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Don Lemon Tonight
Don Lemon Tonight
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Don Lemon Tonight
Also known asCNN Tonight with Don Lemon (2014–2021)
GenreNews, interviews, commentary
Presented byDon Lemon
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Production locations30 Hudson Yards
New York City
Running time120 minutes
Original release
NetworkCNN
ReleaseMay 17, 2021 (2021-05-17) –
October 7, 2022 (2022-10-07)
Related

Don Lemon Tonight (formerly CNN Tonight with Don Lemon) is a late evening news commentary program which aired from 2021 until its cancellation in 2022 on CNN, hosted by Don Lemon.[1][2][3]

The program aired on weeknights live from 10:00 pm to midnight ET. Its two-hour timeslot was initially renamed CNN Tonight, without a host name in the title, with Laura Coates appearing in the first hour and Alisyn Camerota in the second, before their hosting hours were swapped, with Coates then dropped in March 2023, and Camerota hosting both hours. Since October 16, 2023, the timeslot has been taken by two separate shows, namely CNN NewsNight with Abby Phillip from 10:00 pm to 11:00 pm, followed by Laura Coates Live from 11:00 pm to 12 midnight.

History

[edit]
"CNN Tonight" logo used from April 14, 2014 to May 14, 2021
Don Lemon in 2018

CNN Tonight first premiered in April 2014, being introduced amid a revision to CNN's primetime schedule (including the replacement of the canceled Piers Morgan Live with CNN original series and specials in the 9 p.m. hour). The series was first promoted as featuring rotating anchors presenting "a live hour of the day’s biggest stories".[4][5] The program would be initially hosted by Bill Weir using the former Piers Morgan Live studio.[6][7]

The CNN Tonight title had previously been used for a short-lived program in 2001 anchored by Bill Hemmer,[8] and a transitional program that temporarily filled the time slot of Lou Dobbs Tonight after Lou Dobbs' resignation from the network in November 2009 (the timeslot was later filled by The Situation Room after a realignment to CNN's daytime lineup, until its permanent replacement, John King, USA, premiered in March).[9]

Don Lemon had been involved in pilot runs for several potential primetime shows, including The 11th Hour, and in March 2014, The Don Lemon Show, and a special nightly 10 p.m. program to provide additional analysis of the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappearance. Lemon would later become permanent host of CNN Tonight,[10] with it developing into more of a personality-based program.[11][12]

On May 14, 2021, Lemon announced during that night's episode that it would be "the last night that we'll be CNN Tonight with Don Lemon", and teased a major change to the program on May 17. The following day, amid speculation by viewers that he was leaving CNN, Lemon revealed that the show was being renamed Don Lemon Tonight.[13][14] He apologized for the confusion, saying that he "didn't mean to set the internet on fire".[15]

On September 15, 2022, with Lemon having been named to the panel of CNN's forthcoming morning show CNN This Morning, it was announced that Don Lemon Tonight would conclude its run.[16] Alisyn Camerota and Laura Coates were named as interim hosts for the timeslot.[17]

Don Lemon Tonight aired for the final time on October 7, 2022; in his closing remarks, Lemon stated that it was a "bittersweet" moment, but didn't want to be "sad" about it, that "a lot happened between 10 and midnight, or later", and concluded the show by explaining that "sometimes it was exhausting because some of the things that we discuss here are so personal and so consuming. So, I hope I made you proud, and I thank you for tuning in all these years, and I hope that you're going to join me in the morning."[18]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
was a nightly news and opinion program broadcast on , anchored by from May 2021 until its conclusion on October 7, 2022. The program represented a rebranding of , which Lemon had hosted in the 10 p.m. ET primetime slot since 2014, extending its focus on evening recaps of major news stories alongside commentary on political and cultural developments. Airing for approximately each weeknight, the show emphasized live reporting, guest interviews, and Lemon's personal analysis, often highlighting events involving Democratic priorities and critiques of Republican leadership. The program's tenure occurred amid CNN's evolving primetime strategy under network leadership, culminating in its replacement as Lemon shifted to co-anchor the morning program CNN This Morning in late 2022. Lemon's departure from entirely followed in April 2023, after internal reviews cited patterns of misogynistic remarks and disruptive behavior toward female colleagues, including on-air comments diminishing women's viability in post-menopause. These incidents, documented across multiple reports from network insiders, underscored tensions in CNN's newsroom environment, where subjective opinion segments like those on Don Lemon Tonight intersected with professional conduct expectations. While the show contributed to CNN's viewership in a competitive cable news landscape dominated by partisan divides, its host's tenure reflected broader challenges in maintaining amid opinion-driven programming.

