CyberAlert -- 08/31/2000 -- Bush's Unpopular Tax Cut
Bush's Unpopular Tax Cut; FOB Kaplan Forced Out By CNN; Mayor Rivera?; Letterman Caught NY Times Bias
NBC Nightly News skipped the campaign Thursday night as Tom Brokaw anchored from in front of fire trucks in Red Lodge, Montana. ABC's World News Tonight ran a canned piece providing an overview of the Bush and Gore education plans. Bill Blakemore began with the obvious: "The main difference between Gore and Bush on education is a classic Democrat-Republican difference: The extent to which federal government should get involved." Back to the August 30 CBS Evening News, anchor John Roberts announced: "With 69 days now until America elects a new President, the strong U.S. economy is making it difficult for George W. Bush to sell one of his two major campaign themes." From
New Hampshire, Bill Whitaker started his piece, as transcribed by MRC
analyst Brad Wilmouth: "Education and taxes, two of the main
engines of the Bush campaign. Despite recent efforts to explain his
$1.3 trillion tax cut, it hasn't caught fire like the campaign
expected." Whitaker then delivered the usual liberal spin, though he did add a Bush campaign point: "More than half his across-the-board cuts would go to households earning more than $90,000, but Bush argues everyone would pay less. A two-income family of four earning some $47,000 would enjoy almost a $2,000 cut." As usual, by coming at the Bush tax cut from the left Whitaker ignored points a conservative would make, including how Bush's plan is actually quite "progressive" since it reduces the marginal rate for those at the bottom who now pay 15 percent to 10 percent, a one-third reduction, while those in the middle bracket would get a one-fourth rate cut and those paying the top rate only a one-fifth cut of their marginal rate. And of course those who pay the most taxes get a bigger tax cut in raw dollars since those earning $75,000 to $200,000 now pay 79 percent of income taxes collected by the federal government while those in the $20,000 to $30,000 range pay a mere one percent of taxes collected.
Whitaker picked up: "Still, polls show tax cuts aren't the
voter magnets they once were here or across the country." Whitaker concluded: "The Bush folks insist this tax plan is a winner, and though they admit it hasn't caught fire so far, they remain confident it will as the campaign heats up these last two months."
Indeed, and with good reason. Kaplan has a history of liberal activism and Clinton friendship which have impacted his news judgment, a subject CyberAlert last addressed this past April 11 in reporting how Kaplan and his daughter spent a night at the White House after the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association dinner. Kaplan departed after CNN's ratings fell 35 percent last quarter from their level of a year earlier. The AP's Bauder elaborated: "CNN's average daily viewership sank from 463,000 people during the third quarter of 1997, when Kaplan started, to 288,000 during the second three months of this year, according to Nielsen Media Research. The prime-time dropoff was even steeper, at 47 percent. The network's second-quarter ratings were the lowest since 1988." Obviously, the creation of MSNBC and FNC and their gaining of cable carriage by the day, as well as growing public interest in stock coverage provided by CNBC, has split the cable news audience. And before getting to the bashing of Kaplan, it should be acknowledged that while he did do things which hurt CNN's credibility (NewsStand on Tailwind) and ratings (forcing out Moneyline anchor Lou Dobbs and creating the viewer-starved daily prime time NewsStand), during his tenure with CNN Chairman Tom Johnson CNN did not take the lowbrow road followed by MSNBC. CNN still offers expensive-to-produce live newscasts on weekend days and nights, not repeats of repeats of clips of repeats of Dateline NBC segments on Jon Benet. And two of three of their ET prime time hours are devoted to serious news shows sandwiched around a usually serious Larry King Live. Compare that to MSNBC's prime time dominated by Crime Files and Headliners & Legends pre-taped clip shows about sensational crimes and celebrity lives. Now to some highlights of Kaplan's liberal career. -- The April 11 CyberAlert this year reported: CNN President Rick Kaplan, who stayed overnight in Clinton's White House while at ABC News, spent another night there with his daughter last Thursday night after the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association dinner, USA Today disclosed. But Kaplan doesn't see anything wrong with it. In his "Inside TV" column for April 10, USA Today's Peter Johnson revealed: CNN president Rick Kaplan, who took some heat when he worked at ABC News for staying overnight at the White House during President Clinton's first term, spent another night there Thursday -- after Clinton roasted ABC News over "Leogate." "No, I do not feel embarrassed, ashamed or compromised in any