-Caveat Lector-

Inauguration 2001: Watching The Media Watch The News

By Dimitri Devyatkin
Mediachannel.org
January 21, 2001

After watching a day of solemn proceedings marking the handing over of
power from Bill Clinton to George W. Bush, instead of feeling confidence
and reassurance, I feel a wave of dismay, discomfort and distaste, with a
sense of coming disaster.
W. was able to move through the ceremony without misstep, delivering a
cold, not particularly compassionate conservative speech and shaking all
the right hands. After watching him so long on screen, I get a sense of his
arrogance and feeling of entitlement to privilege. He seemed nervous to me,
in a sort of unspoken hurry to get it all over with so he could get back to
his comfortable slippers and bathrobe, warm milk and cookies.

Last Saturday I watched the peaceful transition on TV. There were about
350,000 spectators. About 30,000  almost 10 percent  were demonstrators,
having traveled to the nation's capital from all over America. There was
almost no violence, despite police preparations for potential disturbances,
and the heaviest security ever at an inauguration, with 10 checkpoints
through which everyone had to pass to get to the parade route, a first in
inauguration history. "The police can spin it however they want," said Adam
Eidinger, an organizer with the D.C.based Justice Action Movement, "but the
reason why this demonstration was by and large peaceful was because we were
peaceful, not because the police kept us from doing anything."

Demonstrators stood at nearly every block of the parade route except the
very end, where the president and his wife got out of the car to walk. Some
of the protesters were obvious by their colorful dress and placards. Others
were stealth demonstrators, dressed inconspicuously, who whipped out
placards and banners a moment before the motorcade arrived to add their
voice to the loud chanting and booing. At the swearing-in ceremony, a man
and woman close to the main podium stood up and stripped to the waist,
revealing protest slogans written on their bodies. None of this was shown
on television.

The mainstream commentators deftly footnoted the protesters as fringe
elements. The New York Times barely mentioned the demonstrators, only
quoting one, the comedian Dick Gregory, at a rally: "If you stole my car,
I'm never going to accept that it's your car." In any other country, there
would have been mass demonstrations and troop movements on the day that the
man who did not win the popular vote took power. But in America a bona fide
coup d'état has happened, and our national press is doing everything to
make us "accept" it as a done deal. The television networks devoted no more
than 10 minutes combined to the demonstrators. And The New York Times
placed a single story about the protesters on Page 17 and left readers with
the impression that the dominant themes of the day were "unity,"
"tradition" and, above all, "legitimacy," according to the media watch
group FAIR.

Activists Weigh In

The Independent Media Center (IMC), a nonprofit group of media activists
using mini video cameras, cell phones and the Internet, organized
alternative coverage of the Inauguration on their Web site as an audio
stream. Over 310,000 hits were recorded to the main site over the day.
Listeners were very generous, contributing more than enough funds to cover
the entire production budget.

I tuned in at 8:30 a.m. to hear the indomitable Amy Goodman, the
prize-winning host of Pacifica Radio's "Democracy Now". She is Pacifica's
leading light, and her program is carried nationally. In what is perhaps a
related development, the Pacifica board in a "Christmas Coup" has sharply
curtailed WBAI's freedom, forced a number of staffers to leave and limited
what Amy can say on the air.

Amy had two hours on IMC, from 8 to 10 a.m. She called her show "Plutocracy
Now," and it covered a wide array of issues related to the power shift from
Clinton to Bush. Amy's professionalism and skill and her producer's made
hers the best IMC coverage. She kept the listeners well-informed and used
every moment of airtime judiciously. Free of the newly imposed WBAI
censorship, the program was carried nationally on many radio stations  in
Santa Cruz, Seattle, Hawaii, even the Netherlands. At one point she patched
in a representative from "Billionaires for Bush," who proffered: "People
don't matter  money does."

In the most emotional moment of Amy's coverage, President Clinton used the
last hours of his presidency to announce whom he would and would not
pardon, intruding into Bush's media day with the surprise announcements. To
the shock and disappointment of thousands of activists through the country,
Clinton decided not to pardon Native American activist Leonard Peltier.

She called Dennis Moynihan of www.FreePeltier.org in Lawrence, Kansas, to
learn that Peltier comes up for parole only in 2008. You can bet no one
listening to CNN heard the instant analysis that Bill Clinton's FBI record
surely was a factor in dissuading him from freeing the Native American
leader. Peltier has been sitting in federal prison since 1975 for the
murder of two FBI agents. Though he steadfastly claims he is innocent, he
has earned the FBI's bitter hatred, and the agency has actively lobbied
against his release.

After "Plutocracy Now," the IMC audio stream went to recorded music. I'm
sure many people tuned out then. I know resources were limited, but
couldn't IMC have kept something relevant on the line, at least by
replaying the previous commentaries? It was not a good idea to leave
dedicated listeners with zero.