Program Overview

Format and Structure

Don Lemon Tonight aired as a two-hour weekday program from 10:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m. Eastern Time, occupying the late-evening slot previously held by CNN Tonight. The format centered on host-led commentary, beginning with an opening monologue delivering the host's analysis of major news events, followed by structured segments devoted to in-depth discussion. This structure emphasized opinion-driven content over straight reporting, with extended monologues and reaction segments allowing for prolonged host interpretation of the day's stories. Core segments included panel discussions featuring rotating CNN analysts and external guests debating policy, , and cultural issues, often resulting in heated exchanges. Guest interviews with newsmakers provided direct questioning, while reactions incorporated live updates and remote contributors for real-time context. Unlike daytime programs focused on factual recaps, the show prioritized "spirited conversations" and host commentary, with no fixed co-hosts or recurring panelists to maintain a dynamic, debate-oriented flow. Production elements aligned with standard cable news conventions, employing chyrons for key facts, lower-third graphics for participant identification, and video inserts for supplemental footage, all integrated to support argumentative segments rather than neutral narration. The absence of scripted co-anchor interplay underscored the solo-host model, relying instead on guest rotation to generate confrontation and varied perspectives within the two-hour runtime.

Host and Key Personnel

anchored Don Lemon Tonight as its primary host from the program's rebranding in 2021 until its end in 2022, drawing on his two-decade tenure at that began in September 2006 when he joined as a correspondent covering national and international news. His role emphasized solo commentary on political and social issues, leveraging prior experience in weekend anchoring and breaking news coverage to establish a distinctive primetime voice within 's lineup. The show's production fell under CNN's primetime unit, with Maria Spinella overseeing operations; she had been appointed to lead the slot's content in May 2017 during its earlier iteration as , focusing on structuring segments to align with Lemon's narrative style. Spinella, a veteran with prior roles in broadcast producing, managed a team that prioritized rapid-response reporting and opinion integration without a fixed co-anchor setup. Don Lemon Tonight operated without a permanent , distinguishing it from panel-driven morning programs at ; instead, it relied on Lemon's individual delivery augmented by guest analysts, correspondents, and pre-recorded segments to fill its 10 p.m. ET slot. This format underscored the host's central authority, with production staff handling logistics for live debates and expert interviews rather than collaborative on-air hosting.

Historical Development

Inception as CNN Tonight (2014–2020)

debuted on April 14, 2014, with Don Lemon as host in the 10 p.m. ET primetime slot, replacing the vacated position left by the cancellation of Piers Morgan Live, which concluded on March 28, 2014. CNN tested multiple anchors, including Lemon, Jake Tapper, Michael Smerconish, and Bill Weir, in the slot before settling on Lemon for the new program, which focused on late-evening news analysis and guest interviews. The initial format emphasized recaps of the day's top stories, with Lemon delivering straightforward commentary amid CNN's broader primetime revamp under then-president . By mid-, the show expanded to a two-hour block from 10 p.m. to ET, accommodating extended unscripted reactions to unfolding events and occasionally running later into the night for major developments. This adjustment allowed for deeper dives into , such as political scandals and election coverage. From 2016 through 2020, maintained a consistent schedule, adapting to high-profile cycles like the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections with segments centered on campaign updates and real-time responses to candidate statements. The program prioritized live analysis of administration actions during the Trump era, incorporating panel discussions that highlighted policy disputes and legal challenges. Pre-pandemic operations remained stable, relying on studio-based broadcasts from CNN's New York facilities without significant format overhauls until external events prompted remote adaptations in early 2020.

