The same network that brings you Anderson Cooper 360 should
consider a new show hosted by one of its business reporters: Andy
Serwer 180.
CNNs Andy Serwer swung from warning of a rupturing housing bubble to saying such a bubble doesnt exist in just two minutes in a Minding Your Business report on the December 8 American Morning. This is hardly the first time hes done so, although his reversals are coming quicker. The Business & Media Institute reported recently on Serwers about-face on the economy on the December 2 show, which took about two hours to happen.
Reporting on a UCLA study on the future of the housing market released the same day, Serwer cautioned viewers the findings were kind of scary stuff, adding that 800,000 jobs might be lost if the bubble really bursts. An onscreen graphic warned viewers that the Housing Outlook Darkens.
After reporting a drop among housing stocks the previous day on Wall Street, the Fortune magazine editor concluded that the housing industry is right now peaking, but theyre saying its just not going to continue. But substitute host Carol Costello prompted a correction from Serwer, noting that maybe its not so much the bubble is going to burst, but things are just readjusting to where they should be.
Softening his introductory warning, Serwer admitted, thats probably right, were just unwinding a little bit. Things were at such a frenzied pace there for a while, right?
Just a day before, Los Angeles Times reporter Annette Haddad reported a less pessimistic outlook by experts who put together the latest UCLA Anderson Forecast. Haddad noted in the December 7 article that while the previous UCLA study, released in September, foresaw a possible recession by the end of 2007, such a downturn in the economy was not foreseen in the current prediction.
Forecast author Ryan Ratcliff said there have been several instances since 2001 where sales have flattened out for a few months, only to pick up again. The Business & Media Institute published a special report in late November detailing four years of media hype about the ever-soon-to-burst housing bubble, citing numerous instances where reporters hyped negative indicators as harbingers of trouble.
CNNs Andy Serwer swung from warning of a rupturing housing bubble to saying such a bubble doesnt exist in just two minutes in a Minding Your Business report on the December 8 American Morning. This is hardly the first time hes done so, although his reversals are coming quicker. The Business & Media Institute reported recently on Serwers about-face on the economy on the December 2 show, which took about two hours to happen.
Reporting on a UCLA study on the future of the housing market released the same day, Serwer cautioned viewers the findings were kind of scary stuff, adding that 800,000 jobs might be lost if the bubble really bursts. An onscreen graphic warned viewers that the Housing Outlook Darkens.
After reporting a drop among housing stocks the previous day on Wall Street, the Fortune magazine editor concluded that the housing industry is right now peaking, but theyre saying its just not going to continue. But substitute host Carol Costello prompted a correction from Serwer, noting that maybe its not so much the bubble is going to burst, but things are just readjusting to where they should be.
Softening his introductory warning, Serwer admitted, thats probably right, were just unwinding a little bit. Things were at such a frenzied pace there for a while, right?
Just a day before, Los Angeles Times reporter Annette Haddad reported a less pessimistic outlook by experts who put together the latest UCLA Anderson Forecast. Haddad noted in the December 7 article that while the previous UCLA study, released in September, foresaw a possible recession by the end of 2007, such a downturn in the economy was not foreseen in the current prediction.
Forecast author Ryan Ratcliff said there have been several instances since 2001 where sales have flattened out for a few months, only to pick up again. The Business & Media Institute published a special report in late November detailing four years of media hype about the ever-soon-to-burst housing bubble, citing numerous instances where reporters hyped negative indicators as harbingers of trouble.