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1. Net Seize on Republican Hagel's Comparison of Iraq to Vietnam Like feeding raw meat to a lion, Republican Senator Chuck Hagel on Sunday gave television journalists what they wanted and couldn't resist: A soundbite comparing Iraq to Vietnam when he said on ABC's This Week that "we are locked into a bogged-down problem, not dissimilar to where we were in Vietnam." CNN's Aaron Brown trumpeted at the top of Monday's NewsNight how "the anti-war voices are not just liberal groups camped out with Cindy Sheehan in Texas, but at least one senior Republican Senator, who has always had questions about the war, but now compares it to a war he fought a generation ago." On the CBS Evening News, anchor John Roberts played up Hagel's influence: "What's the White House making of what would seem to be some pretty harsh criticism from a guy who's supposed to be on the President's team?" NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams listed a litany of setbacks for Bush on Iraq, ending with how "it doesn't help that a prominent Senator, in his own party, is comparing it to Vietnam." In the morning on Today, Ann Curry stressed how "a prominent Republican Senator compared the war in Iraq to Vietnam" and Don Teague touted how Bush is "even facing fire from within his own party." 2. GMA Features Sheehan Ally, Pleads: "Can Anti-War Moms Stop Bush?" With "CAN ANTI-WAR MOMS STOP BUSH?" on screen throughout the interview session, ABC on Monday morning didn't let Cindy Sheehan's departure from Crawford deter them from promoting her cause as they brought aboard Celeste Zappala of Sheehan's group, Gold Star Families for Peace. Co-host Charles Gibson gave her a lot of credit, asking about President's Bush upcoming speech in Salt Lake City, from where Zappala appeared: "Do you think, Ms. Zappala, that he would be making these speeches were it not for your group's protest?" In the midst of giving her publicity, Gibson fretted: "You are but a small group there that is perched on the approach to the President's ranch. One hundred, two hundred people. Do you really think you've got people talking about the war?" Gibson also did something unusual, raising how Sheehan called the U.S. "morally repugnant" and he pressed Zappala about whether she worries that her protests "might dishonor" her son who died in Iraq? 3. ABC's Gibson Scolds Americans for Excessive Per Person Oil Use ABC's Charles Gibson on Monday night tried to make World New Tonight viewers feel guilty about all the oil Americans consume as he compared per person U.S. daily consumption unfavorably with less consumption in Japan and Britain. Left unmentioned by Gibson: How the U.S. as larger geographically must use more fuel for shipping, transportation and travel, as well as all the energy consumption required in the U.S. for products we export, such as in agriculture. 4. HBO Show Ends with Shot at Haliburton and "Corporate War-Mongers" One last shot at Iraq as a "corporate war." On Sunday's series finale of the HBO show Six Feet Under, a drama about a family which runs a Los Angeles funeral home, twenty-something daughter "Claire" decided to move to New York City. Saying good-bye to her boyfriend, she asked that he "promise that if the corporate war-mongers decide that we have to invade Iran, and they reinstate the draft, that you will move to Canada....promise me that you won't get your head blown off so Haliburton and Bechtel can get richer." Net Seize on Republican Hagel's Comparison of Iraq to Vietnam Like feeding raw meat to a lion, Republican Senator Chuck Hagel on Sunday gave television journalists what they wanted and couldn't resist: A soundbite comparing Iraq to Vietnam when he said on ABC's This Week that "we are locked into a bogged-down problem, not dissimilar to where we were in Vietnam." CNN's Aaron Brown trumpeted at the top of Monday's NewsNight how "the anti-war voices are not just liberal groups camped out with Cindy Sheehan in Texas, but at least one senior Republican Senator, who has always had questions about the war, but now compares it to a war he fought a generation ago." On the CBS Evening News, anchor John Roberts played up Hagel's influence: "What's the White House making of what would seem to be some pretty harsh criticism from a guy who's supposed to be on the President's team?" NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams listed a litany of setbacks for Bush on Iraq, ending with how "it doesn't help that a prominent Senator, in his own party, is comparing it to Vietnam." In the morning on Today, Ann Curry stressed how "a prominent Republican Senator compared the war in Iraq to Vietnam" and Don Teague touted how Bush is "even facing fire from within his own party."
Reporter David Gregory soon asserted: "Yet for all the President's talk about progress in Iraq, an ongoing political process and the training of Iraqi security forces, at home opposition to the war is growing."
