Jen Psaki stepping up for MSNBC as Rachel Maddow returns to once-a-week schedule

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NEW YORK (AP) — Jen Psaki is stepping up — not to a podium, but to MSNBC’s flagship time slot.

Former President Joe Biden’s first White House press secretary, who began hosting her Sunday show “Inside” in 2023 for the network, will move regularly to prime-time starting on May 6.

She’ll take over Rachel Maddow’s 9 p.m. Eastern weekday hour on Tuesday through Friday when Maddow resumes her one-night-a-week schedule on Mondays. Maddow has been hosting five nights a week for the beginning of the second Trump administration.

Psaki replaces Alex Wagner, who had the daunting task of trying to hold onto as many viewers of MSNBC’s most popular personality as she could. Psaki’s selection was one of the early moves for new MSNBC president Rebecca Kutler, who is also navigating MSNBC’s corporate divorce from NBC News.

With the new schedule comes a new name for Psaki’s program, “The Briefing.” Her Sunday show will end.

Psaki talked with The Associated Press about her new role, and a little about her past in the White House, at an admittedly hard time for MSNBC’s predominantly liberal viewers. “Part of my job,” she said, “is to tell stories of hope.”

___

ASSOCIATED PRESS: For people who have followed your work at MSNBC, should they expect much different from the new show?

PSAKI: We’re changing the name, so there’s that difference … There are things that we will continue to do — like big newsmakers and conversations about policy, what it means for people sitting at home, hopefully some surprising guests sometimes, the future of the Democratic Party … One of the reasons we wanted to change the name, or I wanted to change the name, is that it feels like a moment post-election and the months since we’re all reflecting on the notion that people on the inside or insiders have all the answers is incorrect. I didn’t want to send the message to viewers that that was our assumption. The second is I think right now in this moment, as the federal government is being dismantled and the rule of law is being threatened, people’s rights are being threatened, there’s a huge appetite for information and understanding of what the heck is happening.

AP: Does going into a time slot identified with Rachel for so many years affect how you put together your show? Do you have to be cognizant of her audience?

PSAKI: There’s only one Rachel Maddow. She’s built, obviously, an incredible connection with the people who have watched for 17 years. Even if I trained at the Rachel Maddow anchor school — which doesn’t exist, that I’m aware of — for five years, I could never do what she does how she does it. What I’m taking with me and what I’m trying to apply are a lot of the lessons I’ve learned from her over the past couple of years, one of them being that she works her tail off. She never rests on the laurels of the success she’s had over the course of time. She’s pretty fearless about saying what she thinks, and she tells stories that not everybody does. Those things kind of stick with me. We have very different backgrounds. I spent two decades working for two presidents and a secretary of state and have been on more campaign buses that I could ever recall or list for you. Obviously our show is based in Washington, D.C., which is a difference, too. Every day I’m going to lean into that experience and background to help provide clarity for people who are watching.



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