TVS SADDAM: COURTROOM MISCHIEF-MAKER, NOT BRUTAL MASS-MURDERER
Alexandria, VAThe Iraq war is now three years
old and the bloody ex-dictator of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, is on trial
for crimes against humanity and genocide. Yet the evidence behind
these charges and the gripping testimony of Saddams victims has
garnered little coverage from the broadcast network evening
newscasts.
A new study by the Media Research Center,
Covering Saddams
Shenanigans, Not His Crimes, found that Saddams trial has received
only light coverage on the ABC, CBS and NBC evening newscasts, and
much of that has focused on Saddams courtroom antics, not the
details of his crimes:
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Saddams trial has been mentioned in just 64 stories over the last 5 months. In contrast, the first 6 months of the O.J. Simpson murder trial garnered 431 stories from those same networks.
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ABC, CBS, and NBC devoted nearly three times as much airtime on Saddams outbursts as on the testimony and documentary evidence of his orders to kill 140 people in Dujail.
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Total network airtime devoted to showing viewers the evidence and testimony against Saddam Hussein: just 11 minutes, 35 seconds over a five-month period.
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In spite of a record equal to some of the worst tyrants in history, reporters found Saddams personal reactions and orchestrated antics more compelling than the testimony against him.
Toppling Saddam Husseins brutal regime and bringing the brutal
dictator before a court of law is unquestionably a major achievement
of the U.S. and our allies, said Rich Noyes, director of research
for the Media Research Center. But TV coverage has minimized the
historic significance of this case. Instead, the networks Iraq news
has been a depressingly dour drumbeat of terrorist attacks, U.S.
casualties and dark warnings that Iraq is on the verge of civil
war.
Saddams theatrics are meant to distract from the evidence of his
terrible crimes. Reporters should have resisted the impulse to
reward this cynical strategy. Instead, theyve played right into his
hands.
For a review of the medias reporting record on the Iraq War, please see MRC's Special Report "TV's Bad News Brigade: ABC, CBS and NBC's Defeatist Coverage of the War in Iraq"
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o schedule an interview with MRC President Bozell or another MRC spokesperson, please contact Tim Scheiderer (x. 126) or Colleen OBoyle (x. 122) at 703.683.5004.