-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

From:

http://www.mediaresearch.org

Media Research Center CyberAlert
Monday February 14, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 26)

CBS Plugged New Fortunate Son; Never Turn on McCain?; Clueless
Schieffer


1) Eleanor Clift suggested the anti-McCain push poll tale isn't
so solid; Tim Russert hit George Bush with how his BJU host once
called his father the "devil"; NBC's Dracula interviewing style.

2) Lesley Stahl asked on 60 Minutes about the book charging the
Bush family with a cocaine cover-up: "How did a respectable
publishing house...go ahead with the book when the author
couldn't offer proof?" But CBS also gave a nice plug for a new
edition.

3) Friday night ABC castigated Bush and McCain for not denounc
ing the Confederate flag, CBS celebrated the role of independents
in hurting the parties, NBC promoted the cause of a group pushing
the GOP to the left.

4) Newsweek's Evan Thomas submitted that the media may never turn
on McCain. Friday's GMA focused again on the supposed "push poll"
and Jack Ford mildly pressed McCain for proof before joking with
him about a food fight between McCain staff and reporters.

5) After Al Gore told Jay Leno that Bill Clinton "is my friend,
we're close friends," actor Jimmy Smits praised Gore. Actor
Walter Matthau hailed Bill Bradley, saying he "reminds me" of
Lincoln.

6) CBS: Clueless Bob Schieffer. He doesn't comprehend a basic
argument Bush has made against campaign finance reform and he
found it surprising comparing your opponent to Bill Clinton is
considered negative.

7) Linda Tripp now works in the same building as a left-wing
feminist group which has protected Bill Clinton.


    >>> The latest Media Reality Check fax report is now online.
"Rather's Anchorman Amnesia Over Hillary: Much Like Tom Brokaw's
Amnesia With Gore, CBS Anchor Cites Hillary Gaffes He Hasn't
Aired." The MRC's Tim Graham began the report: "Call it anchorman
amnesia. When the top TV titans put on their pundit hats, they
suddenly recall every inconvenient story they've left out of
their newscasts for the benefit of their liberal friends." For a
rundown of examples of what network anchors never reported, go
to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/reality/2000/Fax20000211.html
<<<

    >>> "Media Love McCain," a piece by the MRC's Director of
Media Analysis, Tim Graham, appears in the February 19 World
magazine. Graham writes: "A dramatic win can lead to dramatic
coverage, but the media's recent pedal-to-the-metal promotion is
just the latest swoon in a long-brewing love affair between Mr.
McCain and reporters." You can read the article online, just go
to: http://www.worldmag.com/world/issue/02-19-99/cover_2.asp <<<


    > 1) We'll start today with a bunch of interesting items
picked up from shows aired over the weekend: Eleanor Clift
suggested that maybe the anti-McCain push poll tale isn't so
solid; NBC's Tim Russert hit George Bush with how his Bob Jones
University host once called his father the "devil" and Reagan a
"traitor"; Dracula-like interviewing on NBC Nightly News and
communism as the "good old days" in China.

    -- Eleanor Clift more discerning than network reporters? As
detailed in the February 11 CyberAlert, on Thursday night all the
networks highlighted a woman in South Carolina complaining about
an anti-McCain "push poll" her 14-year-old son supposedly
received.

    On the McLaughlin Group over the weekend, run from Friday
night through Sunday depending on where you live, Newsweek's
Clift submitted: "I'd like to point out that this was one phone
call. If this was a pattern that was going on wouldn't other
people be stepping up and making the same claim? That hasn't
happened."


    -- Leave it to NBC's Tim Russert to come up with the most
novel question to really get a guest. He flew down to Austin to
interview George Bush for the entirety of Sunday's Meet the
Press. As you would expect from Russert, he pressed Bush about
the size of his tax cut and how much of the surplus he would
allocate to Social Security.

    He soon asserted that "a lot of eyebrows were raised when you
made an appearance at Bob Jones University" and asked Bush about
the school's racist dating policy and anti-Catholic and anti-
Mormon bigotry. But, over video of Bush at the school on February
2, he also hit Bush with this revelation:

    "Let me show you a picture of Governor George W. Bush, the
gentleman there to your right, on the left of the screen, is Bob
Jones III. Let me show you what he said about your Dad, which I
think is rather chilling and I'll put this on the screen for you
and our viewers."

