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1. Watergate Glory Days Revived, Motivations Skipped, Felt a Hero Vanity Fair magazine's well-orchestrated publicity efforts for its revelation of the name of "Deep Throat" led most of the media on Tuesday to enthusiastically re-live their glory days of Watergate. All three broadcast network evening newscasts ran multiple stories on the identification of former FBI official Mark Felt, but unlike CBS and NBC, ABC failed to note that President Nixon's decision to not name him FBI Director, after the passing of J. Edgar Hoover, may have meant personal bitterness was his motivation. CBS featured reminiscing from Dan Rather who declared of Felt: "I think he performed a public service." Later, on CNN's NewsNight, Aaron Brown seemed befuddled that anyone would not consider Felt to be a "hero." When Chuck Colson denounced Felt's betrayal of confidential criminal investigation information ("To think that he was out going around in back alleys at night looking for flower pots, passing information to someone, it's just so demeaning"), Brown demanded: "Why is it not honorable?" Brown conceded that he always "saw Deep Throat as a hero" and that "I want to spin that in an absolutely heroic way." 2. Moran Gives Credibility to "Gulag" Description of Guantanamo At Tuesday morning's presidential news conference in the Rose Garden, ABC's Terry Moran gave credibility to Amnesty International's characterization of the detainee camp at Guantanamo as a "gulag." In his question, Moran proceeded to demand to know "how it came to this," as Moran presumed it "is a view not just held by extremists and anti-Americans, but by groups that have allied themselves with the United States government in the past" and that "in many places in the world the United States these days, under your leadership, is no longer seen as the good guy." 3. Showing Silliness, Morning Shows Look at Hillary v Laura in 2008 Showing their silliness, the ABC and CBS morning shows on Tuesday jumped on Lynne Cheney's joking suggestion that "I think Mrs. Bush ought to run for President. If we want to have a Bush dynasty, let's get Laura Bush." With "Battle of the First Ladies" on screen, Good Morning America opened with side-by-side photos of Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton. ABC's Robin Roberts, in Manhattan, ludicrously claimed such a match-up was "the talk of Washington this morning" and called the imaginary match-up "very interesting," leading reporter Jessica Yellin to agree: "It sure is." Yellin claimed that Senator Clinton's "newfound popularity has Republicans scrambling to find a worthy contender and you won't believe where they're looking." Yellin soon characterized a pedestrian remark from Senator Clinton ("The American military has performed admirably"), as an example of how "lately she's sounding awfully presidential." On CBS's Early Show, Rene Syler insisted from Manhattan that "everyone" in Washington, DC "is buzzing about another race involving Clinton and Bush. Only this time the potential candidates are both women." A giddy Thalia Assuras soon trumpeted: "Some say it would be the battle of the century." Watergate Glory Days Revived, Motivations Skipped, Felt a Hero Vanity Fair magazine's well-orchestrated publicity efforts for its revelation of the name of "Deep Throat" led most of the media on Tuesday to enthusiastically re-live their glory days of Watergate. All three broadcast network evening newscasts ran multiple stories on the identification of former FBI official Mark Felt, but unlike CBS and NBC, ABC failed to note that President Nixon's decision to not name him FBI Director, after the passing of J. Edgar Hoover, may have meant personal bitterness was his motivation. CBS featured reminiscing from Dan Rather who declared of Felt: "I think he performed a public service." Later, on CNN's NewsNight, Aaron Brown seemed befuddled that anyone would not consider Felt to be a "hero." When Chuck Colson denounced Felt's betrayal of confidential criminal investigation information ("To think that he was out going around in back alleys at night looking for flower pots, passing information to someone, it's just so demeaning"), Brown demanded: "Why is it not honorable?" Brown conceded that he always "saw Deep Throat as a hero" and that "I want to spin that in an absolutely heroic way." None of the pieces on Tuesday's World News Tonight, which included anchor Charles Gibson reminiscing with Sam Donaldson, pointed out Felt's bitterness, at being passed over by Nixon, as a motivation. Instead, Brian Ross relayed the party-line of Felt's lawyer, John O'Connor, whose byline is on the upcoming Vanity Fair article and who achieved a rare feat Wednesday morning: simultaneous interviews on all three broadcast network morning shows.
Ross asserted: "Felt was the number-two man in the FBI at the time of Watergate. And according to his lawyer, became frustrated as the Nixon White House tried to block the FBI from fully investigating the political scandal."
Over on the CBS Evening News, Jim Axelrod let Chuck Colson explain why leaking made Felt a "bum" in the eyes of Colson who argued: "If you're the deputy Director of the Federal Bureau of investigation, you walk into the head of the FBI's office and you tell them this is wrong and then you take it to the Oval Office. You don't go sneaking around in dark alleys at night passing tips to reporters."
Later, CNN invited Colson aboard NewsNight where, via satellite from Naples, Florida, he opined: "I was shocked, because I knew Mark Felt well and did not believe -- I thought he was a consummate professional, an FBI man who would take the most sensitive secrets, have everybody's personal files in his control, deputy director. I talked to him often and trusted him with very sensitive materials. So did the President. To think that he was out going around in back alleys at night looking for flower pots, passing information to someone, it's just so demeaning. It's terribly disappointing. It's not the image of the professional FBI that you would expect. It's one more tragedy to chalk up to Watergate." Brown soon gave up trying to understand Colson's view: "So in the end -- I mean, I wonder if there's something generational here, honestly, that people my age -- I'm 55 -- I went through this when I was a kid, really, in the '60s, in the 20s -- I was 20 years old, late 20s, saw Deep Throat as a hero of a sort, because we didn't believe, honestly, that government was willing to investigate itself."
