CyberAlert -- 11/05/2001 -- CNN Defended Taliban Propaganda
CNN Defended Taliban Propaganda; CNN Context Policy Condemned; Koppel Mocked Flag Lapel Pins; Ailes Explained Rivera Hiring >>> Now online: "The MRC's Top 6 October Outrages for Most Biased War Coverage." In a press release distributed last week for the MRC by Creative Response Concepts, based upon quotes collated by the MRC's Liz Swasey, the MRC highlighted the six most obnoxious media quotes from war coverage during October. Those cited in the quotes which have all been previously listed in CyberAlerts: Loren Jenkins of NPR, CBS's Allen Pizzey, NBC's Ann Curry, ABC's Dan Harris and ABC's Michele Norris. To read all of the quotes cited, access the press release by going to: http://secure.mediaresearch.org/press/news/2001/pr20011031.html <<< CNN's Nic Robertson, who last week went on the Taliban's tour of supposedly U.S.-caused atrocities inside Afghanistan, admitted to Howard Kurtz that the Taliban "set the agenda." When Kurtz raised how Robertson had relayed the Taliban claim of 92 killed in one village, Robertson conceded it's "impossible to verify a figure of 92," but then he proceeded to try to substantiate the allegation as plausible, asserting that "the numbers could be believable." Robertson's defense of his reporting came during an edition of CNN's Reliable Sources aired live at 9:30am EST on Sunday morning. Kurtz queried: "When you are going into Afghanistan for a few days for a guided tour, if you will, to what extent do you become, however unwillingly, part of the Taliban propaganda effort?" From Quetta, Pakistan, Robertson admitted: "I think when a journalist goes into Afghanistan, any journalist, they want to be as independent and objective as possible and that's what you strive to be inside Afghanistan. Now, the Taliban do put restrictions on, they do limit the places we can go to, and they do set the agenda. But it is possible to try and break away from that. On the third day of the visit we were able to go out unescorted and talked to people quite freely. So that's what we are trying to do, that's the objective of our mission, not fulfill whatever idea it is they have for us to do. It's for us to report what we want to report." Kurtz followed up by citing what Robertson
chose to highlight: If he was there and doesn't really know, then what exactly did he add to the body of knowledge of CNN viewers? The November 2 CyberAlert quoted from Robertson's November 1 story in which he pegged the number killed at 92 before he asserted: "The Taliban say this was a civilian village, and certainly, when we looked around it, there was a lot of evidence that civilians had lived there. There were boxes of soap powder, children's shoes, women's clothing, a lot of domestic accouterments, clocks smashed on the floor, radios." For more, refer back to: http://www.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2001/cyb20011102.asp#1 ABC's Dan Harris had conceded on the October 30 World News Tonight that the Taliban invited him into their territory because of the "rising civilian casualties" which they see as "an enormous public relations boon to them." While Brit Hume on Fox News Sunday praised it, in the preceding days media veterans Daniel Schorr, Peter Arnett and Tom DeFrank condemned the new CNN policy, stated by Chairman Walter Isaacson, that "we must redouble our efforts to make sure we do not seem to be simply reporting from their [Taliban] vantage or perspective. We must talk about how the Taliban are using civilian shields and how the Taliban have harbored the terrorists responsible for killing close to 5,000 innocent people." Appearing at an October 31 Brookings Institution forum, "The Role of the Press in Wartime," former CNN reporter Peter Arnett, best-known for relaying Iraqi propaganda from Baghdad, castigated the new CNN policy: "It is ill-advised." At the same forum shown by C-SPAN on Saturday
night, NPR Senior News Analyst Daniel Schorr, a veteran of CBS News,
launched into a lengthy treatise criticizing the CNN policy: Sunday morning, on CNN's Reliable Sources live at 9:30am EST, New York Daily News reporter Tom DeFrank expressed his disappointment: "Walter's a good guy, I know him from the old news magazine wars and I think he was trying to say something responsible. I'm a little troubled by it because it seems to suggest that he is telling his reporters what to print, what to write, what to say, what to tell readers or listeners to think and I saw, I thought that was little bit over the top. On the other hand, anything where executives say that networks think a harder about what you do, what you say, what you write, is not a bad thing." Minutes later, during the roundtable portion
of Fox News Sunday, Brit Hume praised CNN's policy: Yes it is. For excerpts from the Howard Kurtz story on the new CNN policy as well as an example of Judy Woodruff following it, go to: http://www.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2001/cyb20011101.asp#2 The Taliban and Pentagon deserve equal skepticism? The Senior Editor of NPR's Morning Edition, Susan Feeney, charged on CNN that the Taliban and the Pentagon are equally non-forthcoming as both offer only "semi-controlled information." A few days earlier, ABC's Ted Koppel snidely rebuked those at other networks who wear lapel pins as he asserted: "I don't believe that I'm being a particularly patriotic American by slapping a little flag in my lapel and then saying anything that is said by any member of the U.S. government." Sunday morning on CNN's Reliable Sources
Feeney, formerly with the Dallas Morning News, defended reporters who went