Rebranding to Don Lemon Tonight (2021–2022)

In May 2021, CNN rebranded its 10 p.m. ET program from CNN Tonight with Don Lemon to Don Lemon Tonight, effective May 17, to emphasize the host's personal brand amid efforts to differentiate in the cable news market. The change was announced by Lemon on May 15, 2021, during a broadcast, signaling a shift toward more personalized programming at the network. This rebranding aligned with CNN's broader strategy under then-president Jeff Zucker to leverage prominent anchors' visibility for viewer loyalty, as Lemon had hosted the slot since 2014. The rebranded show adopted a more informal tone, with Lemon frequently appearing in casual attire such as shirts or hoodies instead of traditional suits, aiming to foster a conversational style during discussions of daily and commentary. Episodes often opened with extended host monologues addressing political developments in the Biden administration, cultural debates, and election-related topics, reflecting heightened personalization of the format. Panel discussions grew more combative, featuring debates among guests on polarizing issues, as cable viewership faced broader declines industry-wide during this period. By September 2022, CNN announced Lemon's transition to co-anchor a new morning program, CNN This Morning, leading to his departure from the primetime slot in October 2022, after which Jake Tapper hosted an interim version ahead of midterm elections. This move marked the effective end of Don Lemon Tonight as a distinct entity, concluding its run of personalized late-night commentary.

Content Characteristics

Commentary Style and Segments

Don Lemon Tonight employed a commentary style characterized by host-led monologues that opened episodes with Lemon's personal interpretations of major developments, setting the tone for subsequent . These openings typically featured Lemon addressing the camera directly to express unvarnished views on political accountability, often critiquing statements from public officials. The monologues transitioned into panel discussions, where Lemon moderated conversations among guests, including journalists and commentators, focusing on dissecting opposing viewpoints through verbal rebuttals. Panels emphasized argumentative exchanges, with Lemon intervening to redirect or challenge participants, as seen in segments on racial incidents and . A signature recurring segment was "No Talking Points," in which Lemon delivered off-script opinions to confront politicians and officials on factual discrepancies and positions, positioning the format as a tool for unfiltered scrutiny. This segment appeared regularly, allowing Lemon to bypass prepared remarks for spontaneous commentary, often targeting claims from conservative media or figures. The show incorporated visuals such as on-screen graphics, video clips, and soundbites from news footage to illustrate causal links between events and policy decisions, frequently using these elements to highlight perceived failures without presenting balancing data in the same frame. Commentary prioritized interpretive narratives over quantitative breakdowns, with Lemon's delivery relying on emphatic tone and selective examples to evoke viewer engagement rather than empirical dissection.

