CyberAlert -- 09/27/2002 -- Jennings Keeps a Copy of the U.S. Constitution in His Pocket
Jennings Keeps a Copy of the U.S. Constitution in His Pocket; Gore Iraq Hypocrisy & ABC Says He Cast "Deciding Vote"; Public Apathy for Bush Economy Frustrates Journalists; ABC & NBC Showcase Same Poster Guy for Family Leave; NY Times Prods Hate U.S. Comments? Is Jennings U.S. citizenship-worthy? He'd be wise to avoid asking his conservative viewers. An excerpt from Shister's story in the September 25 Philadelphia Inquirer, which was highlighted by Jim Romenesko's MediaNews page (http://www.poynter.org/medianews/ ): ....Though he feels "more American than Canadian," ABC's Peter Jennings has never applied for dual citizenship since moving to the United States in 1964. "There are a lot of complicated reasons, many of them private and having to do with my family," says Jennings, 64, in town yesterday to hype his new book, In Search of America, and to anchor World News Tonight from Independence Mall. Jennings' mother, Elizabeth (for whom his daughter is named), "was deeply concerned that I stay Canadian," the Toronto-born newsman says. "She thought a lot of people went away from Canada and forgot their roots." Because Jennings' father, Charles, was a prominent figure in the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., "my mother wanted me to honor that in a pretty permanent way. I don't think that will always be the case." Jennings says he's been thinking for more than a decade about becoming an American citizen, "if the country deems me worthy of it." "It would be a very big step for me, because I value the American idea so much. I don't know whether I've made enough of a contribution to America....I wish to be a worthy citizen." (He really talks like that.) Jennings' children, Elizabeth, 22, and Christopher, 20, are citizens of three countries -- Britain (their place of birth), Canada, and the United States, adopted home of their mother, author Kati Marton, a former WCAU reporter. If they wanted to, Jennings says, his kids could add a fourth country -- Hungary, Marton's birthplace. (FYI: She was his third wife. He's been married to ABC producer Kayce Freed since 1997.) Jennings, a highly emotional man to those who know him well, freely admits he's "having a love affair" with America.... Hokey? How's this? Jennings carries in his back pocket a copy of the Constitution, "for inspiration."... END of Excerpt For Shister's Wednesday TV column in full: http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/magazine/daily/4144068.htm For more about Jennings on the September 6 Late Show, and a RealPlayer clip of it, refer to the September 9 CyberAlert: http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20020909.asp#6
Naturally, Dan Rather did not update his viewers about Gore's hypocrisy. Plus, while also ignoring Gore's hypocrisy, CNBC's Brian Williams tried to add heft to Gore's remarks by reminding viewers of how they came from "the number one popular vote-getter in the last election," while ABC's Claire Shipman emphasized how Gore "noted proudly yesterday that he cast the deciding the vote" for the Persian Gulf War. But if a resolution wins by more than one vote, as did this one (52 to 47 on January 12, 1991), then no one vote is "the deciding vote." In fact, ten Democrats supported the resolution and the Washington Post reported on January 13, 1991 that Gore was "the last of the group to announce his position" -- meaning he waited to see which side would win before casting his then definitely non-deciding vote. And, one more update item, in drafting his speech, Gore consulted with actor Rob Reiner, "Meathead" on All in the Family. Now the details about what I've just summarized above: On the September 23 CBS Evening News, Dan Rather trumpeted: "Gore said if other nations follow President Bush's lead in their relations with the world, quote, 'The rule of law will quickly be replaced by the reign of fear,' unquote. Gore has always supported overthrowing Saddam and was among the few Senate Democrats who voted for the 1991 Gulf War resolution. After that war, Gore said he felt betrayed by the first President Bush's, quote, 'hasty withdrawal from the battlefield.'" The next night, FNC's Brit Hume, in the "Grapevine" segment of FNC's Special Report with Brit Hume, recalled how "in his speech in San Francisco yesterday, former Vice President Gore said the first President Bush had ended the 1991 Gulf War too soon." Hume played a clip of Gore: "Back in 1991, I was one of a handful of Democrats in the United States Senate to vote in favor of the resolution endorsing the Persian Gulf War. And I felt betrayed by the first Bush administration's hasty departure from the battlefield." Hume then informed viewers of Gore's hypocrisy and contradiction: "But this is what Gore said about that back in 1991 on the floor of the Senate, of which he was then a member, quote: 'I want to state this clearly, President Bush should not be blamed for Saddam Hussein's survival to this point. There was throughout the war a clear consensus that the United States should not include the conquest of Iraq among its objectives. On the contrary, it was universally accepted that our objective was to push Iraq out of Kuwait, and it was further understood that when this was accomplished, combat should stop.'" Nonetheless, an hour later on the September 24 edition of CNBC's The News with Brian