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1. Nets Barely Notice Surge in GDP as They Focus on Dow Plunge The ABC, CBS and NBC evening newscasts on Friday all devoted full stories to the fall in the stock market, touted as "the worst two-day point drop for the Dow in five years," but barely had time for a sentence about the 3.4 percent second quarter jump in the GDP, the biggest in over a year. In fact, neither ABC nor NBC cited the specific 3.4 percent rise in the Gross Domestic Product, the measure which the AP on Friday described as the "best barometer of the country's economic fitness." ABC was the most negative. "Stock slide," anchor Charles Gibson teased, "Wall Street finishes the worst week of the year down nearly 600 points." Gibson soon highlighted that news, as he only alluded to the good GDP number, when he reported "the worst week for the Dow in five years. Even positive news on economic growth wasn't enough to keep investors from selling." Reporter Betsy Stark agreed as she too only made a passing reference to the GDP: "In fact, buried inside that positive report on Gross Domestic Product today was more evidence of what economists now describe as an outright recession in the housing sector." ABC didn't even put the GDP number on screen as Stark devoted her entire story to the impact of the declining housing market before concluding that "it increases the odds of a downturn in the overall economy..." 2. Broder Baffled Bush 'Against Providing Health Insurance for Kids' Washington Post reporter and columnist David Broder, known as the "dean" of the Washington press corps, perfectly encapsulated, on Friday's Washington Week on PBS, the media establishment's more government spending is the answer to everything attitude when he acted bewildered as to how anyone could oppose a massive expansion of a federal health insurance program. When host Gwen Ifill raised how "Congress would like to double the number of children covered" by the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), Broder marveled at how "the President has threatened the veto, and everybody I've talked to in the administration this past week says take that threat seriously." Broder equated federal spending with resolving a problem as he wondered: "I mean, who can be against providing health insurance for kids?" Talking over him, Ifill, a veteran of the New York Times and NBC News, echoed, "yeah." Neither Ifill nor Broder noted the amount of the proposed additional spending Bush would veto: $50 billion. 3. Olbermann Cracks: With Cheney Out,'Bush Will Get to Be President' Keith Olbermann opened Friday night's Countdown show on MSNBC by cracking about how, with Vice President Dick Cheney scheduled for a surgical procedure Saturday to replace a battery, "for a few hours, at least, George W. Bush will actually get to be President." 4. ABC Uses Murder of Cop as Hook to Push for More Gun Control On Friday's World News, ABC anchor Charles Gibson incorrectly implied that a murder suspect in New York City had purchased his weapon from a gun store in Virginia, ignoring the fact that the original owner, now deceased, had purchased the gun legally from the shop in 1999, and that police have not yet discovered how the suspect obtained the gun. Instead, Gibson contended that this case shows that criminals often go to shops for their weapons as he set up the piece: "Well, the recent shooting death of a New York City police officer is shedding some light on how criminals get their guns. Too often, they simply go to a store. And they know which stores to go to. According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, one percent of this nation's gun stores sell the guns that account for nearly 60 percent of the guns traced to crimes." During the shooting, another police officer was wounded by a second suspect using a gun purchased in Tennessee, but the ABC story, filed by correspondent David Wright, focused only on the gun involved in the fatal shooting of Officer Russel Timoshenko, and on the gun shop, R&B Guns, of Hampton, Virginia, that originally sold the weapon in 1999. 5. Rue Edwards Poverty Tour Shows 'Nation's Inability to Be Moved' Newsweek's Jonathan Darman lamented in the July 30 issue that the John Edwards poverty tour/publicity tour didn't passionately grip America, that it did not immediately become a mythic event, like filthy-rich Bobby Kennedy's poverty tour in 1968. In a dramatic flourish, the young Harvard-educated reporter blamed this tragedy on a not-very-compassionate America: "There is something tragic about Edwards's failure to break through. Today, 37 million Americans live below the poverty line, 12 million more than at the time of Kennedy's death. And yet Edwards's call of conscience has not resonated. By all rights, Edwards, the son of a millworker, should have an easier time talking about poverty than did Kennedy, the son of a millionaire. His difficulty speaks to the candidate's inability to connect. It also speaks to the nation's inability to be moved." Nets Barely Notice Surge in GDP as They Focus on Dow Plunge The ABC, CBS and NBC evening newscasts on Friday all devoted full stories to the fall in the stock market, touted as "the worst two-day point drop for the Dow in five years," but barely had time for a sentence about the 3.4 percent second quarter jump in the GDP, the biggest in over a year. In fact, neither ABC nor NBC cited the specific 3.4 percent rise in the Gross Domestic Product, the measure which the AP on Friday described as the "best barometer of the country's economic fitness." Not one of the three evening newscasts mentioned how the Dow is still well above the 13,000 level it broke through in April and none noted fresh good news on inflation. ABC was the most negative. "Stock slide," World