CyberAlert -- 07/22/1999 -- Ted Tribute; Kennedy Family "Values" in "National Bosom"; No Scandal Qs
Ted Tribute; Kennedy Family "Values" in "National Bosom"; No Scandal Qs >>> Bozell to appear Thursday morning on MSNBC to discuss JFK Jr. death coverage. MRC Chairman L. Brent Bozell is scheduled to appear Thursday, July 22, in the first half of MSNBC's Watch It with Laura Ingraham. The show airs for one hour at 11am ET, 10am CT, 9am MT and 8am PT. <<< >>> Testimony of Tim Graham, the MRC's Director of Media Analysis, to the House Commerce Committee Subcommittee on Telecommunications, Trade, and Consumer Protection, is now up on the MRC Web site along with two video clips in RealPlayer format of his July 20 testimony which reads in part: "This erupting PBS-DNC fundraising scandal demonstrates what can happen when Congress and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting have done very little to lift the veil of privacy that supposedly 'public' stations draw around their own financial arrangements. Behind our backs, PBS stations have constructed an indirect form of taxpayer- financed campaigns, at least for the Democrats. But the lack of oversight means the taxpayer is asked to put up and shut up." Go to: http://www.mediaresearch.org/press/news/pr19990720a.html <<< For the fifth straight night the three broadcast network evening shows all led Wednesday, July 21, with JFK Jr. death-related stories. All started with three stories about the bodies being found, how the search was conducted and memorial service plans. Like Tuesday night, NBC devoted the most time to the story, once again allocating over half its newscast. In a sign that ABC and CBS have returned to a normal news judgment routine, ABC's World News Tonight featured a look at the lack of community and things for kids to do in suburbs and the CBS Evening News checked out the controversy over genetically-altered crops. (Still no last part of CBS's "Armed America" series.) "The Senator's endurance and resiliency have been tested time and time again," admired ABC's Morton Dean as World News Tonight caught up with NBC and ran a tribute to Senator Ted Kennedy. But unlike NBC on Tuesday night, ABC failed to call his politics liberal. CBS ended by marveling at how the nation has moved from observing to taking part in grieving as those paying tribute outside the Kennedy-Bessette apartment "were strangers to Kennedy, but in their minds, even though they were never near him, they are still close to him." CBS's Bob Schieffer managed to link the Kennedy tragedy to the tax debate, reporting that Congressman Patrick Kennedy has offered to fly back to vote if necessary. (See item #4 today for a look at tax bill coverage.) -- ABC's World News Tonight ended with Morton Dean on Ted Kennedy as family grief counselor and surrogate father: "The Senator's endurance and resiliency have been tested time and time again." Morton asserted that "religion has played an important part in his survival," as he outlined the many tragedies in the Kennedy family history. While NBC's Tom
Brokaw on Tuesday night referred to Kennedy as the "aging liberal
lion of the Senate," Morton avoided any such labeling as he concluded
by simultaneously pointing out Kennedy's shortcomings while also
admiring his resilience and endurance: -- The CBS Evening
News ended with Richard Schlesinger marveling at a change in America over
the last 35 years: One big change between 1963 and 1999: Television, which allows people to think they know those they often see on the screen. For the third straight weekday morning, on July 21 the three morning shows spent most of their time on the Kennedy death, but for the first time they also spent significant time on other subjects while NBC's Today actually devoted a segment to wondering if "the frenzy at the Kennedy compound [is] over the top?" This came an hour after Today spent a segment exploring who will "pick up the mantle" of Camelot. Jonathan Alter advocated Maryland Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, "who's about to become Governor of Maryland." (Maryland residents take note of this, no need to vote since it's already been decided.) On non-JFK topics, ABC's Good Morning America interviewed Jesse Ventura during the 7:30am half hour and Today devoted the whole 7:30am half hour to the recovery of the Liberty Bell Mercury capsule and to a heartwarming interview by Matt Lauer with Lorraine Wagner, the woman who corresponded with Ronald Reagan for over 50 years and is the focus of an article in this week's New Yorker. During the 7am
half hour Today brought aboard Democratic activist Lawrence O'Donnell
and liberal analyst Jonathan Alter of Newsweek to answer Matt Lauer's
question: Lauer conceded the obvious, telling O'Donnell, "This is something that in the media we tend to be a little obsessed with, who will carry the mantle." Alter contended
that the Kennedys have always been entwined in American history as Joe
Kennedy was isolationist in the 1930s when most Americans were and when
Americans were concerned about communism Robert Kennedy toiled for Joe
McCarthy. Bringing his analysis up to the present, MRC analyst Geoffrey
Dickens observed that Alter tied the Kennedy family to the impending rise
of women in politics: An hour later the ubiquitous Alter hadn't left the Today set when Katie Couric asked him and disgraced newspaper writer turned Kennedy expert, Mike Barnicle: "The tragedy that began to unfold last Saturday has attracted an enormous amount of media attention. John F. Kennedy Jr. was no stranger to the spotlight. But is the frenzy at the Kennedy compound over the top?" After reporter Anne Thompson showed how Hyannisport has been inundated by the media Barnicle expressed concern for how the Kennedys are being treated: "The media has mistaken volume for content. There's a huge difference...the most lethal weapon of all, in a sense, is the media. We kill reputations, we invade privacy, we are ruthless and we are endless." Alter complained:
"The problem Katie is that the intensity of the coverage strips the
coverage of the dignity that it used to have before we had 24 hour news.
