President Bush took First Lady Laura Bush on a date to Gettysburg, accompanied by Karen Hughes, Karl Rove, and Alberto Gonzales.

But the very next day, Saturday, White House National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley started bashing Bob Woodward’s new book “The War Within: A Secret White House History, 2006-2008″. I can hardly wait to get my hands on the book myself as the first two Woodward books on Bush’s war in Iraq were excellent. The first one was a positive look at Bush’s run-up to the war. Now that Woodward has turned critical, however, the spinmeisters are back pedaling.

I love how the president himself handles this interview. Essentially, his defense is, “Uh, uhm, well, uh, let’s see ….” In other words, all this hemming and hawing is getting us nowhere and President Bush has yet, after nearly 8 years of failure, to take any responsibility for his losing policies. Should we ever expect him to?


August
28
2008
4:35 pm
Tags:
Post Meta :

I love how news agencies report the inevitable as if it’s breaking news. Barack Obama has had the Democratic nomination secured for about a month now, but somehow it’s important to report that he officially “made history”. OK, he officially made history last year. He only recently re-made history in a kind of sardonic way. He was officially nominated to the position that he had secured informally a month earlier. It’s not breaking news. History was already made. It was only confirmed with his nomination.

Writers! So melodramatic.


Is it me or is Brian Williams about as entertaining as a cardboard box?

I don’t mean that I want my news anchor to entertain me, but I do want my news anchor to present the news in such a way that I don’t fall asleep reaching for my glass of milk. I’d sooner kiss a monkey as watch five minutes of Brian Williams’ reporting. He’s got to be the worst anchor in history.

Case in point, last night’s Democratic National Convention coverage was incredibly slackjawed. They could have just run the convention straight through without snippets of Williams’ interviews and commentaries and it would have been more interesting. I’d rather watch Bill Clinton’s smirky, smarmy applause than to see Brian Williams squeeze a softball question out of his little thin head and lob it at a teleprompted senator wearing the same damn suit the guy before him wore. I kept looking at the end credits as they rolled for that line that says who provided the wardrobe.

And I’m not the only who’s noticed. Jon Stewart is angry as hell. It’s a sad shame when a comic has to lay it on the line for the “serious” reporters. It’s like Elmer Fudd giving acting lessons to Dennis Hopper. What the hell is the media coming to?

I like Jon Stewart. He’s a funny guy. But it’s scary that 18 year olds are getting their news from this guy. I mean, do they not get that he is parodying the guys they’re supposed to be getting the new from?

I’m sure - no, I know - Jon Stewart works hard to produce a funny and informative show. I know that at the foundation of his success is a serious man who loves what he does and wants the real news media to perform to standard. The disappointing and sad fact of the matter is, the news media is failing us. They’re failing us all. And Jon Stewart’s success is the best evidence in the world of that. Step aside, Brian Williams. Make room for the real journalists.


August
26
2008
1:20 pm
Tags:
Post Meta :

Now here’s a useful media blog. NielsenWire is Nielsen’s new blog (as if they don’t have enough already). But this blog is useful as it focuses on short posts that give an overview of ratings and other useful media information. Just in the last five days they’ve told us that the Beijing Olympics is the most watched Olympic games ever, “Tropic Thunder” is the No. 1 box office flick, interesting prime time ratings, a Google-Verizon marriage, a cool post on China’s credit card boom, British social habits, Australians and eco-friendly liquor, and Americans’ coupon clipping habits.

While not every post on the newest Nielsen blog will appeal to everyone, it will (and should) appeal to journalists and media professionals across the board. If a journalist is researching a particular topic for a new story and wants to get some insight into useful statistics then she can use the NielsenWire search feature to find a blog post on the topic. A short blog post could lead the journalist to other blogs and websites that contain more information on the topic, but NielsenWire makes for a good starting place.

But they need to edit their About Us page.


Here’s a one-sided peek into national conventions and how they create narratives that favor the Democrats. But Michael Barone does make one interesting point: The media have not really questioned Obama’s roots. While it is true that he spent some time in Kansas, he also has spent a considerable amount of time in Hawaii and Kenya. He even has relatives in the latter. The media should dig deeper into Obama’s relationship with Kenyans and how his being the president of the U.S. might influence public policy with regard to Kenya and other third-world countries.

