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1. Dionne, Borger and Ifill Fret About Snub of Carter from Funeral Some more fretting over the weekend about the supposed "snubbing" of former President Jimmy Carter from the official U.S. delegation to the Pope's funeral. Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr., a former reporter for the Post and New York Times, made Carter's exclusion his "Outrage of the Week" on Saturday's Capital Gang on CNN. The night before, on PBS's Washington Week, Gloria Borger of U.S. News and CBS News reflected the media obsession as she conceded that "all week long we've been trying to figure out was he [Carter] invited or wasn't he invited." Host Gwen Ifill called Carter's absence "an awkward omission." 2. CBS Cites "Exceptional" Work of Iraqi Cameraman Detained by U.S. CBS News on Friday night came to the defense of an Iraqi cameraman in their employ who was detained by U.S. officials after he was shot by a soldier and his film showed the immediate aftermath of some bombings, which suggested he had foreknowledge. CBS reporter Lee Cowan in Iraq told CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer: "This is a man that was recommended to us by someone that we worked with for a long time here in Baghdad that we trust deeply. He was a graduate of the university here. One of his family members actually works for the police force up in Mosul, and from every indication that we had, the work that he'd done for us the past three months had been exceptional." 3. Rather & Mapes Win Peabody Award for Abu Ghraib Abuse Story Dan Rather and Mary Mapes, the reporter/producer team behind the discredited Bush National Guard hit job, won a prestigious Peabody Award last Thursday for their Abu Ghraib story which aired earlier last year on 60 Minutes II. The University of Georgia's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication issues the awards every year and Horace Newcomb, director of the Peabody Awards, insisted to the New York Times: "It was one of the most important stories of the year and was one of the crucial components of the ongoing conflict in Iraq." Mapes, who was fired by CBS over the Bush story, told the New York Times: "I think there is at least context here, if not vindication. And I am happy for my colleagues at CBS." 4. You Read It Here First: WashPost Picks Up Baldwin's Anti-GOP Rant You read it here first. The "Names & Faces" column in Saturday's Washington Post picked up on a quote from Alec Baldwin cited in the April 4 CyberAlert: "'The leadership of the Republican Party are a bunch of sociopathic maniacs who have their lips super-glued to the [posterior] of the conservative right,' so Alec Baldwin claimed while yammering on HBO's Real Time With Bill Maher last week." The Post's Anne Schroeder, who compiles the Style section column, quipped: "It's a wonder he's not in Washington more often." Dionne, Borger and Ifill Fret About Snub of Carter from Funeral Some more fretting over the weekend about the supposed "snubbing" of former President Jimmy Carter from the official U.S. delegation to the Pope's funeral. Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr., a former reporter for the Post and New York Times, made Carter's exclusion his "Outrage of the Week" on Saturday's Capital Gang on CNN. The night before, on PBS's Washington Week, Gloria Borger of U.S. News and CBS News reflected the media obsession as she conceded that "all week long we've been trying to figure out was he [Carter] invited or wasn't he invited." Host Gwen Ifill called Carter's absence "an awkward omission."
Dionne's "Outrage of the Week" at the end of the April 9 Capital Gang:
On the April 8 Washington Week on PBS, Gloria Borger asked Christian Science Monitor reporter Linda Feldman: "Well, there is someone who didn't go, and that is Jimmy Carter. And all week long, we've been trying to figure out was he invited or wasn't he invited. So what's the real story?" Dionne, Borger and Ifill were just continuing an obsession expressed last week by NBC News reporters and anchors, as recounted in two CyberAlert items:
-- April 6 CyberAlert: NBC's Today treated the lack of inclusion of former President Jimmy Carter, in the official U.S. delegation to Friday's funeral for the later Pope John Paul II, as an inexcusable snub by the Bush White House and the biggest news of Wednesday morning. Katie Couric insisted at the top of the show that with President Bush going to Rome with the First Lady and Condoleezza Rice, as well as his father and Bill Clinton, "the question some people are asking is where's President Carter in all this? Are the Bushes and the Carters the modern day version of the Hatfields and the McCoys? Andrea Mitchell soon fretted: "You have to wonder why the White House couldn't have asked the Vatican to permit one more person in the Basilica? Particularly a Nobel Laureate who actually worked on Third World issues with John Paul II. And it seems as though this snub may have had something to do with Carter's strong criticism of the President at last summer's Democratic convention." Matt Lauer wanted to know "why doesn't Secretary of State Rice step aside and say, 'you take my spot, you know, former President Carter?'" See: www.mediaresearch.org
CBS Cites "Exceptional" Work of Iraqi Cameraman Detained by U.S. CBS News on Friday night came to the defense of an Iraqi cameraman in their employ who was detained by U.S. officials after he was shot by a soldier and his film showed the immediate aftermath of some bombings, which suggested he had foreknowledge. CBS reporter Lee Cowan in Iraq told CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer: "This is a man that was recommended to us by someone that we worked with for a long time here in Baghdad that we trust deeply. He was a graduate of the university here. One of his family members actually works for the police force up in Mosul, and from every indication that we had, the work that he'd done for us the past three months had been exceptional."
