Huh? We've been had?
We realize that many of you consider the TV journalist Bill Moyers to be a liberal fop, but still we challenge you tonight to turn off "Hannity & Colmes" and dip a toe into the chilly waters of the Public Broadcasting System, or, the education channel, if you prefer.
There, writes Tom Shales of The Washington Post, he will explain how we've been had -- by the holier-than-thou, terrible-swift-sword Media, regarding the fiasco in Iraq.
Exhibit A -- the first event recalled in this report -- is a news conference by President Bush on March 6, 2003, which Moyers says is two weeks before Bush "will order America to war." The press conference was a sham, with Bush calling only on "friendly" reporters who'd ask friendly questions. The corker was this scorching investigative query: "Mr. President, how is your faith guiding you?"
snip
Pressures subtle and blatant were brought to bear. Phil Donahue's nightly MSNBC talk show was virtually the only program of its type that gave antiwar voices a chance to be heard. Donahue was canceled 22 days before the invasion of Iraq, Moyers says. The reason was supposedly low ratings, but the New York Times intercepted an in-house memo in which a network executive complained: "Donahue represents a difficult public face for NBC in a time of war. At the same time, our competitors are waving the flag at every opportunity."
Dissent was deemed not only unpatriotic, Donahue recalls, but -- perhaps even worse -- "not good for business." Most of Moyers's report involves serious, respected journalists who let themselves be swept up in war fever and who were manipulated by the administration sources who had cozied up to them. Instead of investigating administration claims about al-Qaeda and WMDs and such, cable news offered up hours and hours of talking-head television.
Former CNN president Walter Isaacson tells Moyers: "One of the great pressures we're facing in journalism now is, it's a lot cheaper to hire thumb-suckers and pundits and have talk shows on the air than actually have bureaus and reporters."
Dan Rather -- who has left his CBS anchor chair but continues with solid and superior reports on the high-definition cable and satellite channel HDNet -- tells Moyers: "The substitute for reporting far too often has become 'Let's just ring up an expert.' . . . This is journalism on the cheap, if it's journalism at all."
Amazingly, but perhaps not, a number of journalists declined to be interviewed by Moyers, which we always find ironic cause their stock in trade is asking other people to answer their questions.
2 comments:
I can't imagine anything more annoying than an hour or two of journalistic thumb-sucking. I've wasted parts of my life back when I wanted to be a journalist, and watched too many of these types of things to be impressed by all the self-referential introspection. Particularly from Gunga Dan.
I think this is where I yell "You kids get off my lawn!" thru the screen door.
Area journalism died the day Banjo Jones went to jail in Galveston for not revealing a source. Locals were aghast that one of their own wanted to play the Game of Truth. One wag told a Galveston Daily News reporter, "We'll be fucked if we let Olafson call the shots around here. He ain't that heavy!" The Same Ol', Same Ol' almost played out in Brazosport when Olafson became Jones became Jim Morrison became Willie Nelson became Elliott Ness...
Post a Comment