CyberAlert -- 09/18/2000 -- Gore Operative Directed Berke
Gore Operative Directed Berke; Quid Pro Quo Blackout; Actors Tout Gore; Elian's Cable Story; Lazio "a Punk"
Moderator Gwen Ifill asked Berke: "I have to ask you about your role in this Rick because you, you personally have come under attack from other news organizations, and certainly by the Republicans, as having been a tool of the Gore campaign in this." In defending himself Berke indicted himself as to
how much he relied on a Gore operative: "Well, let me tell you how it
came about. The Gore people called me last week and they said we want you
to view this tape of a commercial. We don't want to tell you anything
more about it. Judge for yourself. So they showed it to me, I'm looking
at it, I don't notice anything unusual about it. Then they slow it down
and I still don't notice it [points finger at head]. It takes me a while
sometimes, you know, go figure. It took me several viewings to notice the
RAT. If the "no-blink" editor caught it so quickly why hadn't she noticed it before? At least one colleague was not impressed with how the media at large were so enamored with the story. On Inside Washington over the weekend liberal syndicated columnist Jack Germond wondered: "What's wrong with the press? We think it's a big deal if some guy, a hired hand for Bush -- Bush himself didn't put the word 'rats' in this -- does this. Why is it a big story? Why are we paying so much attention to it?"
Here's an excerpt of the column by Snow who back on August 28 was filling in as anchor of FNC's Special Report with Brit Hume: I know a fair amount about the story because I was the first to report it. Two of my colleagues at Fox News, Andy Schwartz and Jim Eldridge, spied the "rats" while screening the ad on Aug. 28. That evening, we put the whole thing on Fox News Channel -- stopping the tape for the seemingly inadvertent reference to vermin. Everyone who saw it had a good laugh. Our publicity department dutifully contacted a number of papers, including The New York Times, and even placed a follow-up call to the Times. But nobody bit on the story, presumably because they understood that in moving the word "bureaucrats" from left to right across a television screen, the final four letters naturally would appear together. So the whole thing vanished -- until, on a slow news day in a laggardly news week, the Gore campaign called Berke with its "scoop." It said a clever viewer in Seattle had noticed the "r" word in a Republican ad, insinuating that the rodentine reference constituted dirty, lowdown, filthy politics at its worst. Berke snapped at the bait. He wrote a piece, which the Times splashed across its front page. It alleged deep and troubling ugliness in the heart of the Republican camp -- all because of four letters only a highly vigilant viewer would notice. The story fingered Alex Castellanos, a GOP ad man, and fulsomely quoted some of Castellanos' most ardent enemies. It gave him a sentence or two for rebuttal. The original item carried no mention of Fox News, meaning Berke had no idea he had been fooled into touting a stale story about an ad scheduled to go off the air the day his piece appeared. Gore operatives thus transformed the Times into a purveyor of all the news that's fit to reprint. Let's put the matter in perspective. The spot criticized Gore's plan to replace garden-variety HMOs with the Godzilla of HMOs, a giant federal health-care plan -- and to force all senior citizens to get their medicine from Uncle Sam. The spot warned that under such a scheme, we would have to entrust our very lives to that most hated of species: bureaucrats.... END Excerpt To read the entire column, go to Townhall.com: To read what Snow said August 28 on FNC about the ad, go to: http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2000/cyb20000913.asp#2
Instead of devoting whole evening stories to Al Gore's hypocrisy in criticizing Hollywood while taking their money, an issue made hot by a $6 million fundraiser Thursday night at Radio City Music Hall, Friday night ABC and CBS stressed Bush's bad week, only gently touching on Gore hypocrisy. ABC's Peter Jennings admired how Gore used the issue to his advantage, CBS gave it a sentence. (Olympics-obsessed didn't utter a word about the
campaign on Friday's NBC Nightly News. NBC, however, was the only one of
the three broadcast network evening shows last week to dedicate a full
story to Gore's Hollywood hypocrisy. Go to: Friday morning, however, the networks did focus on Gore's hypocrisy and his defense of it as taking on a constituency group. On CBS's The Early Show, Bill Plante showed Bette Midler wishing: "Go, go, go, Al. We need a little spanking." Plante earlier scolded: "Al Gore and Joe Lieberman have redefined chutzpah. They've raised millions from the very same show biz folks they're accusing of sleazy marketing." -- ABC's World News Tonight, September 15. Peter Jennings handled the week in review himself, recounting without any mention of the media's role: "The Bush team got knocked off message this week by rats in commercials and posturing about debates that got then nowhere. A week in which policy got trumped by process." He then admired Gore's maneuver: "Mr. Gore
this week the advantages of being an incumbent. He knew the government
report on entertainment and children was coming, a very big deal to
suburban parents. And so a well-timed appearance on Oprah about the evils
of Hollywood." Jennings soon acknowledged: "We thought this week that Republican Dick Cheney was looking a lot more casual. Several Republicans said 'about time.' And we did think it odd that Democrat Joe Lieberman appeared on a radio program [Imus] that is often the epitome of crude behavior that Mr. Lieberman is now campaigning against." -- CBS Evening News. John Roberts reviewed the week,
starting with Bush's problems: "In a week that began with the
controversy over rats and ended by caving on debates faster than a Texas
sinkhole. His retooled campaign looks to political analysts to be more
than a little disoriented." Following a Beckel clip, Roberts made a brief
mention of Gore's Hollywood fundraising, but aired no critical soundbite:
"But don't expect Republicans to let go of the character issue
completely. Not when Gore gives them the sort of ammunition he did at last
night's gala Radio City fundraiser, chastising Hollywood on the one
hand": -- ABC's Good Morning America, September 15.
