..............................................................

>From the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]:

From: Alex Constantine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Monsanto and Fox: Partners in Censorship
Date: Sunday, May 28, 2000 4:08 AM

Monsanto and Fox: Partners in Censorship

by Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber
By all accounts, Jane Akre and Steve Wilson are tough, bulldog
reporters--the sort of journalists you'd expect to make some enemies
along the way.
That, according to Florida TV station WTVT, was why it hired the
husband-and-wife team with much fanfare in November 1996 to head the
station's "news investigative unit." Now, in the wake of their firing
barely a year later, the Fox network affiliate is accusing them of theft
for daring to independently publish the script of the story that they
were never allowed to air.
"This is really not about a couple of disgruntled former reporters
whining that their editors wouldn't let them do a story they thought was
important," Wilson said in announcing that he and Akre are suing WTVT
for breach of contract. "Jane and I have each spent more than 20 years
in the news business. . . . It doesn't take that long for every reporter
to learn that every now and then--usually when the special interest of
your news organization or one of its friends is more important than the
public interest--stories get killed. That's bad enough, but that's not
what happened here. . . . Fox 13 didn't want to kill the story revealing
synthetic hormones in Florida's milk supply. Instead, as we explain in
great detail in our legal complaint, we were repeatedly ordered to go
forward and broadcast demonstrably inaccurate and dishonest versions of
the story. We were given those instructions after some very high-level
corporate lobbying by Monsanto (the powerful drug company that makes the
hormone) and also, we believe, by members of Florida's dairy and grocery
industries."
The hormone in question is genetically-engineered recombinant bovine
growth hormone (rBGH), the flagship product in Monsanto's campaign to
take command of the ultra-high-stakes biotechnology industry. Injections
of rBGH (sold under the brand name Posilac�) induce higher milk
production in dairy cows, but critics warn of potential health risks to
both cows and humans.
The Florida dispute offers a rare look inside the newsroom at the way
stories get spun and censored. It is also cracks the facade that
Monsanto has erected through a highly effective, multi-million-dollar PR
offensive aimed at preventing the news media from reporting the views of
rBGH critics.

The Dairy Coalition

Coordinated by the DC-based PR/lobby firm of Capitoline/MS&L, the
pro-rBGH campaign brings together drug and dairy industry groups in an
ad hoc network called the Dairy Coalition, whose participants include
university researchers funded by Monsanto, as well as carefully selected
"third party" experts; the International Food Information Council, an
industry funded coalition that attacks health and safety concerns about
food as unwarranted and unscientific; the National Association of State
Departments of Agriculture, representing the top executive of every
department of agriculture in all fifty states; the American Farm Bureau
Federation, the powerful right-wing lobby behind the movement to pass
food disparagement laws like the one under which Oprah Winfrey was sued
in Texas; the American Dietetic Association, the national association of
registered dietitians which hauls in large sums of money advocating for
the food industry; the Grocery Manufacturers of America; the Food
Marketing Institute; and other dairy and food associations at the state
and regional levels
Immediately after FDA approval of rBGH, attorneys for Monsanto sued or
threatened to sue stores and dairy companies that sold milk and dairy
products advertised as being free of rBGH, to make sure that any
dissenters within the well-organized food industry would be frightened
into towing the industry line.
Extensive media monitoring and aggressive intervention and punishment of
offending journalists has been critical to the media management
campaign. As early as 1989 the PR firm of Carma International was hired
to conduct a computer analysis of every story filed on rBGH, ranking
reporters as friends or enemies. This information was used to reward
friendly reporters while complaining to editors about those who filed
reports that were deemed unfriendly.
Leaked internal documents from the Dairy Coalition reveal how
journalists who do not toe the line are handled. In January of 1996
dairy officials wrote Mary Jane Wilkinson, assistant managing editor of
the Boston Globe, to complain about an upcoming food column by Globe
writer Linda Weltner. "On February 23rd, [Dr.] Samuel Epstein . . . made
unsupported allegations linking milk and cancer. We're concerned that
Ms. Weltner will give Epstein a forum in the Boston Globe to disseminate
theories that have no basis in science." The letter invoked carefully
cultivated contacts to smear Epstein as a scaremonger with "no standing
among his peers in the scientific community and no credibility with the
leading health organizations in this country." It noted that "others in
the news media who attended Epstein's press conference or reviewed his
study--such as The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and the
Washington Post--chose not to run this 'story.' . . . USA Today was the
only newspaper to print these allegations and we recently held a heated
meeting with them."
Another internal dairy industry document bragged about the handling of
USA Today health reporter Anita Manning, whose balanced article on the
subject offended the rBGH lobbyists. "On Wednesday representatives of
the Dairy Coalition met with reporter Anita Manning and her editor at
USA Today. When Manning said that Epstein was a credible source, the
Dairy Coalition's Dr. Wayne Callaway pointed out that Epstein has no
standing among the scientific community. . . . When Manning insisted it
was her responsibility to tell both sides of the story, Callaway said
that was just a cop-out for not doing her homework. She was told that if
she had attended the press conference, instead of writing the story from
a press release, she would have learned that her peers from the
Washington Post, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the
Associated Press chose not to do the story because of the source. At
this point Manning left the meeting and her editor assured the Dairy
Coalition that any future stories dealing with [rBGH] and health would
be closely scrutinized."
A February 1996 internal document of the Dairy Coalition notes that "The
Coalition is convinced its work in educating reporters and editors at
the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post and the
Associated Press led to those organizations' dismissal of Samuel
Epstein's pronouncements that milk from [rBGH] supplemented cows causes
breast and colon cancer. They did not run the story."
The same document brags of knocking prominent New York Times food
reporter Marian Burros off the beat entirely: "As you may recall, the
Dairy Coalition worked hard with the New York Times last year to keep
Marian Burros, a very anti-industry reporter, from 'breaking' Samuel
Epstein's claim that milk from . . . supplemented cows causes breast and
colon cancer. She did not do the story and now the NYT health reporters
are the ones on the [rBGH] beat. They do not believe Epstein. Marian
Burros is not happy about the situation."
Given this climate of systematic intimidation and capitulation by news
media management, the remarkable fact about the case in Florida is not
that the story was killed. What makes this case unique is the dogged
persistence that Akre and Wilson have shown in standing by their story.