It’s not that we dislike Obama. But we do believe there should be a fairness and accuracy in reporting. Journalists should pursue, relentlessly pursue, a hard look at any candidate running for president, no matter what ticket they run on. Questioning McCain’s alleged abandonment of his sick wife and marrying a rich heiress is just as fair game as Obama’s allegiances. But that isn’t heard much in the mainstream media either.


August
22
2008
4:49 pm
Tags:
Post Meta :

Here’s an interesting concept: FreePress.net has introduced a Free Press Rapid Responder program. What is it, you may ask. Glad you did.

Well, a Free Press Rapid Responder is someone who has downloaded the Collactive tool that Free Press recommends, which will allow you to be alerted, via your desktop, to news stories they want you watch and promote to your friends. In other words, it’s a social media tool.

But it’s a social media tool that is also a press watch tool. If you believe that big media companies bury too many important stories then you can keep an eye on stories that are promoted by Free Press and vote them up and share them with your friends. These stories will be shared on YouTube, New York Times, The Nation, and other big names in media. All you have to do is follow the stories and vote on your favorite ones.


Dennis Ryerson, editor of The Indianapolis Star, wrote a blazing editorial defending traditional media for not getting the story on John Edwards’ affair before the tabloids did.

Rather than just tell you what he said, I’d rather let you read it for yourself. It’s a rather funny read, only it’s not so funny. It’s tragic. Ryerson would have been better off just writing a three word editorial, “Sorry, we failed.” Nope. Not gonna happen. Instead, we get a string of rationalizations, excuses, and a veneer of respectable standards set against those scalawags on the Internet. Here’s Ryerson’s 30 years of blissful experience:

Anybody can post anything on the Internet. A lot of good information shows up but a lot of lies, innuendoes and outright falsities surface as well.

That never happens to print media, does it? Anyone remember Jayson Blair? Oh, how quickly we forget, Mr. Ryerson. This is funny because just prior to his comment, Ryerson said this:

Those who say the media are biased on this one conveniently forget who did in Gary Hart during his Democratic presidential run. They forget all those front-page stories about Monica Lewinsky and Bill Clinton. They forget Wilbur Mills and Wayne Hayes and Brock Adams, all Democratic leaders brought down when sex-related indiscretions were exposed by the mainstream media.

It’s not that Democratic politicians have cornered the market on infidelity. Rather, people remember what they want to remember and forget what they want to forget in order to further their own bias.

I agree, and Dennis Ryerson is the perfect example. Let’s continue:

At The Star, as is the case with every newspaper for which I’ve worked, it’s not easy to get a story published. We go through layers of editors. At our morning and afternoon news meetings, questions are asked. Stories are held, sometimes for days, until we are convinced we get it right.

Do we have the facts? Are we relying on word of mouth or verifiable information? Are our sources reliable? Do we have not just facts but all of the facts to provide proper perspective?

Even then we make mistakes, which I regret. But our goal is to print the facts and nothing more.

I’ve been a journalist too. I’ve won awards for my journalism. I know that newspapers don’t just print the facts. They also print opinions. That’s why they have editorial pages. But Ryerson’s comment is designed to imply that bloggers don’t report the facts. Tabloids don’t report the facts. OK, maybe tabloids get it wrong more often than they should. Newspapers and TV reporters aren’t perfect either. But you don’t here bloggers bloviating about how much better we are to newspaper reporters because our facts are better. That’s just plain nonsense.

Ryerson’s argument can be boiled down to this: Because we didn’t have the facts, we didn’t print them. In fact, we didn’t print anything. We didn’t have the facts.

Well, Ryerson evidently doesn’t know what a fact is. In his mind, as the “superior” journalist, a fact is something that is verifiable and undeniable. In other words, since no one knew for sure that Edwards had an affair then they couldn’t report it. But what they actually had was an allegation of an affair. The allegation was, in actuality, a fact. It always is. Someone said something. Someone alleged something. It actually happened. It really happened that someone alleged that someone else did something. Now maybe what was alleged didn’t happen, but the allegation itself is a fact and for the media to ignore the allegation is not the same as “sticking with the facts.” This is convenient doublespeak.

News reporters often report rumors. Someone alleged that Senator Larry Craig solicited gay sex in a men’s room at an airport. The media reported that before it was known that he actually did. It was just an allegation. And as the story unfolded, the media told more of the facts. It could have been that the story totally turned out to be unfounded. It often happens. Allegations are made then they are proven false. All along the way, reputable media organizations report the facts as they are known. But not in the case of the Edwards affair.