on the Taliban tour: "Well, you can't blame journalists for taking
whatever information they can get in this environment. It's sort of we've
this semi-controlled reporting that's coming out of Afghanistan and not to
be too snide, but you can balance it against the semi-controlled
information you have sitting at the Pentagon everyday. And I think it's
fair to say we're not getting very much out of either side." Last Wednesday, at the Brookings Institution
forum broadcast by C-SPAN on Saturday night which was quoted in item #2
above, ABC's Ted Koppel condescendingly remarked: ABC News has banned on-air staffers from wearing American flag lapel pins, but it doesn't sound as if Koppel would wear one if he were allowed. One wishes ABC followed Koppel's policy and made Dan Harris, who went on the Taliban tour of U.S.-caused death and destruction, put Taliban claims "through the meat grinder of analysis." Fox News CEO Roger Ailes received some negative e-mails from viewers last week after he announced the signing of Geraldo Rivera as a war correspondent, prompting Ailes to respond in a letter to viewers, published in FNC's weekly e-mail newsletter, the Balance Sheet. Ailes promised that Rivera's hiring does not contradict the Fox News Channel's commitment "to fair and balanced news." Pursuing Rivera is nothing new for Ailes, who is cartoonishly portrayed by those on the left as a right-wing partisan hack building a channel to serve GOP interests. His interest in Rivera shows he puts a high priority on landing personalities who will attract viewers no matter what their ideology. Ailes brought Rivera to CNBC in the first place when he ran that channel and in 1997 he reportedly offered Rivera a showcase role in prime time on the new Fox News Channel as well as on the Fox broadcast network if he would leave CNBC, an offer which NBC countered by promising Rivera prime time specials on NBC, appearances on Today and his own CNBC news show, the since-canceled Upfront Tonight. As Lisa de Moraes reported in the November 2
Washington Post: From the November 2 The Balance Sheet e-mail
newsletter from FNC, the Ailes reply to those who complained about Rivera
joining FNC: It would be nice if other network news chiefs took viewer concerns as seriously. In her Friday story, de Moraes outlined why Rivera decided to leave CNBC in two weeks and how he's taking a big cut in his $6 million annual pay. An excerpt: ....On Nov. 17, the day after his last appearance on CNBC's "Rivera Live," he will be dispatched to the Afghanistan region, where he'll join FNC's other recent hiring coup, former CNN correspondent Steve Harrigan, in providing live reports. Rivera was four years into a six-year pact with NBC News that paid him about $6 million per year to host the CNBC prime-time talker, host quarterly prime-time NBC News specials on the broadcast network and appear regularly on the "Today" show.... Rivera said he's leaving because he's sick of being told he can't leave his anchor desk, like when he recently pitched that his next NBC prime-time special be on why Muslims hate America. "They said I couldn't leave the country because of the program," Rivera said. "It was a constant irritant; I want to go where the story is and they'd say, 'What's the domestic angle?' "It got to the point after September 11 where I couldn't bear it anymore," said Rivera, who says that 15 parents of children at his kids' elementary school were killed in the World Trade Center attacks. "I've always seen myself, certainly in the last four or five, six years, as a newsman first and a talk show host second," he said. Rivera told The TV Column he's taking "a significant pay cut" to move to FNC.... On his CNBC show last night, Rivera told viewers he was leaving NBC and heading to the We Report, You Decide Network because "I'm not the same guy I was before the maniacs tried to tear our hearts out. "I'm feeling more patriotic than at any time in my life. Itching for justice -- or maybe just revenge." END of Excerpt I'd predict you'll eventually see Geraldo in FNC's prime time. How could they resist a prime time of ratings-getters Bill O'Reilly, Hannity & Colmes, plus Geraldo? Headline contrasts from Sunday newspapers. -- Will Republicans or Democrats fare better in 2002? November 4 Washington Times headline: "Prolonged War, Recession May Hurt Republicans in '02" Washington Post headline the same day: "Democrats May Carry Tuesday, But Lose It Next Year" -- The Northern Alliance: "Reluctant" or about to pounce? New York Times front page on November 4: "Afghan Rebels Seem a Reluctant Force So Far" Washington Post front page the same day: "Afghan Rebels Plan Assault on Kabul" CBS can't win and Ellen's one good joke. CBS had to twice postpone the Emmy awards, first because they were scheduled for the Sunday after the terrorist attacks and then a second time when they fell on the same Sunday the U.S. launched its bombing. Then last night, further eating into CBS revenues, CBS was unable to air the highly profitable 60 Minutes in the eastern and central time zones because the Chicago-Cleveland NFL game went into overtime. With a hard start for the Emmy Awards telecast at 8pm EST/7pm CST, CBS barely squeezed in the Andy Rooney segment at 7:50pm EST/ 6:50pm CST, and so had no time for any of the regular pieces. The joke I liked best from Emmy host Ellen DeGeneres: "I feel like I'm in a unique position as host because, think about it, what would bug the Taliban more than seeing a gay woman in a suit surrounded by Jews?" A nice in their face spirit. -- Brent Baker
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