
If The Briefing wants to survive, it must evolveâand fast.
Otherwise, Psakiâs bold leap from press podium to primetime spotlight may go down as one of the most high-profile misfires in recent media memory.
Because in TV, as in politics, the spotlight burns hottest just before it burns out.