Major Topics and Coverage

During its run as CNN Tonight from 2016 to 2020, the program devoted substantial airtime to scandals surrounding President , frequently incorporating declassified documents and leaked materials to construct narratives around investigations like the election interference probe and proceedings. Episodes on November 21, 2016, for example, dissected Trump's cabinet picks and business conflicts, framing them through leaks and official releases as potential ethical breaches. This era's coverage prioritized real-time analysis of executive actions, with over 70% of segments in peak periods tying back to Trump administration controversies, per archived episode data. After rebranding to Don Lemon Tonight in 2021, thematic emphases expanded to post-election dynamics, including intensive scrutiny of the , 2021, Capitol breach. On the one-year anniversary, , 2022, the show aired segments attributing the event to partisan incitement, referencing committee filings and eyewitness accounts to link it causally to Trump rally rhetoric, with topics like Ashli Babbitt's death and foreign intelligence documents featured prominently. Coverage of the 2022 midterms similarly highlighted claims, using polling data and legal filings to narrative potential Republican overreach, such as in episodes dissecting vote challenges in swing states. Identity politics and social justice themes recurred, particularly in race relations discussions that emphasized empirical disparities in incarceration rates (e.g., Black Americans comprising 13% of the population but 33% of prisoners) and health inequities, often linking them to systemic factors over individual agency. A June 16, , segment on cultural appropriation debated Rachel Dolezal's identity claims against statistical markers of racial experience, privileging outcome gaps in and . coverage from 2020 onward critiqued skepticism, portraying unvaccinated holdouts—disproportionately in rural demographics—as contributors to excess deaths exceeding 1 million by mid-2022, with segments on March 30, 2020, detailing ventilator shortages and hospital conversions tied to policy responses. These topics integrated causal chains from data, such as CDC reports showing gaps correlating with partisan affiliation.

Reception and Performance

Viewership Ratings

In , Don Lemon Tonight benefited from elevated cable news viewership amid ongoing election-related coverage, averaging approximately 938,000 total nightly viewers based on extrapolations from subsequent declines. In the key adults 25-54 demographic, the program drew an average of 304,000 viewers that year. Viewership fell sharply in , with the show averaging 619,000 total viewers nightly, a 34% decline from , placing it 40th among cable news programs. The adults 25-54 demo averaged 151,000 viewers, roughly half the prior year's figure, while trailing competitors like ' Gutfeld!, which averaged over 2 million total viewers in comparable slots. This drop aligned with post-2020 election normalization in cable news audiences, contributing to broader primetime erosion at , including a -43% decline in total primetime viewers for alone. By early 2023, ratings hit lows, with the program attracting just 73,000 adults 25-54 viewers in , amid CNN's trajectory toward its smallest demo audience since 2014. Quarterly figures reflected ongoing weakness, such as an average 0.2% household rating and 628,000 total viewers in later periods. These trends mirrored network-wide declines, with Don Lemon Tonight consistently ranking outside the top tier of cable news amid reduced overall engagement.

Critical and Public Assessments

Don Lemon Tonight garnered praise from some quarters for the host's candid style, which emphasized unvarnished critiques of political and media figures, often challenging conventional narratives in primetime cable news. This approach manifested in influential monologues that addressed societal norms directly, earning recognition within the industry, such as a 2022 News & Documentary Emmy nomination for an exclusive interview with Capitol riot officer . Critics and viewers frequently highlighted flaws in the program's structure and execution, including repetitiveness in segment formats and a predictability that diminished depth. The show's rating of 3.1 out of 10, based on 140 user assessments, underscored widespread viewer dissatisfaction with its one-note presentations and insufficient rigor in dissecting events. Trade publications positioned Don Lemon Tonight as a key element in CNN's opinion-oriented lineup, valuing its capacity for immediate reaction to unfolding stories while noting tendencies toward abbreviated in favor of emphatic delivery. This duality reflected broader debates on balancing accessibility with journalistic thoroughness in late-night cable analysis.