It used to be a story had some time to unfold in a dignified way. And now
the saturation coverage, I think, is really starting to annoy not just the
people who watch it but those of us who participate." Couric and Alter should talk to Washington Post media reporter Howard Kurtz. MRC analyst Paul Smith noticed that he ended CNN's Reliable Sources on Sunday by insisting to co-host Bernard Kalb: "You mentioned the question of over-coverage, Bernie. I'm not sure a story like this can be over-covered." Two CNN reporters gushed over the Kennedy family Tuesday night on Late Edition Prime Time as Chris Black maintained that despite setbacks "the legacy of values and a significant achievement has endured" and Jeff Greenfield suggested national guilt over the assassination has drawn the family "into the national bosom." MRC analyst Paul Smith picked up on these July 20 assertions: -- From
Hyannisport, Chris Black, a former Boston Globe reporter turned CNN
correspondent, argued: -- Jeff Greenfield
on the Kennedy family and America: Certainly into the bosom of the news media. The intra-Republican battle over a tax cut plan and Clinton denouncing the GOP leadership's plan generated full stories on ABC and CBS, as Dan Rather highlighted how the idea is not popular, and a one-sided half story on NBC which presented only Clinton's viewpoint. ABC's Linda Douglass showed she's not a very good prognosticator, predicting passage one night only to not be so sure the next evening. NBC's David Bloom highlighted how at his press conference Clinton threatened a veto of the GOP tax cut plan, calling it "risky." Bloom allowed Clinton to denounce Republicans for doing nothing about Medicare and Social Security and charge the plan will lead to "major cuts" in popular programs, before Bloom moved on to other press conference topics. Over on the CBS
Evening News anchor Dan Rather intoned: Bob Schieffer
allowed Dick Armey to promote its value before noting how "Democrats
say it's tilted to the rich and so huge there would be no money left to
run the government." Schieffer outlined the major provisions of the
GOP bill and then concluded by relaying how a Kennedy may save the
Democrats: Rather nicely followed up by pointing out how tax cuts are "not a top priority of the public" according to a CBS News poll which found only five percent cited taxes as the most important issue, compared to 14 percent who named health care and eight percent who identified Social Security. ABC's Linda Douglass demonstrated the short-lived nature of television prognostication. Tuesday night she concluded her World News Tonight piece: "But now the President is also calling for a tax cut. So tomorrow the House may consider a Republican proposal to cut taxes by $800 billion over ten years and possibly a Democratic alternative to cut taxes by less than half that. So voters may well get a tax cut whether they want one or not." A night later, she ended her Wednesday story: "The question tonight is whether any plan is going to pass. Some provisions are being negotiated but the price tag remains the same. So Peter, it is likely to be a very long night."
CBS's Dan Rather continues to insist upon spreading the blame around
equally for Chinese espionage. Wednesday night CBS was the only broadcast
network to note an espionage fallout-prompted Senate vote, as Rather told
CBS Evening News viewers: Not all are
equally culpable. As Paul Sperry reported in the June 9 Investor's
Business Daily: The only thing we know that has remained consistent through the Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clinton years is CBS's liberal bias. A jovial Bill Clinton met an accommodating White House press corps for a 70-minute press conference from 2:35 to 3:45pm ET Wednesday afternoon carried live by the cable networks. The press corps avoided all scandal questions and failed to broach Chinese espionage. Instead, they asked about JFK Jr., pressed him from the left "to provide the leadership" to give health coverage to the uninsured, and wondered if he will run for elective office in the future. At one point Clinton lied about Newt Gingrich, but no one in the room corrected him then or in later news reports. Specifically, Clinton charged: "So unless they just simply propose to bankrupt all the teaching hospitals and a lot of the other hospitals in the country and let the Medicare program wither away, as one of their previous leaders so eloquently put it, they can't possibly finance this tax program without doing serious damage." As Clinton well knows and the press corps should, he was lying. His reference to "withering away" was to a comment from Newt Gingrich, but Gingrich was referring not to the Medicare program but to reducing bureaucracy and reforming the program so that the Heath Care Finance Administration would "wither away." Here are three questions of note posed at the July 21 press conference which only CNN carried to the end as both FNC and MSNBC cut out about six minutes early to go back to more JFK Jr. coverage. -- In a question he wasn't too embarrassed to replay in his CBS Evening News story, CBS Scott Pelley asked about John F. Kennedy Jr.'s visit to the White House: "Is there anything Mr. Kennedy said to you that night that particularly struck you?" -- Los Angeles
Times reporter Ed Chen hit Clinton from the left about not doing enough on
health care: -- The press conference ended with this question from CBS reporter Bill Plante: "As the spotlight shifts from you to your Vice President and to your wife, are you likely to be content drifting slowly offstage, or do you think that someday you will want to run for office, some office, again? Or are you willing to tell us this afternoon, sir, that you will never again run for elective office?" (Answer: "I don't have any idea.") On Wednesday's
Special Report with Brit Hume on FNC, NPR reporter Mara Liasson observed:
>>>
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