Posted on 07/08/2009 6:52:55 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The network news divisions are enjoying the unprecedented coverage theyre providing President Obama, not just because they support him, but because White House specials are cheap and do well in the ratings. Obama should change his middle name from Hussein to Nielsen, quipped longtime TV reporter Gail Shister in a story by David Bauder of the Associated Press.
It seems like a never-ending spin cycle: laudatory coverage leads to popularity, which leads to higher TV ratings, which leads to more laudatory coverage.
But its not working anymore. Behind the glittery curtains, Obamas polls are falling. Worse, some ink-stained wretches are getting a little sick of the propaganda merry-go-round.
Helen Thomas and CBS reporter Chip Reid both slammed Press Secretary Robert Gibbs on the hermetically sealed town hall meeting on health care in Annandale, Va., where all the questions and questioners (and president-huggers) were carefully screened to make sure no one burst the bubble of Baracks astonishing cool.
But the network chieftains continue to be unapologetic, even insulting when questioned about their laudatory coverage of the White House.
When APs Bauder asked NBC News Washington Bureau Chief Mark Whitaker about his network awarding four sappy hours to Obama in prime time, when previous presidents got a measly 60 minutes, Whitaker shot back: Are you going to blame NBC for giving that much time to a very exclusive, interesting and revealing look behind the scenes at the White House? Compared to what, more of The Biggest Loser?
Whitaker claimed that strong viewer interest in the president is enough to award him hours of prime time. But thats not really true. When NBC gave President Bush a single hour with a less subservient Tom Brokaw in January 2002, Bush was never more popular. NBCs own poll found 82 percent of the people approved of his performance, and only 13 percent disapproved numbers that far exceed those of Obama.
The only difference was that you wouldnt find NBC in that 82 percent number for Bush.
Back in those days, ABC News President David Westin banned the wearing of flag pins by his employees. I think our patriotic duty as journalists in the United States is to try to be independent and objective and present the facts to the American people and let them decide all the important things.
But this same David Westin now sees no need to be neutral and independent and objective. Pressed about his GOP-free town hall meeting with Obama in prime time to promote socialized health care, Westin spit on the notion of neutered journalism in an interview on National Public Radio.
Implicit in some of the criticism is the notion that true journalism consists of having neutered journalists act as a referee between two opposing partisan viewpoints.
No one would mistake ABC for a referee. You dont hire Cuomos and Clinton press aides as news providers and then claim neutrality without inspiring giggles.
Sigh. It would be nice if the news media behaved like referees, without a rooting interest in one party or the other. But for decades now the networks have been trying to shove their own political preferences down the throats of viewers. They unabashedly seek to make instant legends of the politicians they like (Barack Obama), while destroying the ones they dont (Sarah Palin).
Westin also complained that people who have enough audacity to complain about offering large chunks of prime time to a liberal president are just gaming the system. I am also mindful that there are going to be a certain gaming of the officials in this matter, that the louder people complain, the more they think we may bend over backwards the other way. Our job is to try to keep it right down the middle.
Who is Westin to claim that someone else is gaming officials? As if ABC slavishly offering chunks of their prime-time schedule to Team Obama isnt focused on gaining more access and exclusives from the White House?
Or do they offer all that free air time because theyre philanthropists, and enacting liberal legislation on health care is clearly in the public interest? How is all that free air time keeping it right down the middle?
White House reporters may be getting fed up with presidential stage management, and that is good. But at the top of the news food chain, the executives and the anchormen are still unashamed to offer Obama a stage and let him manage them.
May they all go down HARD.
I have far more respect for a $20 a trick whore out walking the streets than I do for these aholes. The whole lot of ‘em.
Since I don’t watch any of herpes-infested alphabet networks any more, I would love to see every single one of them one year from now standing at a street corner with a weather-beaten cardboard sign. On the hastily-scribbled sign, it would read, “Will whore for food”.
It’s outrageous now, in the sweet by-and-by it’s going to get funny, then it will get pathetic.
The networks will keep giving more and more exclusives to Obama and these events and Town Halls will grow ever more desperate and fatuous as ratings shrink and late-night comics mine them for material.
Towards the end Obama may end up doing a regular weekly Chavez-style “allo’ Presidente” primetime feature where he “answers your questions”, tells us the latest about Sascha, Malia and the dog whatsisname and Michelle gives her latest recipes. I read that FDR actually gave only thirty “fireside chats” over eleven years.
In view of recent gatherings, perhaps Obama’s Townhalls will degenerate into a Saudi-style tribal “majlis” in which a wealthy prince spends a few hours every week receiving supplicants who kiss his hand and beg him for favors.
Obama's health care commercial at ABC finished dead last, behind at least one rerun.
If that is the success they're looking for, they're welcome to it.
They are pathetic.
Odd how they figured this out within a few minutes of Obama being sworn in - but never figured it out in the 8 years President Bush was in office...
What goes around comes around. Just a matter of time.
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