Wednesday, October 11, 2006 | Contact: Colleen O'Boyle (703) 683-5004
ABC, CBS, NBC Sound Like Perpetual Motion Machine Manufacturing "Foley Fallout" Against GOP
Foley Feeding Frenzy: Nets Air 150+ Stories
The Mark Foley instant-messaging scandal is playing out like a
massive October Surprise for Democrats. On Wednesday's Good
Morning America, ABC News anchor Christopher Cuomo spoke
insistently: "Less than a month before the elections and the Mark
Foley scandal just keeps growing." Reporter Jake Tapper added: "This
is the scandal that will not go away."
To measure the aggression of TV assignment editors on the Foley
story, MRC analysts counted the number of stories devoted to the
scandal and the repetitive insistence that Republicans are in deep
political danger and may need GOP leaders to resign. On the ABC,
CBS, and NBC morning and evening news programs, from the story's
emergence on Friday night, September 29, through Wednesday morning,
October 11, the Big Three networks have aired 152 stories. (A
fraction of the stories were brief anchor updates.) The breakdown:
- ABC: 50
(World News, 20; Good Morning America, 30.)
- CBS: 46
(CBS Evening News, 15; The Early Show, 31.)
- NBC: 56
(NBC Nightly News, 20; Today, 36.)
Is this feeding frenzy what the networks would do for any scandal
where a middle-aged Congressman is caught talking dirty to a
teenager? No. Consider the case of Rep. Mel Reynolds (D-Illinois).
In 1994, Reynolds was indicted over a consensual sexual relationship
with a girl named Beverly Heard, beginning when she was 16. Heard
testified that Reynolds gave her cash at each meeting and supplied
her with his pager number and apartment keys.
In
taped phone conversations, they even plotted group sex with a
15-year-old Catholic high school girl Heard had said wanted to have
sex with him. Reynolds responded on tape: "Did I win the Lotto?" He
asked Heard to take naked photos of the girl. He was indicted on
August 21, 1994, and convicted on August 23, 1995 on 12 counts of
sexual assault, obstruction of justice, and solicitation of child
pornography. Here's how the same networks handled that congressional
sex scandal.
The 1994 indictment of Reynolds (total: three stories): ABC:
zero. CBS: two (one anchor brief in the evening, another one in
the morning). NBC: one evening story.
The 1995 conviction of Reynolds on all 12 counts (total: 16
stories): ABC: one. CBS: five (one evening anchor
brief, three morning briefs, and a full morning story). NBC: 10
(one evening anchor brief, six morning anchor briefs, a morning
story, and two morning interview segments).
Please note that this adds up to 19 stories over more than a
year, not 12 days. If the Foley story advanced to an indictment, how
many more hundreds of stories will these three networks air?
There are obviously some differences in the two sex scandals.
Foley's Web interactions were with a congressional page, while Mel
Reynolds was dealing with a minor in private. But Foley's scandal is
based on sex talk, while Reynolds not only had an active sex
life with one teen, he was trying to add more teen sex partners.
There's one obvious similarity: Reynolds was in the Democratic
majority in 1994. The networks did not erupt in a frenzy asking:
what did Speaker Thomas Foley do to protect the children? When would
Democrats force Reynolds to resign? No one did. He was re-elected in
1994.
In the fall of 1994, with the ethical scandals hanging over
Democrats, like the indictment of crooked Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (who
did not resign, but ran for re-election), the Reynolds scandal might
have had partisan resonance. But the networks weren't interested in
that kind of partisan resonance. -
Tim Graham
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