The Deal that Soured

Steve Wilson is an Emmy award-winning former top investigative reporter
for the TV news program "Inside Edition." His past work has produced
stories that forced two recalls of faulty door latches in Chrysler
minivans and exposed ABC news anchor Sam Donaldson's moves to accept
farming subsidies while criticizing them on the air. Washington Post
media critic Howard Kurtz calls Wilson "a dogged and careful
investigator" with a "high-decibel level of journalism." Jane Akre has
been a reporter and news anchor for 20 years and has won a prestigious
Associated Press award for investigative reporting.
The couple's contract with the station stipulated that Akre would be
paid $149,500 over two years to to file short investigative pieces every
few days and anchor the station's weekend morning newscasts. Wilson's
contract offered $85,500 for 10 hours of work per week on larger stories
that would be timed for the all-important "sweeps" rating periods.
At the time of their hiring, it seemed like a good deal for all
concerned. Akre had recently given birth to the couple's first child,
and Wilson hoped signing up with a local station would give him the
chance to spend more time at home and less on the road. "Jane and Steve,
quite frankly, were only interested in a package deal . . . which suited
me. They're both talented individuals who happen to be married,"
explained news director Daniel Webster.
A few months after their hiring, however, Webster was shown the door as
part of a management shakeup following a $2.5 billion package deal in
which WTVT and nine other stations were sold to the Fox network. By
then, Webster had already given Wilson and Akre the editorial go-ahead
for their first big investigative piece--an expos� about possible health
risks of rBGH-treated milk, which also provided solid documentation of
numerous disturbing facts about Monsanto and its product:

*  Posilac� was never properly tested before FDA allowed it on the
market. A standard cancer test of a new human drug requires two years of
testing with several hundred rats. But rBGH was tested for only 90 days
on 30 rats. Worse, the study has never been published, and the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration has refused to allow open scientific peer review
of the study's raw data.
*  Some Florida dairy herds grew sick shortly after starting rBGH
treatment. One farmer, Charles Knight--who lost 75% of his herd--says
that Monsanto and Monsanto-funded researchers at University of Florida
withheld from him the information that other dairy herds were suffering
similar problems.
*  Interviewed on camera, Florida dairy officials and scientists refuted
Monsanto's claim that every truckload of milk from rBGH-treated cows is
tested for excessive antibiotics.
*  Also on camera, Canadian government officials described what they
called an attempt at bribery by Monsanto, which offered $1 to $2 million
to gain rBGH approval in Canada.
*  A visit by Akre to seven randomly-selected Florida dairy farms found
that all seven were injecting their cows with the hormone. Wilson and
Akre also visited area supermarket chains, which two years previously
had promised to ask their milk suppliers not to use rBGH in response to
consumer concerns. In reality, store representatives admitted that they
have taken no steps to assure compliance with this request.
*  Finally, the story dwelt heavily on concerns raised by scientists
such as Epstein and Consumers Union researcher Michael Hansen about
potential cancer risks associated with "insulin-like growth factor-I"
(IGF-1). Treatments of rBGH lead to significantly increased levels of
IGF-1 in milk, and recent studies suggest IGF-1 is a powerful tumor
growth promoter.


