PBS Claims Scandals Overplayed; CBS Denounces Talk Radio
- The latest
four scandal developments ignored by the networks: Hillary Clinton
to be subpoenaed on the FBI files; Trie gets money from China;
Temple donors reimbursed; Tamraz detained.
- PBS meanwhile
contends that the networks have overplayed the Clinton fundraising
scandals. That's right, overplayed.
- In the midst
of laudatory questions to Bill Clinton, Charles Osgood calls talk
radio an impediment to racial understanding: "It's not always
very constructive." Clinton agrees.
- NBC's Gwen
Ifill tells Clinton that both his critics and supporters think
he's "abandoning minorities and the poor."
1) The Friday and Saturday
newspapers were packed with Clinton fundraising disclosures, but the
networks decided to ignore them all -- even before the McVeigh penalty
verdict was announced late Friday. First, two stories mentioned by
only one network:
-- "Solomon Accuses
Huang of Espionage: Rules Chairman Makes Case in Letter to Freeh,"
declared a front page story in Friday's Washington Times. "Huang
Leaked Secrets, GOP Lawmaker Says" announced a Los Angeles Times
headline. The June 13 USA Today also carried a story on Congressman
Solomon's charge based on electronic intercepts that Huang relayed
classified information to the Lippo Group in Indonesia.
Coverage: As noted in the
June 13 CyberAlert, on the June 11 CBS Evening News, reporter Bob
Schieffer raised Solomon's charge as well as the Congressman's belief
that Huang had access to State Department computer traffic. The other
networks: zilch on Friday, Saturday or Sunday on the ABC and NBC
morning and evening shows.
-- The June 13 Washington
Times reported that "Democrats on the Senate Governmental Affairs
Committee yesterday successfully blocked Republican efforts to grant
immunity to 18 persons tied to suspected campaign finance abuses,
including 15 Buddhist monks and nuns who may have been illegally
reimbursed for donations to the Democratic Party."
Coverage: As also reported in
the June 13 CyberAlert, NBC's Lisa Myers concluded a June 12 Nightly
News piece by noting the Democratic obstructionism. ABC and CBS have
yet to mention it.
Now, four developments
ignored by all the networks, even by CNN:
-- "Hillary Clinton May
Have to Testify About FBI Files," announced a June 13 USA Today
headline. In the same day's Washington Times the headline read:
"White House Objections Are Dismissed By Judge: Way Clear for
Hillary Subpoena in FBI Files Case." Times reporter George
Archibald began: "A federal judge yesterday dismissed Clinton
administration objections to a lawsuit by former government appointees
whose FBI files were improperly searched three years ago, paving the
way for Hillary Clinton to be subpoenaed for a sworn deposition. U.S.
District Court judge Royce Lamberth branded government motions to
dismiss the case filed on behalf of former Reagan-Bush appointees as a
'weak attempt to avoid discovery.'"
-- Friday Washington Post
readers were greeted with this headline: "Fundraisers Pressured
Temple After Gore Visit; 12 Donors Were Reimbursed."
-- "Developer Tied to
China Sent Money to Trie Account," revealed a story in Friday's
USA Today. The AP picked up the story and it appeared in other papers
on Saturday. USA Today's Edward Pound reported: "A foreign
developer with ties to the Chinese government funneled at least
$470,000 into a Washington bank account controlled by Charles Yan Lin
Trie while Trie was raising money for the Democratic Party."
-- On Saturday, newspaper
readers learned that Roger Tamraz had been detained. The June 14
Washington Post headline announced: "Tamraz Held in Republic of
Georgia: Democratic Donor Wanted in Lebanon on Embezzlement
Charges."
Coverage: Three of these four
ran in Friday morning's papers, hours before the McVeigh verdict took
over news coverage, but not a syllable appeared Friday morning on
ABC's GMA, CBS This Morning on NBC's Today about these developments,
nor that night though they found time for their usual features: ABC
ran a "Solutions" piece and NBC a profile of an American
Success and a piece on young millionaires.
And the networks didn't pick
up on the developments on Saturday or Sunday either. (Golf pre-empted
NBC Nightly News in DC on Saturday and Sunday, but nothing appeared on
Today those mornings). MRC analyst Clay Waters informed me that CNN
didn't air a scandal story Friday, Saturday or Sunday night.
2) Given this dearth of
television coverage, what did PBS tell viewers over the weekend? That
the media's credibility is being hurt by television network
overcoverage of Donorgate. That is not a typo. PBS, always in touch
with reality, argued that Clinton's fundraising scandals, especially
the Lincoln bedroom angle, were overplayed.
Over the weekend (Friday
night in Washington, Sunday in New York City), many PBS affiliates
carried the latest edition of Media Matters, an occasional series
looking at media coverage. The show sometimes even runs a story by a
conservative. The latest edition, for example, included amongst its
three stories a piece by Terry Eastland, formerly with Forbes
MediaCritic, on coverage of Gulf War Syndrome.
After a report examining
local TV news, Alex Jones, the Executive Editor of the show, set up
the next piece:
"While the public may
trust local television news more than other news sources, overall,
public trust in the media has been on the decline in recent years.
