-Caveat Lector-

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 19 Jul 1999 08:08:31 -0500
From: Bill Nalty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://www.mediaresearch.org

Media Research Center CyberAlert
Monday July 19, 1999 (Vol. Four; No. 125)

Chappaquiddick a Kennedy "Tragedy"; Rather Fooled & Broke Gun Vow

1) JFK Jr's death generated massive coverage over the weekend,
allowing NBC to showcase liberal historian Doris Kearns Goodwin.
Plus, Mike Barnicle rehabilitated as an expert by the networks
and ABC and CBS listed Chappaquiddick as a Kennedy family
"tragedy."

2) Even after a "Coast Guard Lieutenant" referred to Bababooey
and Howard Stern, Dan Rather believed his report: "This just in,
the Coast Guard Lieutenant says they have found debris." ABC also
gullibly put on a Stern fan, but Peter Jennings realized it.

3) Previewing a series on guns, Dan Rather promised: "We're
trying to be both accurate and fair, which is why there will be a
different perspective each night." On Friday Rather broke his
vow.

4) ABC's World News Tonight picked up on the controversy about
PBS stations sharing fundraising lists with the DNC.

5) Katie Couric insisted Al Gore is "squeaky clean," Brian
Williams tagged Gore and Bill Bradley as "centrists" while CNN
labeled Senator Bob Smith an "arch-conservative."


    >>> Hear Carl Cameron from Last Week and More Tonight. On
Monday night, July 19, MRC Chairman L. Brent Bozell will again
host the national Mike Reagan radio talk show. The guests planned
before John Kennedy Jr's death: Laurence Jarvik on PBS
fundraising, Congressman Dan Burton, National Review Editor Rich
Lowry, Grover Norquist on the Reagan Legacy Project and the
Parents Television Council's Mark Honig on the group's Top Ten
Best & Worst TV Shows.

    The Reagan show is distributed live from 6 to 10pm ET, 5 to
9pm CT, 4 to 8pm MT and 3 to 7pm PT, but many stations carry it
on a delayed basis. To see a list of the cities, dial positions
and times 180 stations carry the Mike Reagan Show, listed by
state, go to:
http://www.webforums.com/forums/t-read/msa21.261.html

For a list of major stations, go to the July 15 CyberAlert:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/1999/cyb19990715.html#6

    To listen live during the above listed hours via either
RealAudio or Windows Media Player, go to Broadcast.com's site:
http://www.broadcast.com/shows/reagan/

    At this address you can also play back Bozell's show from
last Thursday with Carl Cameron, Steve Allen, Paul Weyrich and
Tony Snow. Just scroll down to the archive and click on July 15.
To hear FNC's Carl Cameron's explanation for the lack of interest
by his television colleagues in Chinagate, advance the play back
to 2:15 into the four-hour show and listen through 2:32. On
RealPlayer a counter in the bottom left will tell you where you
are as you advance the play back bar at the top. <<<


Correction. Inside Politics did briefly mention Hillary's gaffe.
The July 16 CyberAlert detailed a July 14 gaffe by Hillary
Clinton and stated that only ABC's Good Morning America mentioned
it. MRC analyst Paul Smith since alerted me that it also got a
few seconds on the July 14 Inside Politics, but without video.
CNN's Bernard Shaw announced: "Mrs. Clinton made a blunder while
continuing her emphasis on gun control. She said to a woman whose
son was wounded in a 1994 school shooting quote, �You've really
spent a lot of time in the years since your son's murder,' but
then the woman cut Mrs. Clinton off and said quote, �He wasn't
murdered. My son is alive.' The only thing Mrs. Clinton could say
was, �Thank God.'"


    > 1) The worst thing about the death of John F. Kennedy Jr.:
Another excuse for NBC and MSNBC to feature the pedantic and
always annoying liberal historian, Doris Kearns Goodwin.

    Four other less opinionated observations plucked from the
massive all-day broadcast network coverage on Saturday, which
also dominated the networks on Sunday:

    -- Mike Barnicle is good enough for TV. The Boston Globe
canned the columnist for making up facts in his columns, but that
didn't deter several networks from using him as a "Kennedy family
expert," though he was more of a Kennedy family defender. He was
interviewed on Saturday on CNN and MSNBC, appeared as part of a
panel on Sunday's Meet the Press and showed up again on CBS's 60
Minutes. (Since his departure from the Globe, Mort Zuckerman's
New York Daily News has picked him up as an occasional
columnist.)

    -- John F. Kennedy Jr. may have been more conservative than
many Republicans, at least in not shying away from tax cuts.
Several times ABC played back an excerpt of a 1995 interview with
Barbara Walters in which she asked: "If you were President, what
would you do?" He replied: "I think I would have to call my uncle
Teddy and gloat for a moment. And then I would offer a big tax
cut before the next election and hopefully in between try to do
some good."

