NBC Skipped Meddoff; Pushing "Reform;" Turner's Logic
- Friday night
NBC ignored that day's Senate testimony, ABC gave it 20 seconds
and CBS offered a full story, but concluded that campaign finance
reform is the only solution.
- Today and GMA
ran the first full stories and interviews of the week on Friday;
CNN ran some of Meddoff live, but not MSNBC.
- Ted Turner
believes in global warming because the beach on an island owned by
the billionaire got "washed away" by melting ice caps.
1) Reciting Warren Meddoff's story about how top Clinton aide Harold
Ickes told him how to donate $5 million to non-profit groups that
worked with the DNC, and then to destroy the document, didn't interest
NBC. Friday's NBC Nightly News ignored Meddoff's testimony before the
Senate hearing while ABC gave it just 20 seconds. Only CBS provided
viewers with a full story. (For historical context, on February 6 the
CBS Evening News was the first network to air a full story on Meddoff,
NBC Nightly News caught up in late March.)
Here's a rundown of Friday
night, September 19, coverage:
ABC's World News Tonight.
After two stories on Ted Turner's $1 billion gift to the UN, an update
on Trevor Rees-Jones and a public appearance by Prince Charles, the
train accident in London, Chelsea moving in at Stanford and a feature
on campus crime, Peter Jennings gave this 20 second update on what
happened at the hearings:
"Now to Washington and
the Senate hearings on campaign fundraising today. Businessman
Warren Meddoff testified that former White House Deputy Chief of
Staff Harold Ickes sent him instructions on how to donate $5 million
dollars to groups tied to the Democratic Party. Mr. Ickes, he was
told, told him to destroy the documents. Mr. Ickes says he does not
remember that."
Only the CBS Evening News
took the hearings seriously, though Bob Schieffer asserted that if the
hearings don't produce a liberal result -- campaign finance reform --
they will be a failure. Just after the first ad break, which followed
stories on Rees-Jones, the Prince and the train crash, Dan Rather
turned to Bob Schieffer for a full story on the Meddoff testimony.
Schieffer recounted Meddoff's
story of how he gave Clinton a card saying that he had a client
willing to donate $5 million. But, the client want to give to
tax-deductible groups. Later, Harold Ickes called and faxed a list of
Democratic supported groups that were tax deductible. Ickes,
apparently realizing the illegality of coordination between the DNC
and non-profit groups, asked that Meddoff tear up the fax. Schieffer
wrapped up by noting that Ickes may not get chance to respond because
the committee decided to switch this week to campaign finance reform.
But, he noted, the deal to bring a bill to the floor had fallen apart
Friday afternoon.
Schieffer asked Trent Lott:
"So if it doesn't come up this session it's not going to really
bother you?"
Trent Lott: "No, it
will come up eventually."
Schieffer concluded his
story: "So for all the noise these hearings have produced it
looks tonight as if nothing will happen, this year anyway, to change
any of it."
Next, the show ran a piece by
Phil Jones recounting his interview with Roger Tamraz.
NBC Nightly News, anchored
for reasons unknown by Brian Williams in London, avoided anything
about the hearings but did at least make a brief note about Reno
looking into O'Leary. Here's what NBC covered Friday night:
- Trevor Rees-Jones update
- Prince Charles public
appearance in Manchester
- Train crash in London
- Governors met on
micro-organism attacking fish in Chesapeake Bay area
- Clintons with Chelsea at
Stanford
- In-Depth on Ted Turner's
pledge of $1 billion to UN. Challenged rich to give more
- Reno stepping up
investigation into O'Leary based on Chung allegation (29 seconds)
- Fleecing of America:
supposed oversupply of Army rockets, but they want more
- Late word that Gore has
hired private attorney (10 seconds)
- The American Spirit: Tom
Brokaw profile of photojournalist Gordon Parks
2) The
Thursday appearance by Roger Tamraz generated some morning show
interest Friday morning and CNN actually offered some more live
coverage.
Friday's Good Morning America
ran a full story reviewing the Tamraz testimony and co-host Charlie
Gibson interviewed Sam Donaldson about the corrupt system Tamraz
highlighted. MRC news analyst Gene Eliasen noticed that Gibson's last
question matched a growing media trend -- argue that all the
illegalities and unethical behavior demonstrate the need for new laws.
(See Bob Schieffer above.) Gibson asked Donaldson:
"Sam, you now have a
witness who says yes, he did buy his way in to access the President
for his $300,000. We had a witness a couple of days ago who said
there was a very direct solicitation for funds in the White House,
right in the presence of the President. Does all this mean, are
these committee members going to tell you this weekend, do you
think, that we're going to get a bill that will really reform the
campaign finance system?"
So, if a bunch of houses are
burglarized in Gibson's New Jersey neighborhood, instead of catching
and prosecuting the burglar, the police and DA should lobby the
freeholders to "reform" the burglary laws.
Friday's Today provided the
first fundraising coverage of the week. In addition to a full story on
Tamraz from Joe Johns, Claire Shipman and Tim Russert talked with Matt
Lauer about the impact of Reno's investigation on Al Gore. Earlier,
Russert came on to analyze Clinton's high approval rating, but MRC
analyst Eric Darbe noted that the discussion also briefly explored the
impact of the fundraising scandal.
As usual, viewers of This
Morning on CBS had no idea any hearings were being held. The CBS
Evening News may air more fundraising stories than ABC and NBC, but in
the morning CBS hasn't aired a fundraising story in its prime 8am hour
since early July.
Speaking of morning
avoidance, the three morning shows have yet to carry an interview on
fundraising with a Senator on the Senate Governmental Affairs
Committee.
CNN went live to Meddoff's
testimony when he began at 10:30am ET, but cut out an hour later, just
before 11:30am. Adding up CNN's live hour with Meddoff, the two hours
of Tamraz and the hour and forty minutes with Fowler and CNN's live
coverage of the three Democrats over two weeks about matches the four
and a half hours they spent showing Haley Barbour in one afternoon.
MSNBC, which showcased live
coverage of Barbour, skipped Meddoff, just as the cable network
ignored Fowler and Tamraz. At about 4:45pm ET MSNBC aired a Money
Trail update. Joe Johns devoted three minutes to the Lott/Daschle
disagreement on bringing campaign finance reform to the floor, but
just one minute to telling viewers what Meddoff said.
3) CNN had
Larry King stick around to 10:30pm ET Thursday night so he could
interview Ted Turner live about his just announced $1 billion gift to
the UN. Here's a revealing exchange about how Turner forms his liberal
conclusions:
Larry King: "Global
warming, you were very strong on that tonight, and you said
'everybody knows' that there's global warming."
Ted Turner: "That's
right, haven't you been outside lately? It's hotter than Hell out
there. The polar ice caps are melting. I got a island, and I know
that the ocean's rising because I watched my beach get washed
away."
Quite the scientist, that
Ted Turner.
--
Brent Baker
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