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August 26, 2002

NEW YORK -- If Martha Stewart's television empire is to crumble because of insider trading allegations, so far only a few tiny cracks are visible. Ever since her infamous cabbage-stabbing appearance in July, the one television gig that Stewart can't control -- her weekly segment on CBS' "The Early Show" -- has been put on indefinite hold. Neither Stewart nor CBS want to mix cooking with financial questions again...

By David Bauder, The Associated Press

NEW YORK -- If Martha Stewart's television empire is to crumble because of insider trading allegations, so far only a few tiny cracks are visible.

Ever since her infamous cabbage-stabbing appearance in July, the one television gig that Stewart can't control -- her weekly segment on CBS' "The Early Show" -- has been put on indefinite hold. Neither Stewart nor CBS want to mix cooking with financial questions again.

Yet Stewart can still be seen every day on television, often several times a day.

Her syndicated show, "Martha Stewart Living," airs five times a week and is seen in most TV markets. More specific shows about aspects of domesticity air nearly every day on HGTV and The Food Network.

King World, the company that syndicates "Martha Stewart Living," reports no fallout from the scandal that has put Stewart on the front pages of many newspapers this summer. She's being investigated to determine whether she had insider information that led her to drop a drug company's stock just before federal regulators rejected the company's application for a new colon cancer drug.

No advertisers have backed out of the show, and no stations have chosen to stop airing it, said Arthur Sando, King World spokesman.

Stations have always been able to schedule "Martha Stewart Living" and not worry about it, said Garnett Losak, an expert on syndication for Petry Television. The content is never controversial. The program gets decent, not great, ratings. It has never been hard to find advertisers, she said.

But some station operators have privately expressed some antsiness about the show recently, Losak said.

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Peaked years ago

If Stewart's situation becomes stickier, the stations that carry her have an easy way out.

"Even if this didn't happen, you have to remember, she's been on for a while now," said Marc Berman, a TV analyst for Media Week Online. "Her ratings have been dropping for four years. Her show has long since peaked. In that situation, any syndicator would have to look to eventually replace her."

The ratings needle for "Martha Stewart Living" hasn't budged at all since the scandal broke.

"No one is saying, 'she's in this thing, I'm not watching,'" Berman said.

Nor has controversy increased her audience, as often happens.

At HGTV and The Food Network, executives have been closely watching e-mails and Web site postings from viewers for signs of restiveness toward Stewart.

So far, the domestic diva's stock portfolio seems to mean little to people who want advice on cooking or decorating, said Cindy McConkey, vice president at Scripps-Howard Television, which owns both cable stations.

Most advertisers tend to buy package deals to air commercials on several of the networks' shows. None have specifically asked to stay away from Stewart, McConkey said. Ratings have stayed the same, too.

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