    Russert then read a quote from the March 2, 1982 Washington
Post: "I believe that Mr. Reagan came to office with good
intentions, but he broke his promise to us when he took on Mr.
George Bush, a devil, for his Vice President....Mr. Reagan has
become a traitor to God's people." [ellipses as on-screen]

    Russert asked Bush: "How could you sit with the man who
called your Dad �a devil'?"

    Bush: "Each of us change in life and now he doesn't believe
George Bush is a devil."

    Russert: "Did he tell you that?"

    Bush: "No, he would have told me that I presume...."


    -- Trapped and forced to talk to a TV reporter! On Sunday's
NBC Nightly News Anne Thompson focused on how South Carolina
voters are supposedly tired of negative campaigning. Her expert
witnesses: People laying back in chairs with blood pouring from
their arms as they donated blood after a church service. Talk
about a captive audience.


    -- The same show featured a piece from NBC reporter Chris
Billing in Beijing on how hard it is for young people to find a
job in China. One sentence from his story: "In the good old days
the Communist Party found a job for everybody, now young people
have to fend for themselves."


    > 2) Unlike how their Web site plug for Sunday's piece
implied, 60 Minutes did not devote its story on Fortunate Son
author J.H. Hatfield to letting him voice his claims. While
Lesley Stahl did allow him to defend his integrity and honesty,
the thrust of the piece was a look at how it could be that the
original publisher did not know about Hatfield's criminal
background and how the publisher did not check any facts.

    Despite the skeptical approach to the book, CBS still
delivered a bonanza of publicity for a another company which is
just now releasing the book again as well as a chance for
Hatfield to try to repair his image, to say nothing of repeating
the baseless Bush drug charge.

    As outlined in the February 12 CyberAlert, the 60 Minutes Web
site plug began: "Just because he lied to his editors about being
a convicted felon isn't a good enough reason for those editors to
doubt his book, in which he uses anonymous sources to accuse
George W. Bush of covering up an arrest for cocaine when he was a
young man. That's what J.H. Hatfield, author of Fortunate Son, a
book its initial publisher pulled from the shelves for lack of
credibility, tells 60 Minutes' Lesley Stahl in his first
interview on Sunday, Feb. 13.

    "St. Martin's Press �pulled the book because I have a
criminal background and that doesn't have anything to do with the
price of eggs in China,' Hatfield tells Stahl. He admits hiring a
man to kill a woman for him, committing burglary, writing bad
checks, embezzling and taking kickbacks."

    In fact, Stahl opened her February 13 report:

    "How did a biography of George W. Bush containing the
explosive charge that not only had he been arrested for cocaine
possession, but that his father had pulled strings with a
Republican judge to get him off, how did that book, entitled
Fortunate Son, get published? How did a respectable publishing
house like St. Martin's Press go ahead with the book when the
author couldn't offer proof that the charge was true?"

    Stahl proceeded to recount many of the same facts noted in
the February 12 CyberAlert about Hatfield's history. She reported
that he has no direct witness and that there were no Republican
judges in Texas at the time. She showed how Hatfield denied
hiring anyone to commit murder when first confronted by Dallas
Morning News reporter Pete Slover.

    Then this odd exchange took place, with Hatfield displaying
some Clinton-like reasoning:

    Stahl: "As a teenager you were arrested for writing bad
checks."

    Hatfield: "That's not true."

    Stahl: "Not true?"

    Hatfield: "What is the definition of �teenager'?"

    Stahl: "Oh, so were you arrested as a young man?"

    Hatfield: "Yes I was."

    Stahl: "How old were you?"

    Hatfield: "Probably, ah, 19."

    So, 19, as in nineTEEN, does not make you a TEENager?

    Stahl relayed that original publisher St. Martin's Press
didn't know about Hatfield's criminal background until the Dallas
Morning News publicized it last October, prompting them to recall
the book. Literary agent Jim Fitzgerald told Stahl they didn't
care about checking out the author because they got the rights
cheap and had hoped to make money quick by cashing in on interest
in Bush.

    Hatfield contended his book is accurate since St. Martin's
Press lawyers vetted it, leading Stahl to question what that
meant:

    Stahl: "While St. Martin's never claimed the book was fact-
checked, they did put out a press release saying it was
�scrupulously corroborated and sourced.'"