GMA Features Sheehan Ally, Pleads: "Can Anti-War Moms Stop Bush?" With "CAN ANTI-WAR MOMS STOP BUSH?" on screen throughout the interview session, ABC on Monday morning didn't let Cindy Sheehan's departure from Crawford deter them from promoting her cause as they brought aboard Celeste Zappala of Sheehan's group, Gold Star Families for Peace. Co-host Charles Gibson gave her a lot of credit, asking about President's Bush upcoming speech in Salt Lake City, from where Zappala appeared: "Do you think, Ms. Zappala, that he would be making these speeches were it not for your group's protest?" In the midst of giving her publicity, Gibson fretted: "You are but a small group there that is perched on the approach to the President's ranch. One hundred, two hundred people. Do you really think you've got people talking about the war?" Gibson also did something unusual, raising how Sheehan called the U.S. "morally repugnant" and he pressed Zappala about whether she worries that her protests "might dishonor" her son who died in Iraq? At the top of the August 22 Good Morning America, Charles Gibson offered this plug: "This morning, the war of words as President Bush launches a new PR campaign for the war in Iraq today protesters will be outside. You'll meet one mom in the middle of it." Gibson set up the session with Zappala: "More now on President Bush and the anti-war movement. As we mentioned, the President expected to face an anti-war protest in Salt Lake City this morning. The anti-war movement has been getting a lot of attention because of Cindy Sheehan who launched a protest at President Bush's Texas ranch. But we're going to turn this morning to Celeste Zappala who, along with Cindy Sheehan, founded the group Gold Star Families for Peace." On screen: "CAN ANTI-WAR MOMS STOP BUSH?" The MRC's Brian Boyd took down Gibson's questions to Zappala, who appeared from street-side in Salt Lake City:
-- "The President makes two speeches this week on the war: In Salt Lake City, later this week in Idaho. Do you think, Ms. Zappala, that he would be making these speeches were it not for your group's protest?"
-- Gibson: "Do you really think you've got a dialogue going in this country? You are but a small group there that is perched on the approach to the President's ranch. One hundred, two hundred people. Do you really think you've got people talking about the war?"
-- Gibson: "There is a lot of attention that is focused on Cindy Sheehan. She gave a speech in April which has now come to light. I want to play just a brief cut from it."
-- Gibson: "Let me ask you, Ms. Zappala, the tough question. And that is, you mentioned Sherwood, and you lost a son, Sergeant Sherwood Baker, is what you're doing in anyway, do you worry that it might dishonor him or in anyway diminish his death?"
ABC's Gibson Scolds Americans for Excessive Per Person Oil Use ABC's Charles Gibson on Monday night tried to make World New Tonight viewers feel guilty about all the oil Americans consume as he compared per person U.S. daily consumption unfavorably with less consumption in Japan and Britain. Left unmentioned by Gibson: How the U.S. as larger geographically must use more fuels for shipping, transportation and travel, as well as all the energy consumption required in the U.S. for products we export, such as in agriculture.
With a graphic on-screen of rows of barrels or oil behind flags of the U.S., Japan and Britain, Gibson followed up an "Over a Barrel" series story on what people are doing about high cost of gas, including a man who no longer drives his SUV, by delivering this scolding:
HBO Show Ends with Shot at Haliburton and "Corporate War-Mongers" One last shot at Iraq as a "corporate war." On Sunday's series finale of the HBO show Six Feet Under, a drama about a family which runs a Los Angeles funeral home, twenty-something daughter "Claire" decided to move to New York City. Saying good-bye to her boyfriend, she asked that he "promise that if the corporate war-mongers decide that we have to invade Iran, and they re-instate the draft, that you will move to Canada....promise me that you won't get your head blown off so Haliburton and Bechtel can get richer." Earlier in the show she was appalled to learn that her boyfriend, Ted, a lawyer who in an earlier episode defended the Iraq war, listens to Christian rock music. In the scene on the August 21 finale of the series which ran for five years, "Claire," played by Lauren Ambrose, and "Ted" sat at table in his apartment.
"Claire," who is about to drive to Manhattan to start a new life after the death of her brother, makes a request: "I want you to promise that if the corporate war-mongers decide that we have to invade Iran, and they reinstate the draft, that you will move to Canada." Earlier CyberAlert coverage of the "Claire" character's political outbursts:
August 19 CyberAlert. Going out with another rant against the Iraq war. On the penultimate episode aired August 14 of the drama, centered around a Los Angeles funeral home, a "Support Our Troops" sticker on a SUV set off an angry rant from "Claire," a twenty-something major character. She yelled that "the whole world hates us for going in there in the first place! And terrorists are still going to be blowing s*** up in this country for the next hundred years! And the best thing she can think to do about it is put a sticker on that enormous s*** box!" Claire also contended: "You know they still bring the wounded soldiers back at night so the press can't even film it and nobody sees?" See: www.mediaresearch.org On the July 31 episode of the weekly HBO drama, "Claire Fisher" (played by Lauren Ambrose), a struggling artist just out of college who is the sister of two brothers who run a Los Angeles funeral home after the passing of their father, goes on a date with a lawyer at a law firm where she is temping. See: www.mrc.org HBO's page for Six Feet Under: www.hbo.com The show was created by Alan Ball of American Beauty movie fame. For a list of the producers and writers: www.hbo.com
The page on the "Claire Fisher" character: www.hbo.com
-- Brent Baker
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