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Grading TV's War News
Media Research Center ^ | Brent Baker and Rich Noyes

Posted on 04/23/2003 6:13:42 PM PDT by Mr. Mulliner

Grading TV's War News
Fox News Channel and Embedded Reporters Excelled,
While Peter Jennings and Peter Arnett Flunked


By Brent Baker and Rich Noyes

Executive Summary

     While it only lasted about three weeks, the second Gulf War was an unqualified success. But what about TV coverage of the war? While the media covered many aspects of the war fairly well — reports from embedded journalists were refreshingly factual and were mostly devoid of commentary — television’s war news was plagued by the same problems detected during previous conflicts: too little skepticism of enemy propaganda, too much mindless negativism about America’s military prospects, and a reluctance on the part of most networks to challenge the premises of the anti-war movement or expose its radical agenda.

     Media Research Center analysts watched the war on ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNN and the Fox News Channel. Here are their grades for each network’s performance, followed by ratings for the best and worst network anchors, Baghdad reporters and embedded correspondents:

War Report Card     • Grading the Networks: Fox News Channel (B) and CBS News (B-) received the best grades for war coverage that correctly portrayed the U.S. military effort as successful. FNC aided viewers by rejecting the standard liberal idea that objective war news requires an indifference to whether America succeeds or fails. Day after day, CBS’s Pentagon reporter David Martin gave the most accurate overview of the war’s progress, although others at CBS, such as Lesley Stahl, exhibited a tendency for unwarranted second-guessing. FNC’s final grade suffered after Geraldo Rivera disclosed the location and mission of the 101st Airborne with whom he’d been traveling.

     In contrast, ABC received a near-failing grade (D-) for knee-jerk negativism that played up Iraqi claims of civilian suffering, hyped American military difficulties and indulged anti-war protesters with free air time. One ABC reporter (Chris Cuomo) even promoted anti-war leftists as “prescient indicators of the national mood,” even though polls showed most Americans supported the war.

     Many of the same correspondents appeared on both NBC and MSNBC, so the networks were graded as a team (C+). Both generally offered solid, factual coverage, especially from their strong embedded reporters, but their anchors weren’t as strong as those on FNC and CBS, and both were marred by their use of Peter Arnett as a Baghdad reporter. Like ABC, CNN’s coverage (C+) was tainted by unwarranted negativity and inordinate amount of coverage of anti-war groups, although these weaknesses were offset by a stronger pool of embedded reporters and more skeptical coverage of the Iraqi regime.

     • Grading the Anchors: All of the network anchors received high grades except for the highly tendentious Peter Jennings, who played up any defeatist angle he could find. Five days before Baghdad fell, Pentagon reporter John McWethy warned, “This could be, Peter, a long war.” Jennings felt vindication: “As many people had anticipated.”

     Dan Rather’s impressions of a successful U.S. drive to Baghdad were more accurate than Jennings’s pessimism, while NBC’s Tom Brokaw, ever the steady hand, usually struck a middle ground between the two. On cable, CNN’s daytime anchor Wolf Blitzer was solid and fair; nighttime anchor Aaron Brown was more equivocal and self-conscious. On the war’s third day, MSNBC’s Brian Williams unfortunately compared our precision bombing with the citywide destruction wrought by the Allied bombing of Dresden in World War II, but he rejected the same analogy in a later report. Fox’s Brit Hume provided an excellent one-hour summary of the war each night, while Shepard Smith kept the spotlight on the battlefield and Fox’s embedded correspondents.

     • Embedded Reporters: These reporters excelled when they acted as the viewers’ eyes and ears in Iraq. NBC’s David Bloom, in his innovative Bloommobile, was the star of the group, offering hours of riveting live coverage of the Third Infantry’s historic drive toward Baghdad, including a powerful sandstorm that turned day into night. CNN’s Walter Rodgers narrated hour upon hour of armored troop movements, often under enemy fire, without straying from his “just the facts” style, while FNC’s Greg Kelly provided gripping footage of the U.S. Army’s devastating first thrust into Baghdad.

     On the other hand, ABC’s Ted Koppel spent his time pontificating as if he — not the vast military force that surrounded him — was the real star. “Forget the easy victories of the last twenty years; this war is more like the ones we knew before,” he announced at the end of Nightline on March 24. “Telling you if and when things are going badly for U.S. troops, enabling you to bear witness to the high cost of war, is the hard part of our job,” he promised viewers, “We’ll do our very best to give you the truth in the hope and the belief that you can handle it.”

     • Baghdad Reporters: Until the Iraqi dictatorship ran away April 9, Baghdad-based reporters were controlled by the Ministry of Information. Given the impediments to accurate reporting, networks should have used such reporters sparingly. Instead, ABC gave a great deal of time to the uncorroborated stories of civilian suffering which freelancer Richard Engel reported. While he was still under the watchful eye of Iraqi minders, on the April 2 World News Tonight, Engel highlighted the claim that the U.S. had bombed a “maternity hospital.”

     National Geographic Explorer’s Peter Arnett, who was heavily used by MSNBC and NBC before he was fired, was the most outrageously biased Baghdad reporter. On March 26, days before he went on Iraqi TV to bolster Saddam’s spin, Arnett twice told those watching NBC’s Today of Iraqi claims that the U.S. had used “cluster bombs” to kill dozens at a Baghdad marketplace, a claim later rebutted by NBC’s Pentagon reporter Jim Miklaszewski. Arnett’s servile approach to the Iraqis was in stark contrast to the New York Times’s John Burns, who phoned in several reports to CBS. Burns did his best to expose the Iraqi propaganda.