Williams, MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth observed, Williams plugged an upcoming segment with two anti-war Congressmen by bucking up Gore's importance: "In this country, the march toward war has seemed inevitable, but not to the number one popular vote-getter in the last election, Al Gore. The former Vice President and a select few others have started speaking out against the idea, and today it positively ignited some political conservatives." Earlier that day, on ABC's Good Morning America, Claire Shipman had relayed, without any dubiousness, how Gore said he cast the "deciding vote" in 1991 for the resolution in support of the Persian Gulf War. MRC analyst Jessica Anderson observed this is how Shipman set up her piece on Gore's speech: Meanwhile, in a September 25 New York Times story, Adam Nagourney reported that Gore consulted a "far-flung" group in drafting his remarks: "He wrote it after consulting a fairly far-flung group of advisers that included Rob Reiner, the actor and filmmaker." For a picture and rundown of movie and TV appearances made by Gore's foreign affairs adviser, check Reiner's Internet Movie Database page: http://us.imdb.com/Name?Reiner,+Rob
Add up all the bad numbers and, Stark argued, "it would seem like enough pocketbook issues to catapult Democrats to sure victory -- until talk of toppling Saddam became an all-consuming front-page issue." But Stark still saw hope ahead, political hope that is for Democrats: "With six weeks to go until election day, the economy could reemerge as the dominant issue, especially if the stock market continues to fall. And remember, just a week before Americans go to the polls, they'll get their third quarter stock performance statements, Peter, which at this rate, would put them in a very sour state of mind." It will take four weeks for people to get statements about the third quarter which ends on Monday? Stark must own stocks or mutual funds through firms which operate in slow motion. The next day on Good Morning America, co-host Diane Sawyer recited the same numbers before imploring of Stark: "Now, this would probably cause a crisis, you would think, for the administration, and yet a lot of Americans say they're really not feeling this yet. Will they soon and what will happen?" CNN's Inside Politics decided to offer the incongruous contrasts between the economic performance over eight years of Clinton and the one year of Bush, a statistically fallacious comparison, especially since it's hard to see how Bush policies had time to have much of an impact in 2001 and obviously something will have time to change more over eight years than one year. Nonetheless, on Tuesday's Inside Politics, Ron Brownstein laid out the comparisons, such as: "During Bill Clinton's eight years as President, the median income rose almost 15 percent, to just over $43,000. But in Bush's first year, the median income fell by more than two percent, to just over $42,000." On the September 23 World News Tonight, Betsy Stark announced: The next day, on the September 25 Good Morning America, MRC analyst Jessica Anderson noticed, Diane Sawyer recounted the same bad economic numbers: "Let's take a look at some figures since George Bush has been in office -- here's what I want to show everybody at home. Those living in poverty, the number has gone up. The household income of Americans has gone down; right now median income is $42,000. Since President Bush's inauguration -- take a look at this -- the Dow Jones down 34 percent, unemployment up more than a third, and the federal deficit has ballooned from $281 billion surplus to $157 billion deficit. Now, this would probably cause a crisis, you would think, for the administration, and yet a lot of Americans say they're really not feeling this yet. Will they soon and what will happen?" CNN offered its Bush versus Clinton contrast on the September 24 Inside Politics, MRC analyst Ken Shepherd observed. Los Angeles Times Washington reporter Ron Brownstein made the case: "As Democrats try to shift the public focus from hard choices abroad to hard times at home, newly-released Census Bureau studies show that, in President Bush's first year, average families lost ground economically, after enjoying big gains through most of the 1990s. The most revealing number is the median income, the amount of money that the average American family earns. During Bill Clinton's eight years as President, the median income rose almost 15 percent, to just over $43,000. But in Bush's first year, the median income fell by more than two percent, to just over $42,000. After a clip of Senator Tom Daschle, Brownstein continued: "Democrats blame Bush economic policies for the turnaround. Republicans point to a slowdown that began in Clinton's last year, a downturn that saw family incomes dip slightly even in 2000, according to newly-revised census figures." So why blame Bush? Following a soundbite from Bush, Brownstein acknowledged: "Bush can take heart from one precedent: poverty rose and income fell during Clinton's first year also, and then recovered briskly until the very end of his term, helping him to an easy reelection. But another precedent is more ominous for Bush. During his father's presidency, poverty rose sharply and the median income fell steadily. And when the elder Bush faced the voters again, even military victory in Iraq wasn't enough to protect him from the discontent surrounding that bleak bottom line." But the son hasn't raised taxes.