Perceptions of Bias

Critics from conservative media outlets, such as the , have frequently characterized Don Lemon Tonight as exhibiting a pronounced left-leaning , manifested through patterns in guest selection that disproportionately feature progressive commentators and experts aligned with Democratic viewpoints, often sidelining conservative or dissenting perspectives on issues like race and policing. For instance, analyses highlight the show's reliance on guests who frame social phenomena primarily through lenses of structural or institutional , with limited empirical counterpoints on factors like individual behavior or economic incentives, contributing to what detractors describe as an unchallenged normalization of progressive causal narratives. Independent media bias evaluators have quantified this slant: Ad Fontes Media assigns Don Lemon Tonight a reliability score of 31.24, placing it in a range of mixed factual reporting with significant analysis and opinion components, alongside a hyper-partisan left bias rating that reflects skewed interpretive framing over neutral fact presentation. Similarly, AllSides rates host Don Lemon as left-biased overall, influencing perceptions of the program's ideological tilt in commentary segments. These assessments underscore critiques that the show's structure prioritizes advocacy-style analysis, potentially amplifying unverified assumptions about systemic causes in cultural debates while underrepresenting data-driven alternatives. From the left, defenders portray the program as a platform for unfiltered truth-telling against conservative misinformation, arguing its focus on marginalized voices and structural inequities serves as corrective journalism in a polarized media landscape dominated by right-leaning outlets. However, even some progressive observers have noted tendencies toward ideological echo chambers, where guest diversity remains limited, conceding that this can reinforce audience preconceptions rather than fostering rigorous debate grounded in cross-ideological evidence. Such perceptions align with broader patterns in cable news, where empirical studies of panel compositions reveal imbalances favoring one side, though mainstream academic analyses often downplay these as incidental rather than systemic.

Controversies and Criticisms

Specific On-Air Disputes

During a August 26, 2022, segment on Don Lemon Tonight, host Don Lemon engaged in a heated exchange with conservative commentator Scott Jennings over President Biden's characterization of MAGA Republicans as threats to democracy. Jennings argued that Biden's rhetoric exacerbated divisions rather than unifying the country as promised, prompting Lemon to interrupt and defend the speech as a necessary response to extremism, dismissing Jennings' counterpoints as deflection without presenting countervailing data on polling or historical precedents for such partisan framing. In another clash on September 1, 2022, Lemon again sparred with Jennings regarding Biden's "semi-fascism" label for MAGA elements, accusing the commentator of hypocrisy for criticizing the term while ignoring what Lemon described as daily inflammatory rhetoric from former President Trump. Jennings attempted to pivot to Biden's unfulfilled unity pledges, but Lemon repeatedly interjected, labeling Trump's actions as unchecked aggression and prioritizing narrative alignment over extended debate on empirical examples of political violence from both sides, such as the 2020 riots versus events. Critics from conservative media outlets, including reports, highlighted this as emblematic of Lemon's pattern of curtailing conservative arguments in favor of host-led assertions lacking granular evidence review. Lemon's handling of election-related discussions drew scrutiny for unsubstantiated dismissals, particularly in 2021-2022 segments rejecting 2020 election integrity concerns as fabricated without engaging available data on anomalies like signature mismatches in some states or extended deadlines for mail ballots. For instance, in post-midterm coverage, Lemon asserted widespread Republican claims of fraud were baseless lies, citing court dismissals but omitting instances where judges ruled on procedural grounds rather than merits, such as in cases involving observer access restrictions. This approach elicited FCC complaints from viewers alleging biased that privileged official narratives over investigative reporting, though the commission typically logs such filings without regulatory action unless or indecency thresholds are met. These on-air dynamics contributed to viewer backlash, with conservative commentators and outlets like documenting patterns of interrupted discourse that favored progressive interpretations, prompting calls for advertiser boycotts of CNN programming amid declining primetime ratings in 2022, which fell to under 600,000 average viewers for Don Lemon Tonight. Such episodes underscored perceptions of one-sided adjudication, where empirical counter-evidence from sources like state audits was sidelined in real-time exchanges. Allegations of unprofessional backstage conduct by host , including diva-like behavior and condescending interactions with female colleagues, were reported to have strained production dynamics during the 2021–2022 period of Don Lemon Tonight. A Variety investigation published on April 5, 2023, cited multiple anonymous insiders describing Lemon's history of sending malicious texts to female staffers and mocking female co-workers, behaviors that reportedly persisted over more than a decade and contributed to a toxic internal environment undermining collaborative content preparation. Lemon's representatives rejected the claims as "patently false" and consisting of "15-year-old gossip," arguing they did not reflect his professional record. These reported interpersonal conflicts were said to erode team cohesion, with sources indicating that Lemon's alleged habit of belittling producers and anchors—such as calling a female producer to her face in one instance—fostered resentment and reduced morale among staff responsible for scripting and segmenting the evening program. Insiders attributed this to a broader pattern of rule-flouting, where Lemon prioritized personal style over network protocols, leading to inconsistent on-air rigor and backstage friction that indirectly influenced show preparation. While Lemon denied systemic mistreatment, the cumulative effect of such dynamics, as per the exposé, hampered efficient workflow and creative input from the team during the show's rebranding phase.

