Helms the Terrorist; Don't Blame Communism; Cunanan Tops Fundraising
MRC Job Opportunities:
The MRC has an opening for an entertainment analyst and two intern
positions. Entertainment analysts review television shows to track
content. Starting salary in low $20s. The interns will work for the
entertainment and news division. Hourly pay of about $7 per hour. The
MRC is located in Alexandria, Virginia and applicants should be in the
area so they can be interviewed. Fax resumes to: 703-683-9736
- Charming
Jesse Helms is "a good warm-up game" for Madeleine
Albright before meeting Yasir Arafat, suggested a Newsweek
reporter.
- Communism did
cause North Korea's famine, argued the New York Times. And CNN
treated a credible the view of a North Korean General.
- A new study
found that crime is the number one topic on network news and a
study by the MRC of fundraising hearings confirms that as Cunanan
stories far outnumbered fundraising ones.
1) More on the Jesse Helms as
terrorist theme. The August 13 CyberAlert included the latest issue of
Notable Quotables which cited Time columnist Margaret Carlson's
reference to Senator Helms as a terrorist who runs a committee. MRC
news analyst Steve Kaminski caught another member of the media
comparing Helms to a terrorist in his battle with Bill Weld. On this
past weekend's Inside Washington the panel discussed Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright's upcoming meeting with Yasir Arafat. Evan
Thomas, until a few months ago Newsweek's Washington Bureau Chief,
suggested:
"Albright wants to deal
face to face with the principles. It's going to be fascinating to see
whether she can charm Arafat. If she can charm Jesse Helms, which is
sort of a good test, a good warm-up game for Arafat. She has
incredible gumption, she's a different kind of Secretary of State, it
will be a fascinating test for her."
2) Food shortages and a
starving population of North Korea has nothing to do with communism,
it's caused by a famine. Last Friday, August 8, a New York Times
editorial opened: "Two months of drought and scorching heat has
turned North Korea into a veritable oven enclosing 24 million
people." The Times absolved communist policies: "It is not
the doctrines of Marx but Malthus that now shape this isolated and
fanatical communist fortress."
This bizarre reasoning
reminded me a NBC Nightly News commentary from the late John
Chancellor. On August 21, 1991 he tried to explain why the Soviet
Union faced so many shortages:
"It's short of soap, so
there are lice in hospitals. It's short of pantyhose, so women's legs
go bare. It's short of snowsuits, so babies stay home in winter...The
problem isn't communism; nobody even talked about communism this week.
The problem is shortages."
Back to the Korean peninsula. Wednesday night at 6:30pm ET CNN ran a
special, "Inside North Korea," based on the reporting of CNN
International President Eason Jordan who managed to get into North
Korea. Anchor Jonathan Mann asked who or what are being blamed for the
lack of food. Jordan replied:
"It depends on whom you
talk to. The international relief agencies, some of the people who
work there say that the plight of the people here is not just the
fault of Mother Nature, that it's also the government's economic
policies and agriculture policies. Government officials dispute that
and they say this is solely a problem generated by Mother Nature and
only Mother Nature can solve this problem. So there's a real dispute
about the blame in this case, but General Kim Jung Il (sp?) has been
personally involved in this. He has ordered all of the entire army,
hundreds of thousands of troops, into the countryside to help the
farmers try to harvest what crops will survive."
Another example of the
problem with Western reporters applying Western journalistic norms to
reporting from an oppressive nation. Jordan gave equal weight to views
of both the communist regime and the relief workers, as if each are
equally credible. And the fact that the General "is personally
involved in this" is more ironic than reassuring. In a closed
off, backward nation run by a military dictatorship the army is hardly
the solution to anything.
3) A study released by the
Center for Media and Public Affairs determined that on the three
broadcast network evening shows crime coverage has soared this decade.
From 1990 to 1992 it was the sixth most covered topic, but jumped to
first for 1993, 1994, 1995 and 1996. The least policy and most crime
oriented newscast: NBC Nightly News. As relayed in Wednesday's USA
Today: "From 1993 through July 1997, Tom Brokaw's NBC Nightly
News had the most crime stories (2,896), the least foreign news
(15.6%), and the most features (20%)."
As if on cue, the lead story
on Wednesday's Nightly News: release of the autopsy report on JonBenet
Ramsey. Neither ABC or CBS led with it.
Crime coverage overwhelmed
any network interest in the fundraising hearings, a new study from the
MRC documented. Released Wednesday in a Media Reality Check fax
report, the study put together by the MRC's Tim Graham based upon the
news logging of the MRC analysts determined that Andrew Cunanan
trounced the hearings. The three morning shows, for instance, did not
conduct one interview with a member of the Senate committee and ran
seven times as many segments on Andrew Cunanan as on fundraising.
Below is the full report, but
MRC Web manager Joe Alfonsi has placed a more graphically appealing
version on the MRC Web site. Go to: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/realitycheck/archive1997.asp
The next CyberAlert probably
won't be until next week, so don't be surprised if you don't get one
on Friday.
--
Brent Baker
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