Sudden Death

The resulting story, a four-part series, was cleared by management and
scheduled to begin airing on Monday, February 24, 1997. As part of the
buildup to network ratings sweeps, the story was already being heavily
promoted in radio ads when an ominous letter arrived at the office of
Fox News chairman Roger Ailes, the former Republican political operative
who now heads Rupert Murdoch's Fox network news. The letter came from
John J. Walsh, a powerful New York attorney with the firm of Cadwalader,
Wickersham & Taft, who accused the reporters of bias and urged the
network to delay the story in order to ensure "a more level playing
field" for Monsanto's side of the story. "There is a lot at stake in
what is going on in Florida, not only for Monsanto but also for Fox News
and its owner," Walsh wrote.
"Monsanto hired one of the most renowned lawyers in America to use his
power and influence," Wilson says. "Even though our stories had been
scheduled to run, even though Fox had bought expensive radio ads to
alert viewers to the story, it was abruptly cancelled on the eve of the
broadcasts within hours of receiving the letter from Monsanto's lawyer."
Initially, the story was postponed for a week, during which station
editors and lawyers fine-combed the story but could find no
inaccuracies. Akre and Wilson also offered to do a further interview
with Monsanto and supplied a list of topics to be discussed. In
response, Walsh fired back an even more threatening letter: "It simply
defies credulity that an experienced journalist would expect a
representative of any company to go on camera and respond to the vague,
undetailed--and for the most part accusatory--points listed by Ms. Akre.
Indeed, some of the points clearly contain the elements of defamatory
statements which, if repeated in a broadcast, could lead to serious
damage to Monsanto and dire consequences for Fox News."
What followed next, according to Wilson and Akre, was a grueling
nightmare of perpetual delays and station-mandated rewrites--73 in all,
none of which proved satisfactory to station management. "No fewer than
six airdates were set and cancelled," Wilson recalls. "In all my years
as a print and radio and local and national television reporter, I've
never seen anything like it."
At one point, their lawsuit claims, WTVT general manager David Boylan
told them he "wasn't interested" in looking at the story himself and
pressured them to follow the company lawyer's directions, adding, "Are
you sure this is a hill you're willing to die on?" On another occasion,
Boylan allegedly told them, "We paid $3 billion for these television
stations. We will decide what the news is. The news is what we tell you
it is." Boylan then notified them they would be fired for
insubordination within 48 hours and another reporter would make the
requested changes.
"When we said we'd file a formal complaint with the FCC if that
happened," notes Wilson, "we were not fired but were each offered very
large cash settlements to go away and keep quiet about the story and how
it was handled." The reporters refused the settlement, which amounted to
nearly $200,000, and ultimately were fired in December 1997.