Cancellation and Legacy

End of the Program

The final episode of Don Lemon Tonight aired on October 7, 2022, marking the end of its run in the 10 p.m. ET slot after Lemon's remarks describing it as the "end of an " while transitioning to a morning program. This shift aligned with CNN's broader programming overhaul under CEO , who assumed leadership in April 2022 and prioritized revitalizing primetime to combat persistent audience erosion amid competitive cable news dynamics. CNN issued no explicit cancellation notice for the show; instead, the slot transitioned seamlessly to alternative content, such as extended coverage from other anchors, underscoring operational adjustments tied to financial imperatives like ad sustainability in a low-viewership environment. Empirical data highlighted the program's struggles, with 2022 viewership averaging 619,000 total viewers nightly—ranking 40th among cable news shows—and suffering a 42% year-to-date decline in the 10 p.m. hour compared to the prior year, often placing it behind rivals in key demographics and total audience metrics. These ratings shortfalls, rather than isolated incidents, served as the principal causal impetus for the format change, reflecting 's response to structural pressures in a fragmenting media landscape where primetime slots demanded higher engagement to justify costs.

Broader Impact on CNN Programming

The termination of Don Lemon Tonight on October 7, 2022, amid a 42% year-over-year decline in 10 p.m. ET viewership, underscored 's broader struggles with primetime ratings and prompted an immediate lineup reconfiguration under then-CEO . The show's end facilitated Lemon's reassignment to co-anchor CNN This Morning, aiming to inject star power into the network's morning block while freeing the evening slot for alternative programming like extended news coverage or guest-hosted segments. This shift reflected Licht's mandate to pivot from personality-driven commentary—often criticized for overt partisanship—to a more straightforward journalistic approach, though it exposed vulnerabilities in sustaining audience engagement across dayparts. Lemon's subsequent firing on April 24, 2023, following CNN This Morning's low ratings and internal friction, accelerated CNN's programming reevaluation, effectively marking the failure of the post-Don Lemon Tonight experiment. The morning show's turbulence, averaging under 300,000 total viewers in its debut year, contributed to Licht's own ouster and influenced incoming CEO Mark Thompson's strategy to dismantle opinion-heavy formats inherited from the Lemon era. By August 2023, CNN unveiled a revamped primetime slate elevating correspondents like and to anchor roles, prioritizing ensemble reporting over solo monologues to broaden appeal and counter perceptions of ideological slant that had eroded trust among moderate viewers. Further overhauls in February 2024 abolished the CNN This Morning branding, redistributing hours to expanded blocks for anchors such as Kasie Hunt and Jim Acosta while introducing concept-driven segments like 5 Things to replace fragmented, host-centric structures. These changes, yielding modest primetime gains (e.g., a 10-15% uptick in key demos by late 2023), signaled a causal link between the Don Lemon Tonight legacy—characterized by confrontational rhetoric and audience polarization—and CNN's imperative to diversify formats, reduce reliance on polarizing figures, and align with empirical demands for higher neutrality to stem a multi-year viewership bleed exceeding 50% in some slots since 2020. Ongoing adjustments into 2025, including potential shifts for Wolf Blitzer, continue to address the ripple effects of such high-profile disruptions.

References

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