Here’s more Ryerson:

In my more than three decades in the business, barely a year has gone by that I haven’t heard of some alleged personal indiscretion committed by one politician or another. Few such tips become news stories because those misbehaviors are so enormously difficult to prove.

In most cases laws aren’t broken so there is no string of public records to follow. Often, it’s one person’s word against another. And if we don’t have our facts, who is hurt? Not just some public official, but wives and husbands, sons and daughters.

So yes, I plead guilty. We will be less inclined to report these kinds of stories than the average supermarket tabloid.

OK, I get it. People make false allegations. That’s true. It happens all the time. They’ll allege that such-and-such politician is pro abortion when in fact he simply believes that a woman has a right to make her own choices in that matter. False allegations. Still reported.

People sometimes allege that a politician is for higher taxes when in fact the politician just wants to impose a new tax on a certain group of people for whatever reason. In many cases, those new taxes won’t affect the majority of citizens. False allegations. Still reported.

The fact of the matter is that the traditional news media didn’t pursue the story. Is it possible that maybe they were hoping John Edwards would be the vice presidential pick and therefore conveniently neglected to pursue the facts? Then - then - when it became evident that the facts could no longer be denied and that Edwards might not have a chance at the veep position anyway - then, OK, then we’ll report the facts along with our insipid apologies. Do you think that’s possible?

Oh, and here’s the kicker:

But public officials beware. The Technoworld, for all its assets, also creates something of a Wild West Internet atmosphere. Anybody with a notion of some misdeed has more of an opportunity to report it, to me and my colleagues at The Star with our set of standards, to the National Enquirer with its set of standards, or directly on the Internet without attention to any set of standards.

Wonderful. They’ve got standards. We don’t. Of course, how many news stories have been broken by Internet journalists? The Smoking Gun, Matt Drudge, Huffington Post … these sub-standard news organizations routinely report stories much quicker and more accurately than traditional media do.

Let’s fact it. Traditional print media is out. New media is in. People trust online sources more than print sources. We’ve been losing interest in print news for a long time now. Dan Rather’s mishap on Bush’s National Guard record wasn’t a first. People have been losing faith in traditional media for years and the reason why is because journalists fail at reporting accurately and timely and now the word is out. These virtues that Ryerson is claiming, all bogus. They aren’t virtues. They’re excuses. And we’re not accepting them.


August
15
2008
4:37 pm
Tags:
Post Meta :

One criticism of news media in recent years has been that most of it is owned by just a handful of media kingpins. But Cox News, one of the largest media organizations in the country, is out to dispel that rumor. They’re selling off newspapers.

You can read the official announcement, in the form of a news article on one of Cox’s own newspapers, right here.

Meanwhile, over at Crooks and Liars, swiftboater Jerome Corsi takes one in the balls. Maybe Cox News would be interested in selling him.


If you’ve been reading the news much in the last couple of days then you’ve likely heard that the Democratic Party is having a little “friction” regarding the Clintons’ role in the upcoming party convention. Hey, what’s the news without a little friction, right?

Well, according to presidential hopeful Barack Obama, that friction is just plain fiction. And if he has anything to do with it, he’s going to ease the friction, and the fiction, by going to Hawaii.

Good plan. This man has an entirely different temperament than our current commander-in-chief, who seems to be as adept at his own brand of fiction as anyone in media circles. Is Obama right? Are the media creating fiction or is there real friction in the Democratic Party?


August
4
2008
3:56 pm
Tags:
Post Meta :

In there area where I live there are a lot of small town newspapers. I am close enough to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania to be fortunate enough to see a lot of good historic stuff. Reenactments, tours, visitors, museums, and even the annual Gettysburg Bike Week. I also write the local Gettysburg Blog.

During the course of writing my blog I subscribe to Google Alerts that use the word Gettysburg in any form. Whether it be Gettysburg alone, Gettysburg, Pa. or Gettysburg Pennsyania, I want to see it. I also subscribe to Google Alerts for both York County and Adams County. Interestingly, the paper that I see the most stories in for anything related to Gettysburg or Adams County is the Hanover Evening Sun. Bear in mind, of course, that Hanover is located in York County.

I have often found a story related to Gettysburg that I found in the Hanover Evening Sun that I didn’t find in the Gettysburg Times, the paper that covers Gettysburg. I find this to be rather fascinating. Stories that I’d expect to see in the Times don’t end up there and stories that shouldn’t appear in the Evening Sun do. That brings up a very interesting question, How do local newspaper editors choose what is important enough for their local newspapers?


« newer | older »