    Stahl to Hatfield: "What kind of proof did they ask for to
confirm/verify the cocaine charges in the book?"

    Hatfield: "Nothing actually. We discussed who they [sources]
were, not their identities. Even the lawyer didn't ask me who
they were and I started to offer to her, because I knew we would
have attorney-client confidentiality, she said �I don't want to
know.'"


    Stahl ended the piece by promoting Hatfield's just-released
new edition of the book published by another company:

    "Hatfield was devastated at losing his publisher, but within
days he had a new one, an outfit called Soft Skull Press."


    Viewers saw a bit of video of a party with loud rap music as
a man sporting a mohawk hairdo boasted: "We are printing 45,000
and we will not be silent in the face of injustice. Alright.
Whoa."


    Stahl soon identified him as Sander Hicks, the head of Soft
Skull Press, a business he started at Kinkos. He admitted to
Stahl that he had not checked the assertions made in the book
because St. Martin's lawyers had already approved the text.

    Stahl wrapped up: "Hatfield says he stands by what he wrote
and, incredible as it seems, can't understand why he's not more
in demand."

    Hatfield: "I've lost two contracts recently because of all
this. I guess you could say I'm blacklisted. I'm just kind of
dead meat."

    Stahl: "Well, not exactly. Tomorrow he starts a book tour."


    If any publicity is good publicity, then despite CBS's
dismissal of the actual allegations against Bush, the network
gave Hatfield a Valentine's Eve gift of publicity, to say nothing
of the shot for book sales for Soft Skull Press. Who ever heard
of them before?

    And unlike the tracking of conservative ties a network story
would surely include on a book featuring wild allegations against
a liberal, Stahl did not spend any time tracking down links to
liberal groups or political operatives out to hurt Bush.

    +++ See a bit of this 60 Minutes story, with video of the rap
party celebrating the new release of Fortunate Son, and Stahl
talking with the Soft Skull publisher. On Monday the MRC's Eric
Pairel will post a video clip in RealPlayer format. Go to:
http://www.mrc.org


    > 3) Three liberal agenda campaign stories Friday night on
the broadcast network evening shows: ABC looked at the
Confederate flag issue, portraying Bush and McCain as cowards for
not demanding it be taken from atop the South Carolina state
Capitol building. "In the raucous debate over this old flag,"
ABC's Jim Wooten asserted "the Republican front-runners have
chosen the course of least political resistance." CBS's Eric
Engberg celebrated the role of independents in McCain's success:
"People who are just people are elbowing their way into the
nominating process." NBC's Claire Shipmam promoted the cause of
Orange County businessmen who are pushing the GOP to the left.

    -- On ABC's February 11 World News Tonight Jim Wooten showed
how Bush and McCain take stands on many issues, but refuse to
take one on the Confederate flag, meaning they refuse to condemn
flying it. He played a clip of McCain, for instance, saying: "I
understand both sides. Some view it as a symbol of slavery.
Others view it as a symbol of heritage."

    Wooten countered: "But Dr. Lonnie Randolph, a local civil
rights activist, says it's not an issue you can straddle."

    Following a soundbite from Randolph, Wooten continued: "It's
a measure of just how overwhelmingly important South Carolina is
to Bush and McCain that both would risk their good records on
race to cater to white voters who want that flag to fly forever,
and it could be the difference between winning and losing the
primary here, and maybe the nomination. They yearn for the
Southern yesterdays when nobody seemed to care if anybody was
offended by the Confederate flag. Black voters are such a
microscopic minority in Republican primaries here, the party
doesn't even open polls in some mainly black precincts. So,
practically, for McCain and Bush, it doesn't much matter what
blacks think about the flag."

    Wooten challenged Bush: "But isn't it about more than this
flag?"

    Bush: "No. A flag flying on top of somebody's Capitol is
about as local an issue as you get, as far as I'm concerned."


    ABC viewers then heard from Hastings Wyman, Editor of the
Southern Political Report:" And I don't think either candidate
would gain by saying we ought to take it down. I'm not saying it
couldn't be done, but it would take an act of great
statesmanship."

    A disappointed Wooten concluded: "In the politics of this
primary, that probably isn't in the cards."