way, shape or form," Kaplan said Friday, after sleeping in the Queen's Room while daughter Alexis, 21, slept in the Lincoln Bedroom. Generally speaking, it's an ethical no-no for journalists to get too cozy with people they cover. But Kaplan, a former Nightline, PrimeTime Live and World News Tonight producer, said Clinton's gesture won't affect CNN's coverage of him. "Everyone has relationships," Kaplan said. "We met each other before either of us knew we'd amount to anything. He doesn't expect anything from me, and I don't expect anything from him." Kaplan, a Clinton friend for 30 years, said the president gave Alexis an "amazing" 2 '-hour White House tour. "It was extremely nice of him to do it. In the waning months of his presidency, I felt, 'What the heck?'" END Reprint of previous CyberAlert item -- From the October 9, 1997 CyberAlert: An October 6 CyberAlert item on the then upcoming two-hour CNN special on campaign finance noted that it was to be produced by CNN President Rick Kaplan, who U.S. News reported had demanded that CNN staffers "limit the use of the word 'scandal' in reporting on Clinton's campaign fundraising woes." I wondered: "Can you do a two-hour show on Clinton's 1996 fundraising and not use the word 'scandal'?" A rhetoric question, or so I thought. But incredibly enough the answer is -- yes! The October 7 show titled "Democracy for Sale" wandered well beyond Clinton to examine Republicans and to argue for campaign finance reform, but summarizing charges against Clinton took up a significant portion of the show. Nonetheless, the phrase "Clinton scandal" was never uttered. MRC news analyst Clay Waters reviewed the show and then ran the transcript from the CNN Web page through WordPerfect's "find" feature. The words "scandal" or "scandals" appeared just four times. Twice in the Crossfire segment of the special liberal Bill Press claimed that Republicans are trying to use scandal to bring down Clinton since they can't win on the issues. At another point, Moneyline anchor Lou Dobbs made this generic reference: "The campaign funding scandal hasn't slowed the parties' lust for soft money." And the fourth "scandal" mention? Here it is, from Brooks Jackson: "So, you want to be a Washington player, get next to the powerful, lobby for a tax break or a nice ambassador's job? If you've got money, I can help. First, you've got to get around that law they enacted back in '74 after the Watergate scandal...." Yes, having an FOB, who stayed overnight in the Lincoln bedroom, as President of CNN is reflected in the network's coverage. END Reprint of another previous CyberAlert item -- In his book on the 1992 campaign, "Strange Bedfellows," Tom Rosenstiel quoted this from Kaplan about Bill Clinton: "I know he wasn't Slick Willie, and not a scourge, a really terrific, terrific person." -- Last year during a commencement address at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, Kaplan complained that Ken Starr is "putting obsession ahead of the best interests of the nation" while Bill Clinton has delivered "extraordinary" achievements. Thursday morning, MRC Webmaster Andy Szul will post on the MRC home page a RealPlayer clip of Kaplan's assessments of Starr and Clinton. You can see a picture of Kaplan from that speech at: http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/1999/cyb19990614.asp#4 In the
meantime, here's the text of a portion of Kaplan's May 16, 1999
remarks: -- For more on Kaplan's efforts to help Bill Clinton and his political activism, check out these additional CyberAlert items: For
details on how in February 1992, while at ABC News, he advised Clinton
on how to respond to the Gennifer Flowers story: For
extensive and illuminating excerpts from a January 1998 Vanity Fair
profile which detailed how Kaplan once hired Hillary Clinton; how he
not only advised Clinton about how to counter Gennifer Flowers, but
had earlier counseled Clinton on how to recover from his too-long 1988
convention speech; how he had been a political operative for a liberal
presidential candidate before jumping to journalism; how he made calls
to console Hillary Clinton after Vince Foster's death and to Web
Hubbell after he resigned; how he killed a Whitewater piece from
ABC's World News Tonight, discouraged reporters and producers from
pursuing the topic and only ran an in-depth look one night in 1994
because Nightline was about to grab it; and how he slurred
conservative media critics who see liberal bias, specifically Reed
Irvine and MRC Chairman Brent Bozell, as "liars." Go to: For the record, in CNN's re-shuffling Philip Kent, President of TBS International, will become President and COO of the CNN News Group and Jim Walton, who has been President of CNN/Sports Illustrated, will run CNN's domestic news networks and Web sites. Former Lyndon Johnson aide Tom Johnson, Chairman and CEO of the CNN News Group, will now only oversee editorial decisions as Steven Heyer, President and COO of TBS Inc., will direct CNN's business affairs.