For a Saturday AP dispatch, "U.S. Military Detains Cameraman in Iraq," go to: news.yahoo.com
Schieffer: "The military command in Iraq notified us today that they have detained a freelance cameraman who has been working for CBS News in Iraq. He was shot and wounded by American troops in northern Iraq on Tuesday, and the Army says it now has reason to believe he poses a threat to coalition forces, and suspects him of cooperating with the insurgents. Obviously, we take this very seriously. We want to bring in Lee Cowan in Baghdad and Jim Stewart in Washington with the latest on this. Lee, what can you tell us about this? What do you know?"
Rather & Mapes Win Peabody Award for Abu Ghraib Abuse Story Dan Rather and Mary Mapes, the reporter/producer team behind the discredited Bush National Guard hit job, won a prestigious Peabody Award last Thursday for their Abu Ghraib story which aired earlier last year on 60 Minutes II. The University of Georgia's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication issues the awards every year and Horace Newcomb, director of the Peabody Awards, insisted to the New York Times: "It was one of the most important stories of the year and was one of the crucial components of the ongoing conflict in Iraq." Mapes, who was fired by CBS over the Bush story, told the New York Times: "I think there is at least context here, if not vindication. And I am happy for my colleagues at CBS." The entry about CBS in Peabody's list of winners: "60 Minutes II: Abuse at Abu Ghraib CBS News This Dan Rather report broke the story of the abuses at Abu Ghraib Prison in Baghdad, airing for the first time the photographs of American soldiers and abused Iraqi prisoners that shocked the world." For the full list of winners: www.peabody.uga.edu For the April 7 press release from the Peabody committee, "64th Annual Peabody Awards winners announced: Morley Safer to Host Awards Ceremony on May 16 at New York City's Waldorf-Astoria," go to: www.peabody.uga.edu An excerpt from an April 8 New York Times article by David Carr: ....But it was the award to "60 Minutes II" that set tongues wagging because of the recent controversy that led to Ms. Mapes's firing and Mr. Rather's early departure. (He continues to work for CBS as a reporter.) Horace Newcomb, director of the Peabody Awards, said that in this instance, an award is just an award. The prison story "stands on its own merits," he said. "It was one of the most important stories of the year and was one of the crucial components of the ongoing conflict in Iraq." Susan Stewart, a television critic with TV Guide and one of the judges of the awards, concurred. "I have been participating in these awards for a number of years, and there is never any agenda; it is a pure process," she said. "Now, we don't operate in a vacuum and you can't turn your brain off, but the process of judging the work is separate from any other consideration." In citing the report, the committee said, "This Dan Rather report broke the story of the abuses at Abu Ghraib Prison in Baghdad, airing for the first time the photographs of American soldiers and abused Iraqi prisoners that shocked the world. " Ms. Mapes, who...is writing a book about the controversy created by the report on the president's National Guard service, said she got a call from Mr. Rather yesterday, one she received with a fair amount of trepidation. "He said, 'I have some news for you,' and I said, 'Now what?' " Mr. Rather related the happy news that their Abu Ghraib collaboration had received one of broadcasting's highest distinctions. Ms. Mapes described the experience as bittersweet, "but more sweet than bitter." "I was happy to get the news, especially from someone I love and respect so much," she said. "I think there is at least context here, if not vindication. And I am happy for my colleagues at CBS. I have always tried to separate the people who flicked me like a piece of lint off their shoulder when things were tough and the people that I worked with, who I remain very proud of." While Mr. Rather may have called Ms. Mapes with the news, he chose to issue a very formal statement -- no Rather-isms to mark the honor -- instead of being interviewed. "Each of us who worked on the Abu Ghraib story for CBS News is deeply and humbly appreciative to the University of Georgia's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, and to its advisory board of judges, for honoring the report with a Peabody Award," the statement said.... End of Excerpt
For the story in full: www.nytimes.com
You Read It Here First: WashPost Picks Up Baldwin's Anti-GOP Rant You read it here first. The "Names & Faces" column in Saturday's Washington Post picked up on a quote from Alec Baldwin cited in the April 4 CyberAlert: "'The leadership of the Republican Party are a bunch of sociopathic maniacs who have their lips super-glued to the [posterior] of the conservative right,' so Alec Baldwin claimed while yammering on HBO's Real Time With Bill Maher last week." The Post's Anne Schroeder, who compiles the Style section column, quipped: "It's a wonder he's not in Washington more often."
For the April 9 "Names & Faces" column: www.washingtonpost.com
For the CyberAlert item in full: www.mediaresearch.org I searched Yahoo News and Nexis for any citations of the Baldwin quote highlighted by the Post and found none, so CyberAlert remains the only source I can find for the Post item.
-- Brent Baker
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