Co-host Diane Sawyer asked George Stephanopoulos: "Let's talk about
this fundraiser, $6.5 million last night. The Bush people are saying this
is complete hypocrisy, somebody's got to call them on it. Criticize the
entertainment industry one day and then show up and raise money from them
the next day." -- CBS's The Early Show. Bill Plante highlighted Gore's Thursday night fundraising event: "You know, Democrats and Hollywood? That's old news, right? Bill Clinton, after all, has been raking in money from his friends in the entertainment industry for years. But this week, Al Gore and Joe Lieberman have redefined chutzpah. They've raised millions from the very same show biz folks they're accusing of sleazy marketing. There was Al Gore at Radio City Music Hall last night with some of the biggest names in Hollywood at a political gala for which the top ticket price was $20,000....Yet on Monday, Gore endorsed a White House report which charges that Hollywood markets violence and obscenity to pre-teens, and he warned it to clean up its act or face federal intervention." Plante uniquely mentioned: "But this same week began with Cher headlining a Democratic National Committee fundraiser in Camden, New Jersey. Total take: $1 million. And it continued in Boston where James Taylor helped raise $2 million." Back to Thursday night, Plante relayed: "At
last night's gala, Bette Midler, Julia Roberts and Michael Douglas
entertained a crowd which forked over $6 million. Total for the week: $9
million bucks. Republicans were quick to accuse the Vice President of
hypocrisy." They just wouldn't accept one from any conservative or Republican. -- NBC's Today. News reader Ann Curry, MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens noticed, set up a story: "Vice President Al Gore was going for the gold himself last night at a star studded political fundraiser in New York. And that has sparked criticism from the Republicans who say it is hypocritical for the Democrats to take money from an industry whose values they criticized earlier this week." Reid explained: "Vice President Al Gore was serenaded by some of the music industry's biggest stars Thursday night at a Democratic fundraiser in New York that raked in more than $6 million. That just one day after Gore's running mate, Joe Lieberman, sharply criticized Hollywood for marketing violence and sex to children. In his remarks at the fundraiser Gore too chided the entertainment industry." Viewers saw clips of Gore and Nicholson before Reid picked up on a specific concern: "Republicans also point out that the fundraiser was co-produced by movie mogul Harvey Weinstein, whose distributed some of Hollywood's most controversial films, including Kids, about a group of teens on a relentless quest for sex and drugs. Gore advisers deny the charge of hypocrisy, claiming that Gore is not afraid to stand up to his friends when he thinks they're in the wrong." Reid wrapped up with clips of Gore on the Late Show with David Letterman.
As opposed to conservatives who have never taken on "the entertainment industry"? For CNN's September 15 Showbiz Today, reporter
Michael Okwu wandered among the Hollywood celebrities to capture some
off-stage soundbites, starting with Matt Damon who declared: "To me
it's just a chance to kind of get behind a candidate I think could, will
and should win and be our next President." Okwu then played this from Julia Roberts on stage: "What really spoke to me was that Republican in the dictionary comes just after 'reptile' and just before 'repugnant.'" "Others were more subtle," Okwu observed
in switching back to clips CNN got from celebrities in the crowd and
hallways. Lauren Hutton snidely remarked: "It'll be much better if we
don't do any 'subliminalable' business. Just get out there and do
it." Okwu pressed Midler: "Is this fair to the other
side, to the Republicans? I mean, it's-" Okwu later picked up this insight from actor John Leguizamo: "It's like the '60s, man, artists supporting and caring and making a stand for things." And matching Midler's spanking theme quoted in item #3 above, Julia Roberts advised: "I'd tell Tipper to wear more leather [laughs]. I think that would bring in some votes." He probably already has the leather vote harnessed up. +++ Watch the celebrities pontificate. Late Monday
morning MRC Webmaster will post, alongside this item, an excerpt of the
CNN story. Go to:
That's reality to those who believe the Elian story as recounted in the Fox Family Channel's The Elian Gonzalez Story, a two-hour movie which debuted on the cable channel Sunday night. It will run again his Thursday and Saturday night. Overall, from my cursory review, with two exceptions it appeared to offer a glowingly positive portrayal of every character in the real-life drama, from Janet Reno (complete with shaking hand) to Lazaro Gonzalez to Fidel Castro to Juan Miguel. The exceptions: Donato Darymple was painted as a self-promoting opportunist and Marisleysis as a delusion psycho who imagined she really was Elian's mother. Two scenes stood out for me for their unlikelihood. -- First, Juan Miguel goes to meet Fidel Castro, who
assures him: "You're a very decent man, Mr. Gonzalez. you've been
a loyal party man for several years. Your country is grateful. I am
grateful. Now, I want you to tell me the truth. And I promise you no
matter what choice you make I will personally respect your decision. Your
son, Elian, do you wish him to remain in Miami or do you want to have him
returned to you here?" -- Second, a few minutes later in the movie, lawyer
Gregory Craig goes to Juan Miguel's home in Cuba and while sitting at a
table with him, his wife and mother, advises him: "I strongly suggest
Mr. Gonzalez that you come to Miami."
Imagine the media outrage if any conservative hurled that kind of insult at Hillary Clinton. If you're part of the media it's okay to be "mean-spirited." -- Brent Baker
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