NBC’s Megyn Kelly newsmagazine features Putin in debut


NEW YORK (AP) — Megyn Kelly’s debut on NBC News this Sunday is a real-life cliffhanger involving Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The former Fox News Channel personality is in Russia to participate in an onstage question-and-answer session with Putin on Friday at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. She also is pushing for an offstage interview that would be featured on the first episode of NBC’s “Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly.”

No matter what, the newsmagazine will feature a Putin story. But a one-on-one interview carries a lot more juice and newsmaking potential than a public presentation that happened two days earlier.

“Sunday Night” will air at 7 p.m. Eastern opposite CBS’ “60 Minutes” and is the first of NBC’s stated plans for Kelly when the network lured her from Fox. The second part, and financially the most important, is her 9 a.m. weekday talk show that starts in the fall.

Kelly interviewed several people each night on her Fox show, but usually it was only for a couple of minutes with a stranger. The centerpiece of “Sunday Night” will be in-depth interviews that require more time to get to know her subject better.

“Fortunately, it’s not brain surgery,” she said. “No one’s going to die if I don’t get it perfectly on the first try. But I’m enjoying this. It’s nice, after 12 years in the business, to be learning a new skill.”

Kelly earned mixed reviews for her prime-time Fox interview with Donald Trump last year, but respect for her sharp questioning during debates. NBC said it’s happy with how she’s making the transition. “She’s just a natural,” said Elizabeth Cole, one of the network executives behind the startup. “She really connects with the people she interviews.”

Already completed are sessions with Erin Andrews, the sportscaster and stalker victim who talked about her bout with cancer, and J.D. Vance, author of “The Hillbilly Elegy,” a book about the attitudes of the white underclass.

Her time spent with Vance touched her, Kelly said. “He shed a tear and I shed a tear and I think about him every day now,” she said.

“When I sit down with Mr. Putin … it will be a little harder-hitting,” Kelly said. “I am not looking to make him cry.”

Besides Cole, Kelly is working with another veteran executive, David Corvo, to create “Sunday Night.” He’s supervised newsmagazines at NBC for two decades. As opposed to the true crime stories that dominate most newsmagazines not named “60 Minutes” these days, “Sunday Night” will be a throwback, a mix of stories that will include pieces by Cynthia McFadden, Harry Smith, Kate Snow, Keith Morrison and Josh Mankiewicz and others.