The Perfect Case

Notwithstanding the dramatic issues and allegations at stake for
reporters everywhere, the lawsuit has generated almost no national media
attention and only a few stories in the Florida press--most of which are
couched in timid "he said, she said" language that is sure to please
Monsanto. One editorialist could not resist putting quotation marks
around the word "facts" in discussing the case: "The 'facts' at issue
were as slippery as a just-milked cow. . . . And the lines between
advocacy, truth integrity and insubordination thin to pencil width when
an expensive lawsuit's in the offing."
"Is this an example of local TV's growing reluctance to air hard-hitting
investigative news pieces?" asked Eric Deggans of the St. Petersburg
Times before concluding that "The truth, as always, lies somewhere in
the middle." After examining "the personality conflicts and lack of
definitive scientific evidence" about rBGH, Deggans concludes that
"Wilson's and Akre's case may not be the perfect example to illustrate
the trend of increasingly irrelevant reporting in TV news."
Actually, the case is a perfect example to illustrate that trend. In
fact, Deggan's response to the case shows how corporate interests have
succeeded in dramatically shifting the terms of acceptability in
journalistic discourse.
Good journalism--in particular, good investigative journalism--is almost
always controversial and accompanied by "personality conflicts." In
dealing with technologically novel products like genetically-engineered
hormones, "lack of definitive scientific evidence" is part of what makes
the story controversial.
"Is there smoking-gun, iron-clad evidence available today that drinking
milk from hormone-treated cows will lead to cancer in you or your
children?" asks Wilson. "No. Many scientists will tell you because this
is a drug injected into animals and not directly into humans the testing
of its effects on milk-drinkers has never been thorough enough to know
for sure. But ask yourselves this: how long did it take us all to learn
about the effects of tobacco while the special interests insisted there
was no evidence of any harm? Was it wrong to raise those issues before
the link was indisputable? Or how about Agent Orange, dioxin, PCBs--all
Monsanto products, by the way, all approved by the government, sworn by
Monsanto to be safe. Was it wrong to raise those issues before we knew
for certain?"
In reality, journalistic reluctance to discuss hypothetical, as-yet
unproven health risks is driven more by fear of corporate lawsuits than
by a desire to be "responsible." One such lawsuit by the Food Lion
grocery store chain resulted in a $5.5 million judgment against ABC-TV
in January 1997--just one month prior to Monsanto's threatening letter
aimed at killing the Akre-Wilson story. It was a verdict that Monsanto's
attorney made sure to mention in his letter to Roger Ailes. "What has
Monsanto concerned . . . is the assault on their integrity . . .
blatantly carried on by Ms. Akre and Mr. Wilson," Walsh wrote. "In the
aftermath of the Food Lion verdict, such behavior would alone be cause
for concern."
"A lot of people now are more fearful of doing investigative journalism
since Food Lion . . . which is why we have so many lawyers involved,"
admits Phil Metlin, who took over as WTVT's news director in July 1997.
"We have to be careful . . . and prudent."
The result, of course, has been that attorneys rather than reporters are
empowered to make journalistic decisions.
For its part, WTVT insists that this system of institutional
self-censorship must be defended in order to avoid "chilling the
give-and-take essential in any newsroom in getting the news on the air
in a timely and responsible manner." In legal court filings, the station
insists that its "editorial discretion and judgment should not and
cannot be the subject of second-guessing by a judge or jury, consistent
with the First Amendment."
WTVT also objects to the fact that Akre and Wilson "conducted two press
conferences the day they filed their suit" and "have also created a web
site to publicize their issues, where they have posted the complaint and
exhibits and where they are soliciting public comments." Worse yet, the
website includes two complete scripts of their controversial rBGH
report--one version showing how they wanted to write the story, and the
other showing how the network wanted it edited. Neither version has ever
aired. In fact, its filings in court claim that by posting the scripts
on their website, Akre and Wilson "have misappropriated . . . property.
. . . This misconduct by Plaintiffs is in itself a material and serious
breach of the employment agreements [and] amounts to theft."
Theft it may be, in some strange legal sense, but Akre and Wilson don't
care at this point. "I am risking my career by doing this, and I will
probably never work in television again," Wilson said, "But we wanted to
get this story out."
"As a mother, I know this is important information about a basic food
I've been giving my child every day," Akre said. "As a journalist, I
know it is a story that millions of Floridians have a right to know. The
television station we worked for promised the story would be told.
Instead, we spent nearly a year struggling to tell it honestly and
accurately, and four months after we were fired for standing up for the
truth, the station has done nothing but continue to keep this important
news secret. It is not right for the station to withhold this important
health information, and solely as a matter of conscience we will not aid
and abet their effort to cover this up any longer. Every parent and
every consumer has the right to know what they're pouring on their
children's morning cereal."
Postscript: In May 1998, a month after Wilson and Akre filed suit, the
station aired an rBGH story by the investigative reporter who was hired
to replace them. His story, predictably, omitted many of their
criticisms of Monsanto.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
A version of this article appeared in the June 1998 issue of The
Progressive magazine. Further information about the Akre-Wilson lawsuit
is available on their website at <http://www.foxBGHsuit.com>.
Center for Media & Democracy Home Pag

Forwarded for info and discussion from the New Paradigms Discussion List,
not necessarily endorsed by:
***********************************

Lloyd Miller, Research Director for A-albionic Research a ruling
class/conspiracy research resource for the entire political-ideological
spectrum. **FREE RARE BOOK SEARCH: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> **
   Explore Our Archive:  <http://a-albionic.com/a-albionic.html>

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths,
misdirections
and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with major and
minor
effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said,
CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html
<A HREF="http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to