    -- More coverage than anything in CyberAlert memory. The
search for Kennedy's plane generated much greater and more
intense television attention than any major recent event,
including the Lewinsky scandal or the launch of either the 1991
Persian Gulf War or more recent Kosovo conflict.

    Not only did the three broadcast networks go live all day
Saturday with their prime anchors coming aboard at some point,
which meant the bumping of ABC's major sports coverage to ESPN,
NBC's WNBA to CNBC and the dropping of a golf tournament by CBS,
but all the networks ran specials Saturday night in prime time
with ABC going for two hours. The weeknight anchor stars all
anchored their shows Saturday night, as happened the night of the
House impeachment vote, but Dan Rather and Tom Brokaw were also
back again Sunday night when the three networks also used
previously scheduled news show slots (20/20, Dateline, 60
Minutes) for Kennedy death specials.

    Coverage of all other news was suspended for the weekend with
the near-totality of both Saturday and Sunday's ABC World News
Tonight, CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News devoted to
Kennedy. On Sunday ABC and CBS gave a few seconds to the perfect
game played by the Yankees with ABC adding who won he British
Open and on Saturday CBS aired a story about the heat wave, but
that was it for non-Kennedy news.

    MSNBC touched no other story all weekend, staying live all
night on Saturday night. CNN stayed with it until past midnight
on both Saturday and Sunday when the network switched to CNN
International overnight which did handle other news.

    -- Chappaquiddick listed among Kennedy family tragedies by
ABC News and CBS News. At about 3:10pm ET on Saturday ABC showed
a list on screen headed "Kennedy Family Tragedies," starting with
"1944: Joseph Kennedy Jr. killed in WWII plane crash" followed by
"1948: Kathleen Kennedy (28) killed in plane crash." After "1968:
Robert F. Kennedy assassinated in LA" and before "1984: David
Kennedy (35) dies of drug overdose," ABC listed this item: "1969:
Ted Kennedy in car crash in Chappaquiddick in which Mary Jo
Kopechne died."

    I think that was a tragedy for the Kopechne family.

    Earlier in the day CBS anchor Dan Rather justified CBS's non-
stop coverage by citing the Kennedy "curse" and the family's
tragedies, though he made an error as he recalled Chappaquiddick:

    "I think it's this coming Sunday that would be 30 years since
a car driven by John F. Kennedy's uncle, Senator Robert Kennedy
of Massachusetts, plunged off a bridge and into the waters of
Chappaquiddick, killing 28-year-old companion Mary Jo Kopechne
and all that flowed out of that. It's just been one tragedy after
another for the Kennedy family. Well you say every family has its
tragedies. True enough. But this family, which is as close as
America comes to having royalty...this family has had so much
public tragedy."

    Of course, that was Uncle Ted, not Uncle Robert.


    > 2) The journalistic establishment condemns Matt Drudge for
not double sourcing everything before going with it, but Saturday
afternoon, as happens during live coverage of every major
incident, two networks gullibly showcased reports from a Howard
Stern fan pretending to be a Coast Guard officer.

    While ABC's Peter Jennings quickly realized his staff's
stupidity in putting the obvious phoney on the air, Dan Rather
remained clueless. Even after the caller made clear he was a
phoney by saying "Bababooey's teeth" and Howard Stern were found
"in the bay too," Rather repeated the caller's supposed news
about found wreckage, excitedly restating what he thought was a
big CBS scoop: "But now, this just in, the Coast Guard Lieutenant
says they have found debris." Rather stressed: "This puts the
late information in a whole new context, a whole new
perspective."

    At about 11:10am ET on Saturday Rather assured viewers:

    "It is deep within the professional id of CBS News to check
and double check. Before we say something is a fact we like to
have two independent sources. We'll be clear with you as we go
along what's fact and what's in the way of speculation."

    Almost exactly two hours later, at about 1:15pm ET, Rather
announced: "We now have Lieutenant Ed Gaynor of the United States
Coast Guard, that they've now found some debris. Lieutenant, what
can you tell us about this debris?" [yes, verb missing but that's
what he said.]

    By phone "Gaynor" reported: "Some debris has been spotted and
it is consistent with debris from a Saratoga, whether it's John
F. Kennedy's Saratoga we don't know. We also found Bababooey's
teeth were laying all in the bay too. And Howard Stern and
Bababooey were all there." [Bababooey is a reference to the
producer of Stern's radio show.]