News anchor Charles Gibson teased, "Wall Street finishes the worst week of the year down nearly 600 points." Gibson soon highlighted that news, as he only alluded to the good GDP number, when he reported "the worst week for the Dow in five years. Even positive news on economic growth wasn't enough to keep investors from selling. Among other things, they had to contend with a battered housing market." Reporter Betsy Stark agreed as she too only made a passing reference to the GDP: "It sure is, Charlie. In fact, buried inside that positive report on Gross Domestic Product today was more evidence of what economists now describe as an outright recession in the housing sector." ABC didn't even put the GDP number on screen as Stark devoted her entire story to the impact of the declining housing market before concluding that "it increases the odds of a downturn in the overall economy since housing now accounts for roughly one in ten American jobs." Over on the CBS Evening News, anchor Katie Couric suggested "Wall Street investors may be seeing stars after the beating they took this week. The Dow had another big loss today, more than 200 points. For the week, the Dow gave up nearly 600 points -- or about four and a quarter percent -- its worst week in five years." Actually, percentage-wise, it's really the biggest drop in the Dow in four years. Reporter Kelly Wallace, formerly of CNN, began with a sentence about the GDP: "Better-than-expected economic growth for the second quarter touted by President Bush and still stocks tumbled." But unlike ABC and NBC, CBS at least put the "3.4%" on screen. As opposed ABC's dour spin, Wallace featured brokers and investors who expect the stock market to recover over the long term. Wallace pointed out that "from 1985 to 2006, the Dow grew an average of 8.6 percent per year. If you invested $1,000 back then, you'd have over $15,000 today."
NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams highlighted "the worst two-day point drop for the Dow in five years" before turning to CNBC's Erin Burnett for an explanation. After listing three reasons for the downturn, Burnett delivered one non-specific sentence about the GDP: "There is good news out there and today we found out the U.S. economy is growing a lot more quickly than people expected."
A Friday AP dispatch by Tim Paradis differentiated between the point and percentage reductions: "The Dow fell 208.10, or 1.54 percent, to 13,265.47, with nearly 140 points of that loss coming in the final half-hour of trading. For the week, the index fell more than 585 points, or 4.23 percent. The week's point decline was the worst in five years, while the percentage decline was the largest since late March 2003." See: news.yahoo.com Aversa pointed out another upbeat development skipped by the networks: "An inflation gauge closely watched by the Federal Reserve showed "core" prices -- excluding food and energy -- rose at a rate of just 1.4 percent in the second quarter. That was down sharply from a 2.4 percent pace in the first quarter and was the smallest increase in four years." Given how the media choose to highlight bad news on the economy over good news, another fact relayed by Aversa is hardly a shock: "Bush has been trying to counter weak public-approval ratings for his handling of the economy. Only 37 percent approve of his performance, close to a record low, according to a recent AP-Ipsos poll." For Aversa's story: news.yahoo.com The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video for the July 27 ABC and CBS evening newscast stories, I handled NBC: # ABC's World News:
CHARLES GIBSON: Well, it's been a rough week on Wall Street. The Dow closed down 208 points today. For the week, it dropped 586. That's the worst week for the Dow in five years. Even positive news on economic growth wasn't enough to keep investors from selling. Among other things, they had to contend with a battered housing market. And ABC's Betsy Stark is here. And, Betsy, the housing slump seems to be taking its toll.
KATIE COURIC: Meanwhile, Wall Street investors may be seeing stars after the beating they took this week. The Dow had another big loss today, more than 200 points. For the week, the Dow gave up nearly 600 points -- or about four and a quarter percent -- its worst week in five years. Here's Kelly Wallace.
BRIAN WILLIAMS: Now we move to Wall Street and a dramatic end to a brutal week for the markets: The worst two-day point drop for the Dow in five years. The sellers came out in force. The last half hour of trading today the Dow finished down another 208 points. You combine that with yesterday's 300-plus point drop, that put the loss over 500. We're joined tonight from CNBC by Erin Burnett.
Broder Baffled Bush 'Against Providing Health Insurance for Kids' Washington Post reporter and columnist David Broder, known as the "dean" of the Washington press corps, perfectly encapsulated, on Friday's Washington Week on PBS, the media establishment's more government spending is the answer to everything attitude when he acted bewildered as to how anyone could oppose a massive expansion of a federal health insurance program. When host Gwen Ifill raised how "Congress would like to double the number of children covered" by the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), Broder marveled at how "the President has threatened the veto, and everybody I've talked to in the administration this past week says take that threat seriously." Broder equated federal spending with resolving a problem as he wondered: "I mean, who can be against providing health insurance for kids?" Talking over him, Ifill, a veteran of the New York Times and NBC News, echoed, "yeah." Neither Ifill nor Broder noted the amount of the proposed additional spending Bush would veto: $50 billion.