    Too bad Wooten didn't find time to note that Democrats
controlled the state when the flag went up in 1962 under then
Governor Ernest Hollings or that a Democrat is now the Governor
of the state and yet the flag remains a part of the Capitol
building. So why is it the fault of Republican presidential
candidates?


    -- Over on the Friday CBS Evening News, Eric Engberg provided
a "Reality Check" on what happened to the Bush trip to the
nomination. Engberg found he ran into independents who prefer
McCain. He concluded by approving of their influence:

    "Parties used to nominate in smoke-filled rooms. Then came
closed primaries where only party members could vote. What
appears to be happening now is something many pols view with
dread. People who are just people are elbowing their way into the
nominating process."


    If members of a party don't get to pick their nominees then
why even have parties?


    -- NBC Nightly News focused on Orange County, California,
which reporter Claire Shipman noted, was "the money machine
behind the Reagan Revolution," where a group is now pushing the
Republican Party to abandon conservative ideology. Shipman
explained:

    "Orange County today, thanks to these local Republican
business titans, has now become the center of another revolution
to redefine the Republican Party."

    Thomas Tucker, New Majority Committee: "People have given up
on the Republican Party. They feel it's too narrow."

    Shipman: "They say in the eight years Bill Clinton has been
preaching a more moderate Democratic message, the GOP has become
increasingly strident, alienating its own constituents."


    They want no more "litmus tests" on abortion or gun control,
Shipman added.


    > 4) Newsweek Assistant Managing Editor Evan Thomas suggested
that the media are so enamored with John McCain that they might
just violate a journalistic norm and not ever turn on him and on
Good Morning America ABC's Jack Ford joked with McCain about a
food fight between his staff and reporters covering him.

    On Inside Washington over the weekend Thomas proposed: "The
absolute cardinal rule is the press will always turn on you
because they need to make it a better story, but I think that
McCain may test that."

    Later, when panelist Charles Krauthammer argued that
reporters overwhelming favor Democrats and will turn on McCain
when he threatens to end Democratic rule of the White House,
Thomas insisted there is no liberal media presence on the
campaign trail: "The press as a whole may be liberal but the
traveling press, the national political correspondents, are all
in a high enough income bracket that a lot of them turned into
Republicans, plus their editors, a lot of them are Republicans."

    Note that he didn't contend they are conservatives.

    Friday morning on Good Morning America, MRC analyst Jessica
Anderson documented, ABC pursued the "push poll" story and Jack
Ford later joked with McCain about food fights. Ford set up the
February 11 segment:

    "The race for the Republican presidential nomination is
getting a little bit nastier, with new charges of so-called push
polling. That is the practice of calling up voters, pretending to
conduct an ordinary poll, but the actual aim is to spread
negative information about the other candidate. For days now, the
McCain campaign had accused the Bush campaign of using that
tactic...this issue came to a head yesterday during a McCain
rally in South Carolina."

    Following a report by Linda Douglass on the incident, Ford
interviewed McCain and began with a mild challenge: "Senator, do
you have any real proof that the Bush campaign was responsible
for that telephone call?"

    Ford then raised a complaint better lodged at the media and
his own show: "There are skeptics out there that are looking at
what took place in the town meeting yesterday, and not
questioning the veracity of the young man or his mother at all,
but they're saying, well, maybe this was sort of too good to be
true, that the McCain campaign took this and ran with it farther
than they should have, to have made more out of it than they
should have. What do you think of that criticism?"

    Ford also pressed McCain about one of his ads: "Governor Bush
has complained about one of your ads, where it says that he,
Governor Bush, twists the truth like President Clinton does, and
he says that that is inappropriately negative and way too
personal."

    Finally, viewers heard this lighthearted exchange: "You
mention that you're having fun. As we wrap up here this morning,
I understand there was actually a literal food fight on your bus
just recently between some of the campaign folks and some of the
media folks."

    McCain: "Yes, you know, these reporters are such low-lifes,
I'll tell ya, you know."

    Ford, laughing: "That's 'Mr. Low Life,' that's 'Mr. Low Life'
to you, sir."

    McCain: "I'm sure that my campaign had nothing -- my campaign
people are, even though they're usually off work release
programs, they're very fine people and they don't associate with
that."

    Ford, still laughing: "Senator, always a pleasure talking to
you. Thanks for joining us this morning. You take care. We'll see
you again."

