Posted on 08/22/2013 6:30:44 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Al Jazeera America launched its much-ballyhooed channel Tuesday, providing a mix of unoriginal stories, uninspired reporting, and anti-American bias. Despite the earlier stories in nearly every major news outlet in which AJAM promised a different approach to the news, its debut, simply put, was dreadful.
The only real news AJAM made was filing a lawsuit against AT&T, which decided not to run the channel on its U-verse cable system. The channel is offered, however, on Comcast, Verizon, FiOS, DirecTV, and Dish Network, and on its first day it reached an estimated 48 million households, or less than half the viewership other 24/7 news operations have.
AJAM launched its first live programming at 3 p.m. EDT, with a taped promotional video touting its worldview. Hosts Antonio Mora and Richelle Carey recited the AJAM mantra that the channel plans to focus on hard news and real stories about real people. The video included former secretary of state Hillary Clinton and Senator John McCain lauding coverage by AJAMs predecessor, Al Jazeera English, which ironically was switched off in the United States to allow AJAM to broadcast. The video also jabbed Fox News, the leading 24/7 cable channel, with a clip of a shouting match on The OReilly Factor.
I didnt think it could get worse, but it did. In AJAMs Nightly News program, anchored by John Seigenthaler, who left NBC News in 2008, AJAM provided little to excite its viewers. As I took notes about the program, I scribbled a variety of expletives, which I cannot repeat here, about the coverage of a hunger strike at a California prison, where the authorities were force-feeding 130 inmates. I remember that the prison meme, along with crime and racial strife, dominated Soviet television coverage of the United States.
And the anti-American undercurrent didnt stop there. The intrepid AJAM team found Bangladeshi workers in allegedly substandard conditions making pants for Old Navy, which again allegedly ended up in the United States. The broadcaster said proof existed for these claims, such as a pair of pants actually being sold somewhere in the United States. But no footage of the store or the pants was shown. I guess physical proof was hard to come by.
The broadcast had little advertising, which means AJAM couldnt sell much. But AJAMs spin on this fact has been that it wants to provide more time for news. Interspersed between the nearly ad-free programs were vignettes of various AJAM employees, who said they were excited about working there. In these tough times, journalists would be happy working almost anywhere.
America Tonight, the prime-time magazine show anchored by Joie Chen, reminded me of the inauspicious start of 20/20 in 1978, when Geraldo Rivera investigated the mistreatment of hares in dog racing; the show included a standup from behind a bush at a dog track, in which Rivera spoke earnestly to the camera, and a Claymation caricature of President Jimmy Carter singing Georgia on My Mind. ABC News president Roone Arledge fired nearly everyone involved after that first broadcast. America Tonight needs a fresh start, too.
The opening story was about the events in Egypt. Much of the story featured the reporter in the back seat of an automobile telling the audience how dangerous it was. I served as ABC News bureau chief in Cairo starting in 1980 and spent nearly a decade covering terrorism and wars for ABC and Newsweek. Of course its dangerous! Three journalists and more than 1,000 other people died in Egypt during the past week. Journalists need to talk about the story, not their safety.
Then AJAM turned again to prisons that familiar theme to show how bad America really is. This story focused on the conditions at Orleans Parish Prison in New Orleans and provided exclusive footage of the problems there. A few pertinent facts were downplayed, however. For example, the city and the parish have agreed to a multimillion-dollar building project to make the prison better equipped and more secure. But AJAM didnt let that fact get in the way of a good story.
The third story was about a young woman who overcame a brain tumor thanks to an experimental program. I was happy to see she made it, but it was difficult to determine whether the treatment could help a significant number of people.
Many news organizations pointed out that AJAM has hired 900 people, including top executives from ABC News and CNN, and opened bureaus throughout the country. I dont know many of these journalists, but AJAM has to do better than what I saw.
But maybe the news isnt what AJAM is really about. Qatar, which provides much of the funding for the cable channel, has deeper pockets than Jeff Bezos, who recently bought the Washington Post for $250 million. Simply put, I dont think the channel is about making money in an already-crowded 24/7 cable milieu. AJAM provides the government of Qatar, which has said it will not be involved in the editorial product, a seat at the political table in the United States. One of the richest countries in the world, Qatar provides aid to the Syrian rebels and has reportedly paid al-Qaeda to stay away from Qatari territory. Qataris practice Wahhabi Islam, the same conservative style as Saudi Arabia. The government has been accused of promoting anti-American sentiment through the Arabic channel of Al Jazeera and has backed the Palestinians against Israel as an official policy.
If AJAM is really about news, it needs a serious rewind. Thats unlikely to happen anytime soon. For example, America Tonight has started a multipart series on gangs in Chicago. The first part, which aired yesterday evening, touched the usual themes the prevalence of drugs, guns, and poverty. Thats another page out of the old Soviet propaganda handbook: Show the economic disparity between blacks and whites. In fact, most gang members in Chicago are thugs the city can no longer control. But at least the reporter got out of his car to speak with some of the good guys and the bad guys.
I did think the sets looked nice.
Christopher Harper is a professor at Temple University. He worked for more than 20 years at the Associated Press, Newsweek, ABC News, and 20/20.
It is on our direcTV.
Or was. Blocking that crap was pretty easy.
Some thug tagged the set.
IMO its all about creating more radicals within the US.
They turned a 6 into a 1
The only so called news people they got from America are the cast offs from MSNBC and that is saying something when they get people from a dead network..
Sitcom ideas currently being discussed ...
I dream of Jeannie without her head;
Downtown Stabby;
The Goat Whisperer;
Mary Tyler Moore is a whore show;
Everybody loves Rasheed;
NCIS Qatar;
Celebrity Wife Swat
“America Tonight needs a fresh start, too.”
No, it needs to sink out of sight and so does the entire company. I was totally disgusted yesterday at the number of advertisements I heard on the local Philly news radio and sister stations for this (expletive deleted) and called the news desk to complain.
I think we should be boycotting any advertisers that support the company or who advertise on radio stations such as the above.
http://floridafamily.org/ has been and still is actively informing corporate advertisers about Al Jazeera
Their efforts have been successful. One hundred eighteen companies have pulled ads.
Saudi money keeps them afloat apparently.
RE: Saudi money keeps them afloat apparently.
Make that Qatari money.
Surprised and disappointed to hear that John Siegenthaler has moved to Al-Jazeera (I used to like him, but he just seemed to disappear a few years ago). NOT surprised to see McCain supporting it.
RE: Does that mean that it has the potential to reach 48 million households
YES. That’s the POTENTIAL. It remains to be seen how many are dumb enough to tune in regularly.
You’re right. More cross-identity slippage on my part.
“I will never watch that channel,as a matter a fact I will be writing to DISH network and telling them I will cancel with them if that bunch of terrorist pigs stay on the air..”
A deluge of letters is needed not just a handful of ultra loyal Americans.
Our Time Warner is NOT currently carrying this garbage but rest assured if they made that mistake my letter would be one of the first in their mail box.
I have Al Jazeera app on my iPad. I find it as reliable a news source as anything put forward by any of the big 4 networks in the U.S.
Only the presence of RT keeps them from being the least credible.
this all about getting the camel’s nose under the tent.
it is a favorite tactic
I bet John Siegenthaler got this job with a bit of help
fron good `ol Al Gore.
John Siegenthaler is about as leftist as they come..the
former editor of Moscow on the Cumberland.
I did enjoy his word on words occasionaly tho
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