    Rather, unfazed by how the caller had made abundantly clear
he was phoney, plowed ahead with his big scoop: "Excuse me, when
you said you have determined this debris is from a Piper
Saratoga. [pause as Gaynor is barely heard as producer probably
tunes him down] Well, I'm not sure that we heard correctly there
Lieutenant Gaynor of the Coast Guard telling us, this is breaking
information, I remind you again this is live television, we take
in raw information, we do the best we can to be rock solid in
stating fact. But now earlier there was a report of debris
spotted, then there was a report from the FAA, Bob Orr said, well
the FAA in effect steered us away from making any conclusions
that the debris might or might not have anything to do with John
Kennedy's plane. But now, this just in, the Coast Guard
Lieutenant says they have found debris. That debris, I believe
that he said, we've lost him for the moment now, is consistent
with a Piper Saratoga but that they couldn't determine whether it
was John F. Kennedy Junior's Piper Saratoga aircraft. But this
puts the late information in a whole new context, a whole new
perspective."

    Only after endorsing the caller's information three times did
Rather, maybe at the prompting of an amazed producer screaming in
his ear, suggest that his big scoop was not so reliable: "I want
to emphasize to you that this is raw information. Sometimes
people call in and say things that aren't true, sometimes you
know cranks, that sort of thing happens. So let's be very, very
careful here with this information. One thought comes to mind.
Was this actually the Coast Guard Lieutenant that we thought we
were talking to? He jumped off that phone very pronto. Let's go
to Bob Orr in Washington."

    Poor Bob Orr, who had to be embarrassed by his network's star
anchor, gently informed Rather what every viewer already
realized:

    "Dan, I've never understood why when you're in a crisis type
story and when people are hungry for good reliable information,
I've never understood why pranksters think it's funny to come on
and just pass out erroneous information. I can tell you
categorically Dan that last report was completely unfounded. I
doubt that it was anybody from the Coast Guard..."

    Memo to Orr: Maybe people think it's fun to do because
network producers are too dumb, lazy or incompetent to be able to
determine who someone really is before throwing them onto live
national television. These callers are quite an indictment of
network incompetence. What other baseless facts get on the air
that aren't so obvious?

    But Rather still couldn't quite let go, leaving open the
possibility the caller relayed accurate info even as he properly
conceded responsibility for airing the call:

    "I want to nail this point down. We do not know whether any
debris of any significance has been sighted anywhere. On the
phone, and we can be faulted for this, we'll fault ourselves for
it if there's fault to be assessed, a person we believed to be a
Coast Guard Lieutenant said that debris had been found and it was
consistent with a Saratoga Piper. We now have fairly strong
reason to believe that that was, however it happened, and fault
ours if it did happen this way, that some person, who for
whatever demented reason, would think that it was get through
with a crank call like that [accurate transcript of this sentence
as he said it]. But nonetheless, with live television, and
handling in effect hot-leaded information, sometimes it happens."

    "Fairly strong reason to believe" that it was a "crank call"?
How much more evidence would it take to convince Rather?

    An hour and a half later, at about 2:53pm ET, the same guy
called up ABC News. By that time some real debris had actually
been located. Peter Jennings asked: "Can you add anything to our
knowledge of your search at the moment. We've just listened to
one of your Coast Guard spokesman say you've identified more
debris from an aircraft that would have belonged to Mr. Kennedy."

    The caller, identified on-screen as "Lt. Ed Gainer [same
name, different spelling, as on CBS], U.S. Coast Guard," got
right to his gag: "That's true. I'd like to know, do you know
that Howard Stern thinks you're a dick?"

    An angry Jennings fumed: "Ah, I see. Just cut this gentleman
off, will you. There's always one like this. That happens in
every crisis in America, someone representing the disc jockey
Howard Stern manages to get through. It happens and it passes.
So, just to review what we do know. We apologize to the Coast
Guard that we've misrepresented someone as being a member of the
Coast Guard, but that kind of call doesn't surprise us anymore."

    If ABC News knows these phoney calls are going to come in why
don't they stop putting them on the air? It would make Howard
Stern a more responsible member of society if he condemned or at
least stopped rewarding these callers by playing their phoney
calls on his show, but that doesn't excuse the networks for
putting the landing of a scoop ahead of basic source
verification.

    ++ Listen and watch Rather's embarrassing episode. Late
Monday morning MRC Webmaster Sean Henry will post a video clip,
in RealPlayer format, of Rather's humorous reaction to the phoney
caller, a truly classic moment in live television. Go to:
http://www.mrc.org


    > 3) Rather isn't any more "accurate and fair" than he is
culturally hip to Howard Stern calls. Last week he promised
viewers a balanced series on the role of guns in America, but
Friday night's installment violated his pledge.

