Posted on 09/20/2004 5:33:17 PM PDT by Vision Thing
And it seems Reuters did not mention the Free Republic's role in the controversy, so not only are they lagging, but their reporting is far from comprehensive and complete.
Interesting read.
First Drudge broke the blue dress.
Now Buckhead.
Gives me hope for the future of journalism.
(BTW, isn't always liberals who complain that the media is getting too consolidated and in the hands of too few people?)
Hey, Reuters. Your next.
This writer hasn't stopped trying to say the memos are "fake but true," to use the phrase from the NY Times.
This was just a shot across your bow,Media Fiends.
Prepare to be boarded!
It was the shock heard round the newsworld.
Sorry I can't help it! Somebody stop me.......
CBS was not really duped, its more like they were a willing accomplice.
Don't forget the pajamas!
It won't matter. Rather'll survive and by the time the Nov. ratings period comes around again, CBSNews will have rebounded.
Boy, oh, boy, democrats and Damn Blather should never underestimate the power of the little people. There is a growing tide of conservatism in this country, I truly believe it.
So, who actually gets credit for this? I've seen FreeRepublic and Buckhead's name in news stories. Yeah, baby!
I bet Dan the Man and them other rat bastards will be thinking twice before they pull that stunt again. The bloggers and FreeRepublic and others will be watching.
Aargh, matey, make Damn Blather walk the plank.
They did not get duped. Their own experts told them the documents were fishy.
They went with documents they knew might be fake in order to run the story because they were desperate to arrest Kerry's slide in the polls.
It's as simple as that. Nobody was duped.
"Steven Miller, who teaches broadcast journalism at New Jersey's Rutgers University, said CBS fell victim to the economics and cut throat competition in television news."No, Steven. CBS fell victim to hubris and denial.
(You must have dozed off during History 101.)
They have managed to institute people of the liberal persuasion in all focal points of the major networks.
The free ride is over.
And hillary-if you are reading this-we are going to be all over you should you run. We know you.
Rush made a great point today that lends some credence to your claim. If CBS were really duped, they'd be pissed, because someone intentionally endangered their so-called credibility. Instead, they calmly issue both an admission of being duped and an apology. This is not the behavior of someone who has been played like a fiddle.
Not a chance.
The one unimpeachable source CBS swore backed the story is a fraud, as CBS now claims. Taking CBS at its word (very hard these days; Burkett is probably just the fall guy in a bigger picture), how can a "trusted" news organization ignore such obvious flaws in its source (Burkett has an anti-Bush history that a seventh grader researching a term paper could find in an hour), overlook even more apparent flaws in the proffered documents, pooh-pooh stated qualms about the reliabilty and lack of provenance of the memos, and ignore double-checking other sources to stress test the story (the secretary, the Killian family, Staudt, etc.)?
The answer is that Dan Rather and Mary Mapes are complicit, incompetent or otherwise unfit for the responsiblity that comes with managing a major news division. (By the way, what do you think Mapes was doing while she was working on this story for five years? Talking incessantly to ONE person?)
CBS has embarrassed itself for the last time with this "release." Even the New York Times had the sense to terminate those associated with the Jayson Blair fiasco. I cannot imagine many viewers or affilaites remaining with CBS after this unless swift and appropriate action is taken at CBS News.
I earlier posted that the Rathergate episode would become a case study for journalism schools about the dangers of reposing too much autonomy and lack of accountability in a single person. That case study will now be expanded to business schools to address the economic impact of failed brand crisis management. Successful management will be identified (Tylenol--immediate acknowledgement and recall; NYT firing all associated with Blair and installing public integrity ombudsman) and contrasted with massive failures that led to severe devaluation of brands (CBS News/60 Minutes)
I predict Rather will not be around to call the election this year.
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