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HBO’s ‘Axios’ thinks big. They want to be the “60 Minutes” for the modern age.

NEW YORK (AP) — New York is focusing more on the testing that will be be needed to restart the economy. New York City started to open new coronavirus testing sites for hard-hit communities Friday, and the state will coordinate testing at hundreds of labs. Testing also prompted the latest outbreak-related flare-up between the governor and the president. The latest coronavirus developments in New York: ___ TESTING Gov. Andrew Cuomo argued New York’s efforts to ramp up testing to help restart its outbreak-crippled economy will fall woefully short without federal help, while President Donald Trump said the governor should stop complaining and start working. ADVERTISEMENT Cuomo said he will order the 300 labs and hospitals licensed to perform virus testing to coordinate and prioritize diagnostic testing with the state. Mass testing is widely considered crucial to bring people safely back to work. The Democratic governor has clashed intermittently with the Republican president over the federal government’s response to the outbreak. And there was a new flare-up Friday after Cuomo implied the federal government was shirking its responsibility to coordinate mass testing with states. “The federal government cannot wipe its hands of this and say ‘Oh, the states are responsible for testing.’ We cannot do it. We cannot do it without federal help,” he said. Trump tweeted soon afterward tweeted that Cuomo should spend less time “complaining.” “Get out there and get the job done. Stop talking!” Trump tweeted, noting that the federal government has helped New York with hospital beds and equipment. Separately, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced five new walk-in testing sites will be open by Monday, with a focus on residents ages 65 and older in areas with high numbers of cases of the COVID-19 virus. The sites will initially offer a total of 2,400 tests a week, but the city aims to double that quickly. “Everyone’s important,” the Democratic mayor said, but “this is about sharp, clear disparities.” Separately, five other new testing sites will be available to health care workers who are members of a major union that represents nurses, aides and many others. Those sites, offering a total of 3,500 tests per week, also will be open to other essential workers, including those who work at adult care facilities, and to city residents 65 and older with underlying medical conditions. De Blasio and Cuomo are starting to focus publicly more on how New York can recover from the outbreak, while warning it is too soon for people to relax their guard. ADVERTISEMENT The number of total hospitalizations has leveled off recently, though about 2,000 people a day with COVID-19 are still entering the hospitals, the governor said. There were 630 deaths reported Thursday, bringing total of confirmed cases since the outbreak close to 13,000. ___ FACE-COVERING RULE New rules requiring New Yorkers to cover their faces in public are going into effect Friday as the state’s residents prepared for at least another month of social distancing to curb the spread of the coronavirus. Under the guidelines announced this week by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, everyone must wear a mask or face covering when in a public place and unable to maintain appropriate distance from others. Children younger than 2 and people with a medical reason why they can’t tolerate a mask are exempt from the rule, which takes effect at 8 p.m. Cuomo announced Thursday that the state’s stay-at-home restrictions that have been in place since March 22 will last at least until May 15. He said the extension was made in consultation with officials from other Northeast states and will be reevaluated next month.

NEW YORK (AP) — No one can accuse Axios co-founder and CEO Jim VandeHei of small dreams for his bi-weekly news series on HBO, which is ramping up production to air nearly every two weeks for the rest of the year and moving to Monday nights.

He wants to be a “60 Minutes” for the modern age.

“If you’re going to design a ‘60 Minutes’ for the new generation, it might look something like what we’re putting together,” he said. “Our ambition with it is we want to have influence on a consistent basis like a ‘60 Minutes.’”

Axios’ concentration on the intersection between politics, the media, business and technology is reflected in interviews that are the centerpiece of the HBO show. Monday’s episode, the 18th one of the show since its premiere in Nov. 4, 2018, includes talks with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Walmart CEO Doug McMillon.

Recent interviews include Jonathan Swan’s talk, conducted remotely, with Cui Tiankai, the Chinese ambassador to the United States, and VandeHei talking with Donald Trump Jr. in front of an audience of his father’s supporters in Wisconsin.

The current executive producer of “60 Minutes,” Bill Owens, recalls how founding producer Don Hewitt used to tell potential competitors to jump right in, the water’s fine.

“What we have is 50 years of public trust and still, I would argue, the best group of television journalists in the business,” Owens said. “That’s taken a long time to assemble. Axios is just starting out and trying to do that. I salute them.”

VandeHei said the Axios journalists involved with the show, which besides Swan include Ina Fried, Alexi McCammond, Margaret Talev, Mike Allen, Dion Rabouin, Dan Primack and Sara Fischer, are cultivating a blunt interview style that doesn’t dance around topics.

Axios’ focus is more about the future than the past, said Matthew O’Neill, who produces the television show with Perri Peltz.

“It’s about pitching forward, it’s about what’s next,” O’Neill said. “It’s about driving the conversation. There is an aspect to that I think the audience is really hungering for.”

Although some interviews, like with Joe Biden and Tiankai, take up entire episodes, most shows have other elements, including a short documentary and animation segment. One memorable short piece last month followed a scientist in Nepal who had to phone a top government official with the news of the country’s first positive coronavirus test. The official asked that the news of the positive test be kept secret — as Axios’ cameras recorded the conversation.

O’Neill and Peltz bring a background in documentaries to the news immediacy of Axios’ journalists, and HBO executives add their own sensibility.

“You have those three things playing off each other that I think gives you something unique and different,” VandeHei said.

Like other television programs, “Axios” has adjusted to new rules for working with coronavirus; Swan stood looking at a screen for his interview with the Chinese ambassador. There’s also a recognition that the story will dominate most of the programs in the months to come.

The new time slot for “Axios,” Monday at 11 p.m., is markedly different from its early Sunday evening perch. The biggest difference is the show will come out with more new episodes by the end of this year than it has done in its history.

“We really believe in this model,” VandeHei said. “We really believe we’ve created something distinct and new in the TV space, which is hard to do, and we want to see if we can create a level of excellence even with a more consistent schedule.”

News Talk Florida: News Talk Florida Staff
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