    McCain: "Thanks, Jack."

    How chummy.


    > 5) Journalists may be enamored of McCain, but Hollywood
stars are sticking with liberal Democrats. Thursday night one
praised Al Gore while another advocated Bill Bradley, claiming he
"reminds" him of Abraham Lincoln.

    -- On the Tonight Show Thursday night February 10, guest Al
Gore assured Jay Leno that he considered Bill Clinton to be a
friend: "He is my friend, we're close friends. He made a mistake,
I was critical of that mistake like most everybody else. I've had
the chance to work alongside him on behalf of the American
people. We've gotten a lot done. The economy's better. A lot of
other things are better. I'm running for President on my own with
my own vision."

    Gore added: "You know what I'm hearing out there is that
people are really tired of hearing about it and tired of talking
about it and they want to move on."

    When the interview ended the camera followed him backstage
where the upcoming guest, actor Jimmy Smits, hugged him. Leno
later asked Smits, once a star of LA Law and NYPD Blue and now
out promoting a new movie, if he supports Gore. Smits answered:

    "I'd like to think that we've been partners for the last
eight years. He's been very interested in terms of diversity in
education, he supported the foundation. I have sat at his desk in
the Capitol. I was giving some congressional awards out to young
kids."

    Apparently "foundation" was a reference to some Hispanic
group with which Smits is involved.


    -- In the midst of a February 10 appearance on CNN's Larry
King Live with actress Diane Keaton, actor Walter Matthau blurted
out his presidential endorsement: "I like the basketball guy, the
guy who is running for President, the basketball-"

    Larry King: "Bill Bradley."

    Diane Keaton: "Bill Bradley, yes."

    King: "The basketball guy, see, you threw me."

    Matthau: "He, the basketball guy, reminds me of Abraham
Lincoln."

    I didn't realize Matthau was that old.


    > 6) CBS should stand for Clueless Bob Schieffer. Two
examples today: He revealed he doesn't comprehend a basic
argument Bush has made against McCain on campaign finance reform
and he found it surprising that South Carolina Republicans would
consider it "negative campaigning" to compare your opponent to
Bill Clinton.

    -- Schieffer appeared on CNN's Reliable Sources to discuss
McCain's coverage. Schieffer denied any bias, attributing his
good press to interest "in a good story." At one point on the
program shown on February 12 and 13, host Howard Kurtz raised a
Bush argument: "Bob Schieffer, the Bush campaign has a radio ad
up now which says that McCain's election will benefit the liberal
media. Is this an effective Republican argument, that is the
press likes a candidate he can't be very good?"

    Showing he apparently doesn't understand a key point of
contention in a race he is covering, a baffled Schieffer replied:
"Does that mean -- well, I mean, what does that mean? That our
ratings will go up if John McCain is elected?"

    Kurtz had to explain the obvious: "Well, it has to do with
campaign finance reform and whether the press will have more
power. But it's also an increasing charge made by Bush aides and
campaign surrogates that -- raising questions about, they would
say, the candidate and the Fourth Estate."

    Schieffer: "Now that sounds a little whiny to me. I'm not
sure of what I would make of it."

    No surprise there.

    -- Sunday night Schieffer popped up on the CBS Evening News
with an update on the race he understands so well. He concluded
his brief item read from CBS's Washington bureau:

    "The interesting thing is what is considered negative
campaigning in South Carolina and that is both candidates have
tried to compare their opponents to Bill Clinton. Apparently
calling someone Clinton-like or like Bill Clinton is the dirtiest
thing you can call them in South Carolina."

    I guess in Washington media circles it's befuddling to learn
that anyone would be upset by a comparison to Clinton.


    > 7) It really is a small world. A February 11 Washington
Post story examined how Linda Tripp is faring as a $98,000 a year
public affairs specialist for the Defense Manpower Data Center.
She works at an office building in the Rosslyn area of Arlington
County, Virginia. Deep within the article I caught this
paragraph:

    "Tenants in Tripp's office building include the organization
Feminist Majority, but the group's president, Eleanor Smeal, has
not bonded with Tripp in the elevator. �I don't think anyone on
the staff has ever had a conversation with her,' said an
organization official. �It was rather ironic that she came to
work here.'"

    A delicious irony. -- Brent Baker


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, 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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