 

 



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: ccrm; iraqifreedom; mrc; televisedwar

1 posted on 04/23/2003 6:13:42 PM PDT by Mr. Mulliner
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To: *CCRM; bert; calypgin; Peacerose; First_Salute; ForGod'sSake; Landru
I hadn't seen this posted anywhere, but wanted to make sure you all had a chance to see it.
2 posted on 04/23/2003 6:14:55 PM PDT by Mr. Mulliner (QUANDO OMNI FLUNKUS MORITATI: When all else fails, play dead)
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To: Mr. Mulliner
pretty good grades for my favorite FNC. I'm surprised Ollie North wasn't mentioned.
3 posted on 04/23/2003 6:25:36 PM PDT by RightWingMama
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To: RightWingMama
I wonder how it would have been if NBC and MSNBC had been graded separately. I've been hearing very good things from freepers about MSNBC's war coverage and their clear efforts to save their news channel by turning more conservative.
4 posted on 04/23/2003 6:28:47 PM PDT by Mr. Mulliner (QUANDO OMNI FLUNKUS MORITATI: When all else fails, play dead)
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To: Mr. Mulliner
It may be posted elsewhere but some of the grades don't match up. Thanks for posting the facts from MRC!
5 posted on 04/23/2003 6:39:31 PM PDT by PhiKapMom (Get the US out of the UN and the UN out of the US)
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To: PhiKapMom
Shephard Smith deserves a special award for indefatigability.
6 posted on 04/23/2003 7:10:36 PM PDT by gaspar
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To: gaspar
No kidding -- Smith was on all the time and always filled with enthusiasm!
7 posted on 04/23/2003 7:11:54 PM PDT by PhiKapMom (Get the US out of the UN and the UN out of the US)
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To: Mr. Mulliner
I was a captive viewer of MSNBC since my cable doesn't carry FOX News. Aside from Arnott, who was, to my utter amazement, immediately fired after that dreadful Iraqi TV interview, I thought that the coverage was pretty balanced.

I cried my eyes out when David Bloom died. Before this war, I didn't care for him at all. (I had a hard time forgetting his smirking commentary during the hanging chad fiasco of the 2000 election.) I sincerely think, had Bloom lived, he would have emerged from this a changed man...at least in the areas where liberals are usually most negative--defense and supporting our armed forces... (Hey, it's a start.)

I enjoyed MSNBC's wall of troop photos sent in by loving family members entitled "America's Bravest." That wall got gigantic. I believe that they are still continuing the practice since thousands of photos and comments were mailed to the MSNBC studio.
8 posted on 04/23/2003 7:30:41 PM PDT by demnomo
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To: Mr. Mulliner
MSNBC did a good job, much better than CNN. Why CNN did not get an F in the MRC's report card is weird, especially after the news that they concealed alot of stuff that was going on right under there noses. and nonsense coming out of Chritine Amanpour was constantley slanted against America.

Petter Jennings deserved his "F". Even Baghdad Bob deserves a better grade than Maple Leaf Peter.
9 posted on 04/23/2003 7:38:34 PM PDT by The South Texan (The TV Media (save FOX News,) is our worst Enemy!!!!!!!!!!!!)
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To: Mr. Mulliner
Yes, I wouldn't believe that MSNBC is rated so highly but I have to agree that they did well. Since they picked up Michael Savage before the war the drift to the right must be management and Bill Gates.

ABC rated "F" earned it -- ABC deserves to be tried for treason and Peter Jennings hung with a rope used to torture Iraqi prisoners.
10 posted on 04/23/2003 7:40:21 PM PDT by BeAllYouCanBe (Maybe this "Army Of One" is a good thing - You Gotta Admire the 3rd Infantry Accomplishments)
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To: BeAllYouCanBe
I've done some thinking about ABC. All the networks over the years have been blatantly liberal, but I've always thought it was all fairly unintentional and is a result of just being way too narrow in their thinking -- pretty much the way that Bernard Goldberg sees the problem.

But ABC now seems so far to the left that I'm wondering if they didn't make a management decision to just try to take over the liberal audience the way that FNC has taken over the conservative audience in cable news. Even though the liberal audience is much smaller, perhaps they think that if they can sew up that audience, they can win in a ratings war.

I don't know if it has worked, but that's my best guess about what's happening here.
11 posted on 04/23/2003 7:47:50 PM PDT by Mr. Mulliner (QUANDO OMNI FLUNKUS MORITATI: When all else fails, play dead)
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To: RightWingMama
My words exactly.
12 posted on 04/23/2003 7:57:32 PM PDT by gitmo ("The course of this conflict is not known, yet its outcome is certain." GWB)
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To: Mr. Mulliner
That John McWethy of ABC also made a radio report one night that drove me up the wall I was so mad. I cannot recall the details but it was gratuitous false reporting. These guys must hate it when America wins. Does that make them unAmerican? Yep.
13 posted on 04/23/2003 10:01:14 PM PDT by ontos-on
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To: BeAllYouCanBe
Look, I might agree with Michael Savage most of the time; and also think that he has important things to say. But I have to admit that he is too involved with himself to be reliably steady.
14 posted on 04/23/2003 10:04:21 PM PDT by ontos-on
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