Posted on 09/10/2004 9:55:51 PM PDT by kattracks
La Femme Kerry said the other day that anyone who did not support her husband's health care plan was an "idiot," which if true means they are the same cohort of folks who still believe the CBS documents on President Bush's service record are genuine.
As of this writing, the network is said to be investigating the situation. Of course, this is not a real investigation, in the police sense. CBS leaves that sort of thing to fiction, on its CSI programs, for example. What they're investigating is how to minimize the public relations damage.
They have only two choices: they must either be the duper or the dupee. In other words, either someone at CBS was in on the fraud, or they were defrauded by the con artist who passed off the forgeries as genuine.
What did Dan Rather know, and when did he know it?
For someone like Sandy Berger, it is always better to claim sloppiness than evil intent, but for a news organization, the issue is not nearly as clear. It is the job of an organization like CBS to sort out the real from the phony. If they don't do that, what earthly good are they?
In other words, it may be better, PR-wise, for them to blame the mess on overzealous producers than to admit that someone on the outside sold them a bill of goods.
Regardless, the culpability in this case goes only so high up the executive food chain. CBS is owned by Viacom International, Inc., a corporate giant that also owns such entities as Blockbuster, Paramount and Simon and Schuster. The Chairman and CEO is a man named Sumner M. Redstone, a Harvard-educated lawyer who ran a film distribution company called National Amusements, a closely-held company which acquired Viacom, then only a cable TV company, in 1987.
It would appear from his biography, that Mr. Redstone is a Democrat, but I'll bet my portfolio he wasn't part of the Bush-Guard scam. And I'll further bet he's p---ed off something fierce.
So that's lesson #1 here. The newsies like to complain about the giant corporate ownership that has taken over their business, forcing them in their own minds at least to surrender some of their independence. But it is "corporate" that is coming down on them like a ton of bricks right now, because they really and truly do need adult supervision.
If lesson #1 is the top-down lesson, lesson #2 is strictly bottom-up.
For decades, I have wondered why, if the three network news organizations were truly in competition with one another, they didn't act like they were. Eventually, I decided my sense of competition had been warped because of having learned it in the political game.
In politics, a major part of the competition is exposing your opponent's miscues. But that never seems to happen in the news business. Why, I often asked myself, don't the networks spend some investigative effort on one another, debunking the others' stories whenever possible? Wouldn't that be in the public interest, convenience and necessity? But they never do. Night after night, they simply report on the same news, with virtually the same lineup of stories, and it's been like that since the very beginning.
The only reasonable explanation is that none of the organizations wants to call the kettle black, for fear that they are equally pot-worthy. I think that's pretty close to the definition of what might be termed oligarchic monopolistic behavior, where a few companies have divvied up the market and are all getting fat and happy and don't want to risk anything.
So lesson #2 is that "them days is gone forever," because the market for news has uncontrollable players now. In other words, the Internet has arrived. Thank you, Al Gore.
The expose of CBS's phony documents was done by the blogosphere, that incredibly viral part of the Internet that can process information with lightning speed and disseminate it in ways that cause it to expand exponentially. Within a few hours, the bloggers had found the document experts who could authoritatively show the likelihood of Col. Killian's having typed those memos in 1972 was approximately equal to the likelihood that Plato wore a wristwatch.
When the network newsies aren't complaining about Corporate America having intruded into their space, they complain about how the "unreliable" Internet has intruded into their audience, and is deluding the populace with inaccuracies.
To use Mr. Kerry's favorite word, they're "wrong" on both counts.
Veteran GOP media consultant Jay Bryant's regular columns are available at www.theoptimate.com, and his commentaries may be heard on NPR's 'All Things Considered.'
©2004 Jay Bryant
Good one!
1) Practically nothing, and
2) At no demonstrable time in the past 30 years.
Thank you. (w!)
I know that the entire CBS news establishment is about to be "razed in a manner reminiscent of 'Jenjis' Khan"...
No. Dan will retire along with Walter .... sitting on his pile of millions and stll held up as a great icon of the Press.
Silly me...I read on for quite a bit thinking it was John
Sumner M. Redstone is Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Viacom. Under his leadership, Viacom has become one of the world's largest entertainment and media companies, and a leader in the production, promotion and distribution of entertainment, news, sports, music and comedy. Viacom's properties include CBS, MTV, Nickelodeon, VH1, BET, Paramount Pictures, Viacom Outdoor, Infinity Broadcasting, UPN, Spike TV, TV Land, CMT: Country Music Television, Comedy Central, Showtime, Blockbuster and Simon & Schuster. National Amusements, Inc., a closely held corporation which operates approximately 1,400 motion picture screens in the United States, the United Kingdom and South America, is the parent company of Viacom.
And working for Kenneth.
Now we knew somebody would come up with this headline! LOL!
When he scratched his ass, smelled his finger, and realized it smells just like everyone else.
I went to CBSnews.com. At the bottom of the page there is a "contact us" link. I went thru that link and filed a complaint to chief editor of the cbs evening news. I stated my case and held CBS News directly responsible for supporting Rather and this fraud. I went on to say that I would be contacting CBS sponsors and boycotting them. If more people did the same, CBS would be overwhelmed with complaints and could no longer ignore the issue.
The arrogance of CBS to stubbornly stand by this story in the face of the overwhelming evidence that thoroughly debunks it is stunning.
We have gone beyond mere bad or biased reporting - perhaps it is now time to discuss conspiracy to commit fraud. Let the indictments begin.
A slight correction: What did Rather know? Nothing. And when did he know it? It has been ongoing condition for decades.
Answer to #1: Nothing.
Answer to #2: From the day he was born.
Now, that is clever. A+ work.
Milk llamas for Rigoberta Menchu?
No way, that girlie man doesn't have the equipment necessary for the job. He might have to have an artist enhancement like algore did. :-)
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