    Last Tuesday, July 13, the CBS Evening News launched a five-
part series called "Armed America." Rather outlined what it would
deliver, saying that night CBS would air the "start of a
five-part series on the role of guns in our country. They've been
a fact of life in this land for better or for worse since before
there was a United States. Each night we're going to give you a
look at the impact of firearms from a different perspective. We
know this is a very controversial subject. We're trying to be
both accurate and fair, which is why there will be a different
perspective each night. Tonight Richard Schlesinger begins with
the epidemic of accidental shootings in �Armed America.'"

    That first piece looked at a three-year-old shot in the face
by a 14-year-old. On Wednesday, Day Two, CBS aired a pro-gun
perspective by focusing on a Colorado town with little crime
where guns are used to protect sheep from predators. Day Three,
Thursday, brought the second look at the downside of guns with a
piece on gunshot victims inundating a Philadelphia emergency
room.

    Until this point, each piece was presented from a point of
view without countervailing facts or soundbites. If CBS had stuck
to that policy, Friday would have brought a pro-gun story and
meant CBS showed two pieces each for each side before a wrap-up
story for part five. But CBS couldn't restrain itself. Friday's
piece began as a look at Susanna Gratia-Hupp, a woman at the
Luby's mass shooting massacre in Colleen, Texas who became a
state representative and advocate of concealed weapons, which she
believed would have saved lives. But instead of adding to her
case by citing John Lott's study about how violent crime rates
fall after concealed weapons laws are passed in states, Rather
countered her by giving almost equal time to a police chief
opposed to allowing citizens to carry guns.

    Given the Kennedy death part five may not run on Monday, but
if it does this is how Rather plugged it: "Does or does not the
Bill of Rights give every American the right to carry a gun, to
bear arms? On Monday's CBS Evening News, a Reality Check on the
Second Amendment."

    Think that will be even-handed?

    You can read rough transcripts of the "Armed America" pieces
which have already aired at:
http://www.cbs.com/flat/section_3420.html


    > 4) Friday night ABC picked up on the PBS mailing list
sharing controversy. Nothing about it Friday on CBS, CNN or NBC
before the Kennedy crash took over the news, though Fox News
Sunday did squeeze in a discussion about it during the end of
show roundtable.

    Reporter Bob Woodruff began his July 16 World News Tonight
piece by explaining how the issue came to light after a
Massachusetts mother complained that a donation to Boston's WGBH
in the name of her young son, Sam, prompted a fundraising letter
to him from the DNC. Woodruff got to the big picture:

    "For years PBS and its member stations have been arguing they
are not the liberal broadcasters that conservatives have long
charged. That effort was dealt a setback with the news that WGBH
swapped Sam's name, and 32,000 others, with the Democrats over
six years. A congressional committee had been considering
increasing PBS's federal funding. Now that is in doubt."

    Rep. WJ "Billy" Tauzin, Chairman, Telecommunications
subcommittee: "This is clear evidence that everything the critics
have been saying about some elements of public broadcasting being
too doggone close to one of the major parties."

    Nice of him to finally realize that.

    Woodruff later added: "Other public television stations,
including New York and Washington, now say they also shared
lists, some with both Democrats and Republicans. PBS says the
practice will now stop."

    Actually, neither exchanged lists with the RNC.


    > 5) Al Gore is "squeaky clean," he and Bill Bradley are
"centrists" while Senator Bob Smith is an "arch-conservative."
That's what network viewers learned last week from NBC, MSNBC and
CNN.

    -- July 16 Today. Interviewing Republican presidential
candidate Dan Quayle on Friday morning, MRC analyst Mark Drake
caught this assertion in the form of a question from Katie
Couric:

    "When it comes to values though, I mean Al Gore is pretty
squeaky clean, wouldn't you say?"

    -- July 15 The News with Brian Williams on MSNBC. MRC intern
Ken Shepherd noticed that anchor Brian Williams conceded that Tom
Harkin and Ted Kennedy are liberal, but not this year's
presidential candidates, Gore and Bradley. He told guest Paul
Begala:

    "Paul, do you miss the left these days? The center is where
the action is. As one of our correspondents pointed out here last
night, there is no true liberal to be found in this race. There's
no Harkin, there's no Kennedy, there are just two centrists that,
watch them very closely, will become more so."

    -- July 12 The World Today on CNN. Announcing the impending
departure from the GOP of Senator Bob Smith, anchor Jim Moret,
MRC analyst Paul Smith observed, did not shy from applying an
ideological label:

    "Smith, an arch-conservative, confirms he has been talking to
several third parties including the taxpayers party about the
possibility of running on their national ticket."

    If Gore and Bradley are "centrists" then Michael Forbes is an
"arch-conservative." -- Brent Baker

    >>> To subscribe or unsubscribe, send a message to:
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           Kaddish, Kaddish, Kaddish, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      *Mike Spitzer*     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
=================================================================

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