Reuters story on the proposal of the House Democrats: www.washingtonpost.com [This item was posted Sunday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The exchange on the July 27 Washington Week, provided by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth who corrected the closed-captioning against the video:
GWEN IFILL: Well, every other dispute we've talked about tonight is basically rooted in partisanship. But another looming clash has Republicans and Democrats on one side and the White House on the other. The disagreement is over the federally funded state children's health insurance program. Congress would like to double the number of children covered. The administration says that would simply cost too much. So is this all going to come to a head in a presidential veto, David?
Olbermann Cracks: With Cheney Out,'Bush Will Get to Be President' Keith Olbermann opened Friday night's Countdown show on MSNBC by cracking about how, with Vice President Dick Cheney scheduled for a surgical procedure Saturday to replace a battery, "for a few hours, at least, George W. Bush will actually get to be President." Olbermann asserted at the start of his July 27 show: "Tomorrow morning Vice President Cheney will undergo surgery to have the battery replaced on his heart defibrillator -- which means an exact reversal of last week's colonoscopy and invocation of the 25th amendment. For a few hours, at least, George W. Bush will actually get to be President. Our fifth story on the Countdown, let's hope he uses his alone-time wisely because today his administration was again reduced to try to reform clear reality into foggy myth with a dedication of language-parsing that makes Bill Clinton look like a chronic generalizer. Not that you would have known anything wrong from Mr. Bush's schedule today devoted to an economic speech and to handing out science medals.... [This item was posted late Friday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]
ABC Uses Murder of Cop as Hook to Push for More Gun Control On Friday's World News, ABC anchor Charles Gibson incorrectly implied that a murder suspect in New York City had purchased his weapon from a gun store in Virginia, ignoring the fact that the original owner, now deceased, had purchased the gun legally from the shop in 1999, and that police have not yet discovered how the suspect obtained the gun. Instead, Gibson contended that this case shows that criminals often go to shops for their weapons as he set up the piece: "Well, the recent shooting death of a New York City police officer is shedding some light on how criminals get their guns. Too often, they simply go to a store. And they know which stores to go to. According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, one percent of this nation's gun stores sell the guns that account for nearly 60 percent of the guns traced to crimes."
Friday's Washington Post reported the legal sale in 1999: www.washingtonpost.com According to the Daily Press (Newport News, Virginia), R&B Guns owner Richard Norad's legal trouble began when, "while checking the transaction forms for R&B in 1998, State Police found that the store's gun sale documents omitted a potential buyer's second identification," as the law requires two forms of ID for a purchase. After Norad was issued five warnings, he was charged with 10 such failures to provide a second ID that occurred between January 1998 and April 2000. Notably, the Daily Press also relayed that Norad "filed 2,300 transaction forms with the State Police in 1999," which would suggest that the total number of incomplete transaction forms may have been 10 out of as many as 5,000. No details were reported by the Daily Press on whether authorities interviewed the purchasers involved in the 10 incidents to see if they were legally entitled to their purchases or if any of these guns made their way to criminals. Without providing details on Norad's violations, Wright concluded his report continuing to suggest that the gun shop owner had sold a gun to the killer directly: "Virginia authorities finally closed down R&B Guns several years ago. The store owner pled guilty to selling firearms without checking ID's and served a two-year probation. This week he told the New York Daily News it's very upsetting that one of the guns he sold was used to kill a cop."
Wright's take matched an equally distorted Friday New York Daily News article: www.nydailynews.com Below is a complete transcript of David Wright's piece from the Friday, July 27 World News with Charles Gibson:
CHARLES GIBSON: Well, the recent shooting death of a New York City police officer is shedding some light on how criminals get their guns. Too often, they simply go to a store. And they know which stores to go to. According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, one percent of this nation's gun stores sell the guns that account for nearly 60 percent of the guns traced to crimes. Here's ABC's David Wright.
Rue Edwards Poverty Tour Shows 'Nation's Inability to Be Moved' Newsweek's Jonathan Darman lamented in the July 30 issue that the John Edwards poverty tour/publicity tour didn't passionately grip America, that it did not immediately become a mythic event, like filthy-rich Bobby Kennedy's poverty tour in 1968. In a dramatic flourish, the young Harvard-educated reporter blamed this tragedy on a not-very-compassionate America: "There is something tragic about Edwards's failure to break through. Today, 37 million Americans live below the poverty line, 12 million more than at the time of Kennedy's death. And yet Edwards's call of conscience has not resonated. By all rights, Edwards, the son of a millworker, should have an easier time talking about poverty than did Kennedy, the son of a millionaire. His difficulty speaks to the candidate's inability to connect. It also speaks to the nation's inability to be moved." For Darman's piece in the July 30 Newsweek, "The Down and Out Tour: Edwards's poverty campaign echoes RFK's, but times have changed (and Edwards is no RFK)," go to: www.msnbc.msn.com [This item is based on a Friday NewsBusters posting by Tim Graham: newsbusters.org ]
-- Brent Baker
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