Hypocrisy on Aldrich; Media
"Harder" on Clinton
One Media Reality Check and two
other quotes today.
1) A little media
hypocrisy on the Gary Aldrich book Unlimited Access? On Monday night the
MRC released a fax report, as part of our Media Reality Check 96 project,
which documented that "while TV producers echo George Stephanopoulos
in insisting that guests meet a threshold of credibility,' the networks
have not been so high-minded when allegations were made against
conservatives."
2) A Chicago Tribune
reporter says that because reporters are of the same generation and share
the same values as Clinton, they are "harder on him."
3) Before we get too
far from policy, don't forget that as soon as Dole suggests a tax cut, the
media hordes will descend upon him. A Newsweek reporter says a tax cut
"is the worst thing we could do."
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The MRC's Media Reality Check 96 as put together Monday by Tim Graham and
Steve Kaminski:
July 1, 1996
Contact: Keith Appell (703)683-5004
The Networks' Selective Sense of Sourcing
"If privacy ends where
hypocrisy begins, Kitty Kelley's steamy expose of Nancy Reagan is a
contribution to contemporary history." -- Reporter Eleanor Clift in
Newsweek, April 15, 1991.
ALEXANDRIA, VA. -- The decision
of CNN's Larry King Live and Dateline NBC to cancel interviews with author
Gary Aldrich is just the latest example of the networks' double standard
on stories of sexual scandal. While TV producers echo George
Stephanopoulos in insisting that guests meet a "threshold of
credibility," the networks have not been so high-minded when
allegations were made against conservatives.
MRC Chairman L. Brent Bozell III
asked: "Who better meets the threshold of credibility: a 30-year
veteran of the FBI who worked inside the Clinton White House or the
unproven allegations of Anita Hill? Or Kitty Kelley? The networks didn't
pause to investigate these stories or knuckle under to White House wishes:
they put those stories on the air in a major way."
For examples, see the following
cases from the MRC database:
-- Kitty Kelley, who implied
Nancy Reagan had extramarital affairs while at the White House, appeared
in three consecutive morning interviews on NBC's Today show (April 8-10,
1991) and also on CBS This Morning (April 11, 1991). The New York Times
put her unproven charges on page one, without any attempt to prove her
allegations. Time and Newsweek both put Kelley's book on their April 15,
1991 covers. Wrote Newsweek's Jonathan Alter: "Of course there are
some mistakes in it....The point, however, is that Kelley's portrait is
not essentially untrue."
-- Anita Hill and her unproven
allegations of sexual harassment against Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas drew 67 network evening news in the first five days (more than 13 a
night) before the Senate hearings even began. Dan Rather interviewed Hill
on the CBS Evening News (10/7/91) asking "Why do you believe this
man, Judge Thomas, that you have worked closely with for a long time, has
not spoken directly to what you consider to be the substance of this
charge?" If unproven allegations should not be heard on the network
airwaves, how do the networks explain Anita Hill interviews or live
coverage of the Hill-Thomas hearings?
-- Joseph and Susan Trento
claimed that the late Ambassador Louis Fields suggested George Bush might
have had an affair with State Department aide Jennifer Fitzgerald. Despite
a dead source, CNN was the first to ask Bush about the charge. Dateline
NBC anchor Stone Phillips asked the President about it in prime time
(8/11/92). ABC's Good Morning America and CBS This Morning interviewed the
Trentos the next day.
-- Unnamed accusers of Newt
Gingrich claimed he came to first wife Jackie's hospital bed to discuss
divorce terms. Without naming a source more specific than "a friend
at the time," Dateline NBC's Tom Brokaw (11/13/94), CBS's Connie
Chung (1/4/95), and CNN's Judy Woodruff (12/17/95) all forwarded the
story.
-- The last time a network
canceled a high-profile guest: After intense pressure, NBC's Today show
canceled former Ted Kennedy aide Richard Burke in the fall of 1992 over
the claims in his book, The Senator, that Kennedy used drugs and had sex
with underage women.
Why the selective concern for
fairness?
2
Keeping in mind media reaction to the Aldrich book and how reporters were
reluctant to make filegate a big story, Chicago Tribune reporter Elaine
Povich thinks the media go after Clinton in order to overcome a perception
of bias. Povich was the author of the famous Freedom Forum study which
found 89 percent voted for Clinton. Asked about that at a June 14
Radio-Television News Directors event, she responded:
"Most reporters who covered Bill Clinton
were of his generation, identified with him, had a lot of the same
experiences, were about his age, and they were harder on him. It's the
coach's son. You're just so worried that you're going to give him
favorable treatment that it goes the other way."
3
The Povich quote appears in the July 1 Notable Quotables that you should
receive soon is you haven't already. But, here's a quote we couldn't
squeeze in, from Newsweek Washington Bureau Chief Evan Thomas on the June
8 Inside Washington, a quote identified by MRC analyst Steve Kaminski:
"I hope it's totally hypocritical and
insincere, but it does have a way of driving policy ultimately, and you
could get a real tax cut, which would be the worst thing we could
do."
All for
now. I am on vacation, so I haven't seen Bryant Gumbel for several days,
but the bias never stops. --
Brent Baker
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