Many say it's because of too much cynicism among journalists, too many
feeding frenzies, too many stories that scream, 'Gotcha!' One prime
target of this syndrome has been politicians in general, and
especially the President. Bill Clinton's presidency has been tarnished
by one story after another challenging his integrity and honesty. The
clamor reached a fever pitch when the White House was accused of
selling the Lincoln bedroom for campaign contributions. It was,
undeniably, a juicy story, but did the media go overboard? Geneva
Overholser, Ombudsman for The Washington Post and former
Editor-in-Chief of The Des Moines Register, gives the story a hard
look."
As transcribed by MRC intern
Jessica Anderson, Overholser began by asserting: "Not since
Richard Nixon has a sitting President received a grueling
interrogation about campaign finance that Bill Clinton has. It is
clearly a legitimate story, but does it merit this much ink and
airtime, or have reporters stacked the deck against Clinton?"
Yes, Overholser argued over
the next 15 minutes, before concluding:
"In the end, despite all
the ink and airtime, Donorgate probably won't go down in history as
President Clinton's Watergate. After all, so far there's no smoking
gun. Selling the White House made a great story, but with all the fuss
about who slept over in the Lincoln bedroom, reporters may have
shortchanged the bigger story: that our nation's whole system of
campaign finance is badly broken, and will the press now finally focus
on that scandal? Maybe, but only if there are no other beds making
headlines."
Houston to PBS: What planet
are you on? Overplayed? Overholser ran about ten clips of network
stories, which is probably just about every story that aired. The
Washington Post broke the bedroom story on December 15. NBC first
mentioned it on January 21. Other than a brief flurry of stories at
the end of February, the networks hardly touched the matter and, as
any CyberAlert reader well knows, they've skipped most major Donorgate
revelations.
For a reality check, review
the February, March and May MediaWatch studies in which the MRC's Tim
Graham put together a list of revelations and showed how little TV
coverage they garnered. Go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/mediawatch/1997
3) CBS anchor Charles Osgood
refused to challenge Clinton on anything, but he managed to trash talk
radio as a detriment to racial harmony. The CBS show Sunday Morning
featured an interview with President Clinton taped after his big race
speech. Osgood's talk radio bash was surrounded by softball questions
for the President.
Here, as taken down by MRC
intern Jessica Anderson, are all of Osgood's inquiries aired on the
June 15 broadcast:
-- "Do you believe that
what fathers and mothers do and say, with respect to attitudes about
different kinds of people, have great influence on how we think
initially?"
-- "Sir, was there some
particular incident or series of events that triggered your decision
to take this initiative now on race relations?"
-- After Clinton explained
that "This seemed to me to be a good time to ask the American
people to step back and be honest with each other, and have this
conversation and come up with a plan to move us into the 21st century,
as we ought to be," Osgood wondered: "Does that plan
necessarily involve new legislation or government action?"
-- "Is there risk
involved in that, though, sir, if you have people speaking frankly, do
you really want people to say what they think about others? We have
something of that kind that goes on on talk radio all the time and
people say what they think, but it's not always very
constructive."
Clinton took advantage of the
chance to denounce talk radio: "Yeah, but people in talk radio,
the difference is in talk radio, people are talking at each other and
talking about each other, instead of speaking with each other. I don't
mind the honesty of talk radio, what I mind is the hard-headedness of
it. You know, 'I've got the whole truth, and I know it, and I'm going
to scream at somebody and then I don't want to hear anything back from
someone who disagrees.' What I want is a level of complete honesty and
candor, but in a setting in which everybody feels free to speak their
mind and then they try to reach common ground. And I believe about
eight in 10 Americans would think that was worth doing."
-- "Do you think that
today the United States is a racist country and is it mainly white
racism?"
-- "Do you think the
presidency still is the bully-pulpit that Theodore Roosevelt called
it, with respect to issues like this, and with all that you have on
your plate now, I mean particularly some legal problems being thrust
on you, does it make it more difficult for you to try to do
this?"
-- "Over the years,
since the 1960s, we've had the Kerner Commission report, we've had
other studies, and fairly recently our national conversation on race,
but still we seem to be far short of our goal. Haven't we studied this
issue to death?"
-- "Since the Kerner
Commission report, the country has changed somewhat and is changing
even faster now into a multi- ethnic kind of society. Does that change
the picture?"
-- "Mr. President, are
you optimistic that this country will ever see its way to the ideal of
racial justice?"
What a tough set of
questions. Osgood did not raise any concerns of either conservatives
or, except on talk radio, of critics on the left. Don't want to appear
divisive.
4) NBC's Gwen Ifill believes
the only Clinton critics worth mentioning are those to the left of
Clinton. In an interview that NBC aired on Monday's Today, Ifill asked
the President:
"Is this welfare bill
your great vulnerability on this subject? Your supporters, your
critics, they all say that, perhaps, you are abandoning minorities and
the poor."
An example of how Clinton is
occasionally subjected to critical coverage of his policies -- from
the left.
--
Brent Baker
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts
Media Reality Check | Notable Quotables | Contact
the MRC | Subscribe
|