(For more about ABC's celebration on Monday night of the new law, see the September 24 CyberAlert. Peter Jennings trumpeted: "A groundbreaking plan for family leave. For the first time, fathers as well as mothers will be able to stay home with a newborn baby and be paid for it." Muller lamented how "the United States is one of the few industrialized nations that doesn't offer workers paid family leave. The federal government has enacted unpaid leave, but that doesn't really help families who have no way to pay the bills....Proponents hope the California example will lead the way." Details: http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20020924.asp#3) NBC was so excited about the new regulatory and tax scheme that they had Lothian produce two stories featuring different people whose plights would be resolved by the new law. One ran on Tuesday's Today, the other on Tuesday's NBC Nightly News during which Lothian heralded California as a trend-setter: "Just the latest policy made in California and bought nationwide....ground-breaking changes leading the way." And on MSNBC, Ashleigh Banfield championed it: "Great news in California! If you're a brand new mom or dad, you can take some time off with your brand new born and you're gonna still be getting paid for it." Like the ABC and CBS stories on Monday night, NBC's Dan Lothian focused on the benefits and gave only token time to a detractor. Today news reader Lester Holt set up the September 24 story aired during he 8am update: "California is now the first state with a comprehensive family leave law that lets workers take six weeks off to care for a new baby or sick relative while getting paid." Lothian began, as taken down by MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens: "California Governor Gray Davis using his pen and power to help employees in the state take time off from work, with pay." After a clip of Gray, Lothian stressed the problem the law supposedly solves: "It's a landmark law Vincent Catino says would've helped his family when he took time off without pay after his wife Lynette underwent emergency surgery." Tuesday night Tom Brokaw referred to "a storm of controversy tonight over an unprecedented new family leave law in California, one that could lay the groundwork for similar changes in dozens of other states," but the subsequent piece from Lothian still gave much more time and emphasis to supporters than critics. Lothian began with the plight of another person who would have benefitted if the law were in place sooner: "Marisol Quintero's life revolves around her ailing 18-month-old son, battling a rare blood disorder. His frequent hospital visits require her to take time off from work without pay -- an emotional and financial burden." So just who is Marisol Quintero? The September 24 Los Angeles Times revealed that at the signing ceremony with Governor Gray Davis, Quintero "introduced Davis to the crowd." So, not exactly hard for Lothian to find her. That might also explain Constantino/Catino. Advocates of the law probably presented him to reporters as a typical citizen. A few hours later on Tuesday night, on MSNBC's Ashleigh Banfield on Location, MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth noticed how Banfield's show played the same Lothian story as had aired NBC Nightly News. Banfield both championed the wonders of the law while also noting how critics think it will be bad for the economy, an even-split in emphasis which was not reflected in Lothian's piece. On her September 24 show, Banfield plugged: "Coming up, California Governor Gray Davis signs a bill into law, and it is great if you're a new mom and a new dad and looking to get a little time off with your new little kid. But it is lousy if you're a business owner. Why should the businesses have to pay for your time off with your new kids? Find out how it all works and why it's happened, families first." Introducing the actual story a bit later, Banfield asserted: "Great news in California! If you're a brand new mom or dad, you can take some time off with your brand new born and you're gonna still be getting paid for it. That's not so bad -- unless you're a business owner because it's gonna cost you. A lot of critics of this brand new law in California say with the economy in the toilet, this is not a good time to be passing such a law. In fact, they say it's gonna be a tough act to swallow."
In his "Best of the Web" column for OpinionJournal.com
(www.opinionjournal.com/best), James Taranto caught an item in this week's New York Press in a listing of "bests," as in "Best Pickup Joint" and "Best Annoying Form of Transportation." Under the heading of "Best Harassment of an Arab in the Wake of 9/11," the Press related in the unbylined "Manhattan Living" column: That's online at: http://www.nypress.com/15/39/news&columns/manliving.cfm Taranto suggested: "The story sounds too good to be true." Yes, but I'm afraid it also sounds all too much like the attitude of a journalist trying to get an interviewee to say something quotable. -- Brent Baker
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