In the next segment, Brown talked with Tim Noah of Slate, Howard Kurtz of the Washington Post and CNN and David Gergen, who checked in from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government where he's the Director of the Center of Public Leadership.. Brown began by reading back to Gergen a statement he made on NPR in 2000: "David, let's start with you. Back five years ago or so, you said this: 'I think if you have information that there's been wrongdoing or skullduggery' -- and congratulations for using that word -- 'or criminal activity in the government, rather than going to the press. It's best to take to it the Justice Department and to authorities. I did not think Deep Throat acted in an honorable way.' Do you still believe that Deep Throat did not act in an honorable way?"
Brown prompted Noah to outline how Felt was "no Boy Scout." Noah elaborated: "He was no Boy Scout. Indeed, he was among other things a lawbreaker. He was prosecuted for allowing break-ins to -- involving members of the -- or suspected members of the Weather Underground, a violent anti-Vietnam organization. He was prosecuted for that and convicted. And later pardoned by Ronald Reagan. So you kind of have a lawbreaker breaking a whistle -- sorry, blowing the whistle on a -- on a lawbreaker. So no one's really a hero here. Plus the motive that Mark Felt had was, at least in part, a simple bureaucratic one. The White House was trying to get control of the FBI, which had been a rogue agency for years under J. Edgar Hoover." A bit later, Brown declared: "I just think -- I don't know hero, that's not a word I throw around. But it just looking at the landscape at the time, what Washington was like, it does make a kind of moral sense to me."
Moran Gives Credibility to "Gulag" Description of Guantanamo At Tuesday morning's presidential news conference in the Rose Garden, ABC's Terry Moran gave credibility to Amnesty International's characterization of the detainee camp at Guantanamo as a "gulag." In his question, Moran proceeded to demand to know "how it came to this," as Moran presumed it "is a view not just held by extremists and anti-Americans, but by groups that have allied themselves with the United States government in the past" and that "in many places in the world the United States these days, under your leadership, is no longer seen as the good guy." A few hundred men caught on the battlefield in a fight against terrorism and then held in a detainee camp where they are well-fed is hardly the same thing as the Soviet gulags which held innocent millions in poor conditions and used them as slave labor.
Last Wednesday, ABC's World News Tonight provided publicity to Amnesty International's charge when anchor Charles Gibson gave time to trumpeting how their "report takes aim at the United States for its treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo. Quote, 'When the most powerful country in the world thumbs its nose at human rights,' Amnesty said, 'it grants a license to others to commit abuse with impunity.'" For more, see the May 26 CyberAlert: www.mediaresearch.org CBS's Thalia Assuras and NBC's David Gregory, in their CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News stories, ran a soundbite from Bush's answer but, ironically, ABC's World News Tonight did not. ABC didn't even carry a story on the news conference.
Two earlier CyberAlert items from this year which recounted questions Moran posed at presidential news conferences:
Showing Silliness, Morning Shows Look at Hillary v Laura in 2008 Showing their silliness, the ABC and CBS morning shows on Tuesday jumped on Lynne Cheney's joking suggestion that "I think Mrs. Bush ought to run for President. If we want to have a Bush dynasty, let's get Laura Bush." With "Battle of the First Ladies" on screen, Good Morning America opened with side-by-side photos of Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton. ABC's Robin Roberts, in Manhattan, ludicrously claimed such a match-up was "the talk of Washington this morning" and called the imaginary match-up "very interesting," leading reporter Jessica Yellin to agree: "It sure is." Yellin claimed that Senator Clinton's "newfound popularity has Republicans scrambling to find a worthy contender and you won't believe where they're looking." Yellin soon characterized a pedestrian remark from Senator Clinton ("The American military has performed admirably"), as an example of how "lately she's sounding awfully presidential." On CBS's Early Show, Rene Syler insisted from Manhattan that "everyone" in Washington, DC "is buzzing about another race involving Clinton and Bush. Only this time the potential candidates are both women." A giddy Thalia Assuras soon trumpeted: "Some say it would be the battle of the century." Charles Gibson teased at the top of the May 31 Good Morning America, over side-by-side pictures of Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton: "The battle of the First Ladies. New talk it could be Hillary versus Laura in the next race for the White House. Is America ready for a female President?"
The MRC's Jessica Barnes took down the 7am half hour segment, which tri-host Robin Roberts happily set up: "The talk of Washington this morning, the 2008 presidential race. Now, some comments Vice President Dick Cheney and his wife, Lynne, made on Larry King last night are fueling talk about a surprising match-up. Could it be a battle of the First Ladies? Our White House correspondent Jessica Yellin has the details from Washington. Very interesting, Jessica."
At least CBS's Early Show, the MRC's Brian Boyd noticed, waited until the 7:30am half hour to jump on the silly story. Rene Syler touted: "The next presidential election is still three years away, but that doesn't seem to matter much in Washington where everyone is buzzing about another race involving Clinton and Bush. Only this time the potential candidates are both women. CBS News correspondent Thalia Assuras has more."
-- Brent Baker
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