Turner Hires a Liberal;
Whitewater Check Not Checked
1) CBS Evening
News relayed the White House attack on the Arlington
"smear," but the networks still ignored the story before the
denial.
2) Turner picked
a liberal Democrat, who pushed Clinton left on the environment, to
head the foundation he created to give away $1 billion.
3) ABC, CBS and
CNN have yet to air an evening story on the discovery of the
Whitewater check payable to Bill Clinton.
>>>> MRC Stocking
Stuffer: "Team Clinton" T-shirts for just $5.00. The front
of the shirts have "Team Clinton" above a drawing of Peter
Jennings, Dan Rather and Bryant Gumbel sitting behind an anchor desk.
Beneath them: "The Starting Line-Up of the Pro-Clinton Press
Corps." Only sizes L and XL still available. Please specify size
and send $5.00 per shirt (cash or check payable to the Media Research
Center) to: Media Research Center T-shirt offer 113 South West St.,
2nd floor Alexandria, Va. 22314 <<<<
1
The November 24 CyberAlert reported that one 18 second item on
Friday's Good Morning America was the totality of broadcast network
attention to the Arlington Cemetery allegation "through Friday
night." In fact, as MRC analyst Clay Waters informed me on
Monday, the CBS Evening News carried a short item Friday night. I just
fast-forwarded through it since CBS did not put up a graphic for it.
Between a story on skinheads in Denver and video of a malfunctioning
satellite, Dan Rather took 17 seconds to announce:
"There's been considerable publicity
lately about accusations that President Clinton quote, 'perhaps
provided burial space at Arlington National Cemetery to major campaign
donors,' unquote. Spokesmen for President Clinton flatly and
unequivocally denied this today to CBS News and they called it 'a
deliberate political smear,' unquote."
The
point remains though, as outlined in the last CyberAlert, that in the
48 hour news cycle for the allegation, from release of the Insight
article on Wednesday afternoon through Army Secretary Togo West's
effective defusing of it Friday afternoon, with one small exception,
the broadcast networks did not publicize the charge. From Wednesday's
evening shows through Friday's morning shows the one 18 second GMA
item was the only broadcast network coverage. Just something to keep
in mind if you hear complaints about how the "mainstream"
media spread a false charge unleashed by a right-wing outlet. See the
November 21 CyberAlert on how Mike McCurry denounced the mainstream
press.
Even
after Togo West's Friday afternoon press conference the story didn't
generate much network interest. Friday night neither ABC's World News
Tonight or NBC Nightly News mentioned the subject. (And my
fast-forwarding did not fail me as MRC analysts Gene Eliasen and
Geoffrey Dickens have confirmed the lack of ABC and NBC coverage.) The
flap did get a bit of attention on some of the weekend shows: a short
segment on CBS's Saturday Morning, a brief discussion amongst Robert
Novak, William Safire and Tim Russert on Meet the Press, a topic
raised on the Fox News Sunday roundtable; plus the three items cited
in the last CyberAlert: Margaret Carlson's Outrage of the Week on
CNN's Capital Gang, a roundtable topic on CNN's Late Edition and the
end of show comment from Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts on ABC's This
Week.
2
Last week Ted Turner chose a liberal Democrat to run the foundation he
created to oversee distribution of his $1 billion gift to the United
Nations. By the end of December Tim Wirth, now Undersecretary of
State, will assume the position of President of Turner's just-created
United Nations Foundation. Before joining the Clinton team Wirth had
served as a Congressman and Senator from Colorado, earning a very
liberal reputation.
At
the State Department Wirth has been in charge of the administration's
environmental efforts, including plans for next month's Kyoto summit.
His departure, the Los Angeles Times reported on November 20, is
"leaving his colleagues angry and confused." The Times
explained: "Wirth had been widely seen as likely to head the U.S.
delegation to the global warming talks in Kyoto, Japan, which begin
Dec. 1. His departure, hastily disclosed by Turner, clearly dismayed
other Clinton administration aides and sent them scurrying to find
another candidate to lead the U.S. team."
Wirth told the LA Times that "he still expects 'to be an
enthusiastic member' of the U.S. delegation. 'I don't see what going
to Turner has to do with being on this team,' Wirth said. But other
administration officials questioned whether Wirth would have a role in
Kyoto."
The
same day The Washington Times noted how Wirth had pushed the
administration from the left and tried to shut down any conservative
opposition:
"Wirth became a lightning rod for
conservative opposition to the global warming treaty in Congress
because of his moves calling on the United States and other
industrialized nations to adopt legally binding reductions in carbon
dioxide and other so-called greenhouse gasses while exempting
developing countries from such cuts...
"More recently, Wirth prompted criticism
by privately asking congressional delegates to the UN-sponsored
negotiations not to criticize the administration's position in
Kyoto."
Not
much of a believer in "diversity."
3
ABC, CBS and CNN have yet to tell their evening show viewers anything
about the discovery of the Whitewater check in the trunk of an
abandoned car. The 1982 Madison check for $27,000 payable to Bill
Clinton contradicts his assertion that he never borrowed any money
from the S&L.
When
the story broke back on November 6 CNN's Inside Politics carried a
story and that morning NBC's Today aired a 17-second item. The next
week, on November 10, NBC Nightly News featured the only evening show
story yet on the discovery. (See the November 12 CyberAlert.)
Here's how the other networks have handled the topic:
ABC:
Nothing on the discovery on either Good Morning America or World News
Tonight, reported MRC analyst Gene Eliasen.
CNN: Though Inside Politics has run two
stories, MRC analyst Clay Waters has observed that through last week
the story had never made it onto The World Today.
CBS: Zilch on the Evening News or This
Morning. But, more than a week later, the November 15 CBS News
Saturday Morning gave the revelation a few seconds. Every week during
the last half hour of the two-hour show CBS News radio reporter Mark
Knoller gives hosts Susan Molinari and Russ Mitchell a rundown on the
week at the White House. MRC analyst Steve Kaminski took down his 33
seconds on the Whitewater discovery, the totality of CBS News coverage
so far:
"...The President also finds himself
under assault from other directions. Get this: out of the blue,
workers at a junkyard in Arkansas recently cracked open the trunk of
an old Mercury Marquis and found an uncashed check for more than
$27,000 made out to Bill Clinton. His former partner in Whitewater,
convicted felon James McDougal, says the check is evidence that the
President committed perjury when he gave testimony that he never got a
loan from McDougal's bank. The President's lawyer says the check has
all the credibility of a newly discovered Elvis
autobiography...."
To
put the prominence CBS News gave the story in some perspective, the
Saturday morning CBS show gets lower ratings than cartoons on the WB
network, a network without an affiliate in many major markets.
Finally, CNN has let go of another on-air personality: Susan Rook,
host of TalkBack Live. As noted by John Carmody in the November 24
Washington Post, she's the sixth on-air anchor or reporter dropped by
new CNN President Rick Kaplan. Last week CNN announced the departure
of Kitty Pilgrim, Kathleen Kennedy, Linden Soles, Jeff Levine and Mark
Feldstein.
--
Brent Baker
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts
Media Reality Check | Notable Quotables | Contact
the MRC | Subscribe
|