New York Times reporter Jim Rutenberg explored the claim: ....In the second quarter of this year -- the most recent full quarter for which cable ratings are available -- the 9 p.m. showing of "The News With Brian Williams" was actually watched by an average 203,000 people, according to Nielsen figures. It was in fourth place in its time period among the cable news networks behind CNN's "Larry King Live," with 936,000 people watching each night; CNBC's "Rivera Live," with 374,000; and the Fox News Channel's "Hannity & Colmes," with about 308,000. So, how can MSNBC say the program is being watched by 42 million people when its nightly audience is about one-20,500th of that? Thanks to some statistical ingenuity and vague language, the MSNBC number is basically correct, according to MSNBC executives. Here is the calculus: Mr. Williams's program, which runs Monday through Friday, is repeated four times a night after its initial 9 p.m. showing -- twice on MSNBC and twice on CNBC, NBC's financial network. MSNBC executives said they arrived at the figure by taking the total number of people who watched at least one minute of the program in any of its runs in April. In other words, if while clicking through the channels in April, a viewer happened to pause for 60 seconds on Mr. Williams's program, she became one of the 42 million.... Executives at MSNBC said they thought their method for the billboard would better represent the real audience for Mr. Williams in the course of a night since, they contend, many of his viewers tune in briefly for information and then head elsewhere.... END Excerpt Even if you assume the 10pm ET CNBC repeat captures a fresh 200,000 and then each of the second showings on CNBC and MSNBC garner another half as many more, you get about 600,000 actual unique viewers. By MSNBC's rationale, CyberAlert doesn't have 5,900 subscribers, but 118,000 readers (5,900 x an average of 20 editions a month).
The August 30 "Page Six" item by Jared Paul Stern with Paula Froelich and Chris Wilson, revealed: Geraldo Rivera is threatening to run for mayor. The other night at Elaine's the macho newsman was overheard telling pals that he's gunning for Rudy Giuliani's seat in 2001, and isn't worried that his womanizing past will haunt him on the campaign trail. "He said he's already told everyone all about his sex life in his book ['Exposing Myself'], so he really doesn't have any skeletons in his closet," our spy reports. "Many people over the years have urged him to run, and he has thought about it, but as far as some imminent decision to run, no," Rivera's spokesman Jim Griffin tells us. "I think what he meant was that maybe he was exploring it." END Reprint To read the daily "Page Six" column, go to: http://www.pagesix.com This might be an effective way to depopulate the liberal media of its top left wing crusaders so they only burden residents of one city, district or state. Now, what office could we get Bryant Gumbel run for?
"Ages-Old Polar Icecap Is Melting, Scientists Find,"
announced a front page headline on August 19. The story by John Noble
Wilford began: The dire story prompted Letterman to complain on the air about how The Weather Channel was ignoring this catastrophe while instead, in the face of impending doom, offering summer beach forecasts. But
then on Tuesday night this week Letterman had to apologize to The
Weather Channel after he saw that the New York Times retracted its
story. An August 29 article by the same reporter carried this
headline: "Open Water at Pole Is Not Surprising, Experts
Say." Reporter Wilford acknowledged: ABC News promoted the original New York Times story on August 19, but decided to skip the correction this week. World News Tonight anchor Antonio Mora warned on August 19: "Part of the ice cap at the top of the world has melted. The New York Times reports that some scientists are calling it dramatic proof that global warming has started to alter our climate." Reporter Dan Harris asserted: "On a recent expedition from Norway to the North Pole, Malcolm McKenna, along with a group of scientists and tourists, found open water, about a mile of it right on the Earth's crown. McKenna, a paleontologist who has studied global warming, immediately started taking pictures to record what he said should be a serious wake-up call....What McKenna and the others saw, however, may have been just an aberration. Experts say strong winds likely broke the ice apart. What is truly remarkable is that the expedition saw thinning ice all over the polar region. Climatologist Doug Martinson says the area has been warming at an alarming rate." Now that you can put it in context, let's return to where we began. From the August 30 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Signs The New York Times is Slipping." Copyright 2000 by Worldwide Pants, Inc. 10. Instead of "All
The News That's Fit To Print," slogan is "Stuff We Heard
From a Guy Who Says His Friend Heard About It" Now that last one would truly be a sign that something is different at the New York Times.-- Brent Baker
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