No Energy "Crisis" for Bush; European Global Warming Upset; Today Showcased Sheehy's Hillary Tribute; Newsweek IDed Condit, Sort Of
1) "The White House had scrambled to put together a
controversial emergency energy plan to meet what it intimated was a
looming crisis," Dan Rather lectured in pointing out how prices are
falling, so now "Bush is scrambling again to try to keep support for
his plan from falling apart." ABC and NBC led with the same theme but
ABC failed to acknowledge how in March it too had declared an "energy
crisis" as Charles Gibson predicted gas prices will "get even
worse this summer."
2) Dan Rather uniquely highlighted a European plan to
lobby Bush on global warming and the New York Times story about how, in
Rather's words, "Republicans were allowed to pressure Florida
canvassing boards" last fall.
3) Gail Sheehy's Vanity Fair tribute to Hillary Clinton
"reveals how celebrity, character, and chutzpah have turned the
controversial First Lady into a surprisingly effective legislator, whose
marriage is not only enduring but apparently thriving." But Today's
Katie Couric didn't challenge any of Sheehy's assertions.
4) Not until the 11th paragraph of the second piece in its
cover story package did Newsweek acknowledge that Gary Condit is a
Democrat, but not a good one: "He is one of about 30 conservative
'blue dog' Democrats who cannot be counted on to vote the party
line."
Correction: July 16 CyberAlert misspelled the last name of Dick Armey
in quoting Time magazine's Michael Duffy.
1
ABC, CBS
and NBC led Monday night by contrasting the lessening energy crisis with
Bush's insistence on going forward with his energy plan. But in
stressing how lower gasoline and natural prices as well has the lack of
blackouts are undermining Bush's cause, none of the networks
acknowledged how the lower prices and increased supply contradicted their
warnings about how greedy energy operators were deliberately driving up
prices.
"The White House had scrambled to put
together a controversial emergency energy plan to meet what it intimated
was a looming crisis," Dan Rather lectured, but now "Bush is
scrambling again to try to keep support for his plan from falling
apart."
And ABC failed to mention how less than four
months ago it had declared as a fact that America was in an "energy
crisis" as Charles Gibson predicted gas prices will "get even
worse this summer."
For a flavor of the coverage on Monday night,
July 16, here's how the three broadcast network anchors opened their
shows:
-- ABC's World News Tonight. Peter Jennings
announced: "Good evening everyone. We begin tonight with the
President's latest effort to get the nation's attention about energy.
When the President first introduced his energy plan, which was long on
production and shorter on conservation, he painted the nation's energy
situation as a crisis. California's energy crisis was in the news
everyday and the price of gasoline was certainly on its way up. Today the
President is facing opposition to his plans in the Congress and so he's
trying again. And it may be even harder to have the nation see it the
President's way."
Back on the March 30 World News Tonight anchor
Charles Gibson agreed with Bush, as he plugged an upcoming story:
"When we come back, America's energy crisis. Gas prices are soaring
and they'll get even worse this summer."
Apparently not.
-- CBS Evening News. Dan Rather declared:
"Good evening. Remember those dire predictions of $3 a gallon
gasoline and a summer of blackouts? Isn't working out that way. The
Energy Department reported today that since peaking in May gasoline prices
have plunged a whopping 30 cents a gallon, down to nationwide average
tonight of $1.41 for self-serve regular. Prices for electricity and
natural gas are falling as well. The White House had scrambled to put
together a controversial emergency energy plan to meet what it intimated
was a looming crisis. Now as CBS's John Roberts reports, President Bush
is scrambling again to try to keep support for his plan from falling
apart."
(ABC's Michele Norris had pegged the average
gas price at ten cents higher as she noted it had fallen from $1.76 per
gallon in May when Bush announced his plan, but "the average price at
the pump has since fallen to $1.51 per gallon.")
-- NBC Nightly News. Brian Williams opened the
show: "Good evening. The summer of 2001 is in full swing and so far
no sign of those dire predictions of just a few months ago -- like $3 a
gallon gasoline, power outages on both the West and East coasts. While no
one is disappointed, nothing like that has happened so far and life as we
know seems to go on as usual across the country. But the Bush White House
tonight is going ahead with an energy plan that assumes the nation's
energy situation is still very much in crisis."
At least in the subsequent report Robert Hager
pointed out that rising prices and shortages could return.
2
Monday
night, of the broadcast evening shows, CBS uniquely highlighted a European
plan to lobby Bush on global warming and the New York Times story about
how, in Dan Rather's words, "Republicans were allowed to pressure
Florida canvassing boards" last fall.
Rather announced on the July 16 CBS Evening
News: "The President's rejection of the Kyoto treaty to cut global
warming is the focus of a meeting this week in the former German capital
of Bonn. 180 nations hope to salvage the pact without U.S. support. Mr.
Bush travels to Europe for other meetings starting Thursday and European
leaders reportedly plan a joint effort to persuade him to change his mind
about the global warming treaty."
A bit later on the same show, Rather intoned:
"There's some new fallout from the 2000 presidential election mess.
Researchers at MIT and Cal Tech said today as many as two million ballots
nationwide were not counted because of what are called 'equipment and
ballot problems.' And some Democrats are calling for investigations
after the New York Times reported Republicans were allowed to pressure
Florida canvassing boards to accept questionable overseas absentee
ballots. But the Times found that even if all those flawed ballots had
been tossed it would not have changed the outcome in Florida."
That's the second hit on the CBS Evening
News for the same New York Times story which conceded they didn't find
anything which would have changed the result. As detailed in the July 16
CyberAlert, the then-upcoming story led the July 14 CBS Evening News.
