Media Having Trouble Finding Right Angle On
Obama's Double-Homicide

April 14, 2009
 
WASHINGTON—More than a week after President
Barack Obama's cold-blooded killing of a local 
couple, members of the American news media 
admitted Tuesday that they were still trying to 
find the best angle for covering the gruesome 
crime.

"I know there's a story in there somewhere," said 
Newsweek editor Jon Meacham, referring to Obama's 
home invasion and execution-style slaying of Jeff 
and Sue Finowicz on Apr. 8. "Right now though, 
it's probably best to just sit back and wait for 
more information to come in. After all, the only 
thing we know for sure is that our president 
senselessly murdered two unsuspecting Americans 
without emotion or hesitation."

Added Meacham, "It's not so cut and dried."
 
Since the killings took place, reporters across 
the country have struggled to come up with an 
appropriate take on the ruthless crime, with some 
wondering whether it warrants front-page 
coverage, and others questioning its relevance in 
a fast-changing media landscape.

"What exactly is the news hook here?" asked Rick 
Kaplan, executive producer of the CBS Evening 
News. "Is this an upbeat human-interest story 
about a 'day in the life' of a bloodthirsty 
president who likes to kill people? Or is it more 
of an examination of how Obama's unusual 
upbringing in Hawaii helped to shape the way he 
would one day viciously butcher two helpless 
citizens in their own home?"
 
"Or maybe the story is just that murder is cool 
now," Kaplan continued. "I don't know. There are 
a million different angles on this one."

So far, the president's double-homicide has not 
been covered by any major news outlets. The only 
two mentions of the heinous tragedy have been a 
100-word blurb on the Associated Press wire and 
an obituary on page E7 of this week's edition of 
the Lake County Examiner.
 
While Obama has expressed no remorse for the 
grisly murders—-point-blank shootings with an 
unregistered .38-caliber revolver—-many 
journalists said it would be irresponsible for 
the press to sensationalize the story.

"There's been some debate around the office about 
whether we should report on this at all," 
Washington Post senior reporter Bill Tracy said 
while on assignment at a local dog show. "It's 
enough of a tragedy without the press jumping in 
and pointing fingers or, worse, exploiting the 
violence. Plus, we need to be sensitive to the 
victims' families at this time. Their loved ones 
were brutally, brutally murdered, after all."
 
Nevertheless, a small contingent of independent 
journalists has begun to express its disapproval 
and growing shock over the president's actions.

"I hate to rain on everyone's parade, but we are 
in the midst of an economic crisis here," 
political pundit Marcus Reid said. "Why was our 
president ritualistically dismembering the 
corpses of his prey when he should have been 
working on a new tax proposal for small 
businesses? I, for one, am outraged."
 
The New York Times newsroom is reportedly still 
undecided on whether or not to print a recent 
letter received from Obama, in which the 
president threatens to kill another helpless 
citizen every Tuesday and "fill [his] heavenly 
palace with slaves for the afterlife" unless the 
police "stop the darkness from screaming."

"President Obama's letter presents us with a 
classic journalistic quandary," executive editor 
Bill Keller said. "If we print it, then we're 
giving him control over the kinds of stories we 
choose to run. It would be an acknowledgment that 
we somehow give the nation's commander in chief 
special treatment."

Added Keller, "And that's just not how the press 
in this country works."

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