There were sporadic cell-phone calls from people in the streets saying the
demonstrators were encountering difficulty passing through police lines
even though they had a permit to gather at Freedom Plaza near 14th Street
and Pennsylvania Avenue. We heard from the antiauthoritarian "black bloc"
group at F and 13th, apparently all dressed in black, who were standing in
the streets shouting: "Whose streets? Our streets!" and "Abolish
capitalism!" One representative described their function as providing
security in the event of a confrontation, implying that they were tough
guys almost spoiling for a fight. There was no comparable reportage on the
networks, which avoided showing or even mentioning any demonstrators.

 From The Streets

On NBC, several old prep-school classmates of George W. Bush from Andover,
draped in their white school scarves, described the young George W. as the
one who knew everybody. On CBS, they told us that George W. is no stranger
to the White House having lived there during his father's reign. CBS
proudly added that they've carried every U.S. inauguration live since 1946
and then broke for a real commercial.

ABC seemed to have the most impressive command of helicopter shots,
following W.'s massively armored black limousine as it cruised through the
D.C. streets. The soon-to-be-anointed one had to stop for ablutions at St.
John's Church, as all presidents do on their way to the swearing in. ABC
was able to jump from camera to camera with virtually no break in the live
coverage of an automobile. (It reminded me of how they covered O. J.
Simpson's mad Bronco ride before the California Highway Patrol.) ABC also
had the stupidest-looking hosts, who were wearing identical tan cowboy hats.

Turning back to IMC, I learned that more than 400 protesters were being
held up by police at 14th and Pennsylvania, right along the parade route.
The IMC host asked the woman who called in to put the telephone up to the
mouth of a policeman and ask questions. "Use your telephone like a
microphone," he directed. However, the woman holding the phone did not
sound assertive enough to push her phone forward. The difference between a
regular demonstrator and a media activist is the awareness of moments like
this one, where an extra measure of gumption makes the difference between
getting a story or not.

In some incidents, I had a strange feeling about the IMC studio hosts, as
if they were almost looking for a disturbance to break out. There was a
breathless tone from one caller describing the first arrests: "The Bush
crackdown has already begun."

CNN showed protesters in large groups marching, shouting slogans and
holding placards, and at least one egg hitting the Bush limousine. Yet the
overwhelming tone of the protests  by such groups as the National
Organization of Women, International and National Action Centers and dozens
of others  was peaceful and seriously concerned. A well-spoken woman
interviewed on CNN said she had come to protest the undemocratic procedure
followed in Florida. Police restrained a young man wearing only striped
boxer shorts after he jumped into the parade route.

IMC's coverage was less benign, presenting live audio coverage of people
who had been detained by the police. One man who called in said he had
blood dripping from a head wound. He said he had been peacefully leaving as
ordered by a policeman when he was struck on the head. In trying to
disperse the crowd, police hit about 10 people, according to the caller.
Again the networks and major newspapers covered none of this.

Reigning In The Rain

Watching the Bush family traipse around Washington, the network
commentators made various remarks about his 19-year-old twin daughters,
Jenna and Barbara. Officially, the girls are non-topics for the press by
request of their mother, Laura Bush, who asked the press to restrain their
coverage of the girls "as they did with Chelsea Clinton."

(The National Enquirer already published a scalding report about one
daughter's wild drinking and carrying on at college.) NBC found time to
comment that now the young women will suspect any new friend's attentions,
question everybody's intent. George W. apparently likes to stay in touch
with his daughters by e-mail, but now every note he writes will become part
of the public record, so he is going to have to be careful.
As we approached the big moment and the bigwigs were shown climbing the
stairs to the ceremony, all cameras focused on the Bush family.

Former President George H. W. Bush climbed up with his wife Barbara,
beaming with pride to see their boy had made it. It was raining lightly, so
the VIPs were issued clear plastic raincoats. George W. arrived with music
and lots of handshakes. He air-kissed his wife and brushed cheeks with his
daughters. Clinton and Gore sat in fancy leather armchairs, also out in the
rain.

George W. also got a fancy chair.
As he lifted his right arm and pressed the Bible, the oath was spoken and a
new president was installed. A Marine Corps tenor sang the national anthem.
George W.'s speech  some said it was his best ever  was colder and harsher
than it might have been. He took a jab at Clinton with a claim for
"responsibility," so no one would forget about Monica Lewinsky. Fox TV said
that throughout the ceremony George W. avoided eye contact with Clinton.
----
New York Citybased Dimitri Devyatkin ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) has been an
independent video producer since 1971, whose work has appeared on ABC and
PBS as well as British and French TV.

<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, mis-
directions 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, CTRLgives 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://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.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