3
Gail
Sheehy has penned vicious articles about conservatives, such as Newt
Gingrich, but after she wrote a gushing tribute to Senator Hillary Clinton
in the August Vanity Fair, Today's Katie Couric didn't challenge her
glowing assessments. Instead, she encouraged Sheehy to extrapolate.
"She has also won a great deal of respect
by working very, very hard," Couric asserted, "and by not
pulling any kind of prima donna act." Couric marveled at how
"the conservative Republicans speak with her, speak of her in such
vitriolic terms that they're like puddy in her hands up there! I mean many
of them said, 'Oh my constituents will kill me but I really like
her.'" When Sheehy referred to how the Senate welcomes scoundrels and
Hillary could be called a "co-scoundrel," Couric recoiled:
"Co-scoundrel? That's pretty harsh."
For a flavor of Sheehy's tribute, check out
the article summary in Vanity Fair below the headline, "Hillary's
Solo Act." It oozed: "Hillary Clinton has defied conventional
wisdom, slipping into her new role of Senator as if she'd been groomed
for that cozy, backslapping, mostly male club. Which, in fact, she has: by
the imprint of her parents, by her experience at the then male-dominated
Yale Law School, and even, paradoxically, by her trials as Bill
Clinton's wife. Trailing Hillary from Capitol Hill to an intimate
vacation with Bill Clinton in the Caribbean, Gail Sheehy reveals how
celebrity, character, and chutzpah have turned the controversial First
Lady into a surprisingly effective legislator, whose marriage is not only
enduring but apparently thriving."
MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens took down all of
Couric's questions on the July 16 show and some of Sheehy's replies.
Couric set up the segment: "Hillary
Rodham Clinton has been serving as Senator from New York since January.
Now journalist Gail Sheehy who has covered the former First Lady's career
assesses Clinton's new role in the August issue of Vanity Fair magazine in
an article simply called, 'Hillary's Solo Act.' Gail Sheehy, welcome back
nice to see you....So what is the headline? And obviously we are going to
get into further detail. But what do you think would be the headline of
her, her stint so far as a U.S. Senator?"
-- Couric: "But it's interesting you say
she's one of the boys but it seems to me from your article that she's
helped to become one by using her feminine wiles."
Sheehy: "Absolutely. She is using the whole
armor-motorium of feminine wiles on the Senate floor. And it was
fascinating to observe her. Literally doing a bill. I mean rubbing
people's arms and the small of their back, fluttering her hands before
conservative Republicans, telling them jokes, co-sponsoring bills with
them. And taking advantage of the fact that the Senate is the best refuge
for a co-scoundrel. You know once you get into the club you're one of them
and they'll protect you. So all the scoundrels going on around the
outside, they give her Senatorial courtesy."
Couric: "Co-scoundrel? That's pretty
harsh."
-- Couric: "And of course the
controversial pardon issue which really, wasn't necessarily, that she was
tarnished by, certainly."
-- Couric: "Giving Senator Clinton her
due, though. We talk about her feminine wiles she has also won a great
deal of respect by working very, very hard. And by not pulling any kind of
prima donna act. Her Secret Service detail is very much in the background.
She goes to all sorts of meetings that some people, in the past, have not
attended. For example I know she goes to a meeting over at the House of
Representatives with all the folks from New York. Which, I guess, Moynihan
never attended, right?"
Sheehy: "And she's been trying to get an
economic package for New York by, by building support in the, in the
House. She goes to a prayer meeting. She's made friends with conservative
Republicans. She, the wonderful thing about Hillary's position is she,
her, her celebrity trumps her scandals. And as long as you can get Hillary
to co-sponsor legislation and show up at a press conference with you, you
can be guaranteed that 10 grown men will drop to their knees and start
taking pictures of you and she and you may end up in the, in the front
page of The New York Times."
Couric: "Right. So are you saying her
colleagues are using her for that reason?"
-- Couric: "And, and it's been quite
remarkable. Because she is so disliked and, and the conservative
Republicans speak with her, speak of her in such vitriolic terms that
they're like putty in her hands up there! I mean many of them said, 'Oh my
constituents will kill me but I really like her.'"
-- Couric: "Do people, or are people
looking at her, I think they've always saw her as someone with
presidential ambitions. Has that been laid to rest, at least for now
temporarily?"
-- Couric: "And we're out of time. But of
course you talk about the public's fascination with the Clinton's marriage
as well. It's an interesting article called, 'Hillary's Solo Act.' Gail
Sheehy, as always, thanks so much for coming by."
4
Newsweek
finally identified Gary Condit as a Democrat, barely, and then as more of
a Republican one. As FNC's Brit Hume reminded viewers on Monday night in
relaying the findings of an MRC study on the resistance by the networks to
labeling Condit, last week's 1500 word article in Newsweek failed to tag
Condit as a Democrat.
This week, the July 23 issue featured the
Levy/Condit story on its cover. The first piece inside looked at the
investigation, but didn't label Condit. Not until the 11th paragraph of
the second story, on Condit's background, do Newsweek readers finally
learn of Condit's party affiliation. The piece by Evan Thomas and Karen
Breslau, headlined "Behind the Smile: From preacher's kid to pol
with a taste for motorcycles and mosh pits, the odyssey of Gary Condit,"
included this sentence: "He is one of about 30 conservative 'blue
dog' Democrats who cannot be counted on to vote the party line."
In other words, he's sort of a Republican
kind of guy.
Now if only the weekday version of the CBS
Evening News would acknowledge the story even exists. On Monday night,
after both the Saturday and Sunday editions of the show ran stories, the
CBS Evening News ignored it again, just as Dan Rather has on every weekday
so far.
ABC and NBC each ran one story each, but for
the first weekday in a week it did not lead the NBC Nightly News. -- Brent Baker
>>>
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