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Old 11-18-2007, 07:27 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Charlatan
I have to wonder if the news media is worse today than it has been in the past or if today's "worse" is just this era's particular flavour of media.

An informed citizenry is key. A free press is key.

Legally we in the West have a free press. I would argue that spin, bias, etc. have always been a factor and that any instances we see of it today are either a) due to there just being more of it (i.e. more choice of information = more chance for spin) or b) our citizenry is increasingly media savvy and therefore better able to spot the spin or counter-spin.

As for informed citizenry. I think we agree that people are disengaged. Do we know that people were ever engaged? I can well imagine that in the early days of democracy in the West, or the early days of America, when the populations were much lower that being engaged was an easier thing. But the fact is, people are busy dealing with life. They don't necessarily like or care who does what as long as they have a relatively "good life".

Being informed or even well-informed takes a lot of effort. Effort that many are not willing to make OR do not have the time to make.
Charlatan, there once was a time when the "most trusted man in America" was a television network nightly news caster:
Quote:
http://www.richmond.edu/~ebolt/histo...kite_1968.html
WALTER CRONKITE'S "WE ARE MIRED IN STALEMATE" BROADCAST, FEBRUARY 27, 1968



Tonight, back in more familiar surroundings in New York, we'd like to sum up our findings in Vietnam, an analysis that must be speculative, personal, subjective. Who won and who lost in the great Tet offensive against the cities? I'm not sure. The Vietcong did not win by a knockout, but neither did we. The referees of history may make it a draw. Another standoff may be coming in the big battles expected south of the Demilitarized Zone. Khesanh could well fall, with a terrible loss in American lives, prestige and morale, and this is a tragedy of our stubbornness there; but the bastion no longer is a key to the rest of the northern regions, and it is doubtful that the American forces can be defeated across the breadth of the DMZ with any substantial loss of ground. Another standoff. On the political front, past performance gives no confidence that the Vietnamese government can cope with its problems, now compounded by the attack on the cities. It may not fall, it may hold on, but it probably won't show the dynamic qualities demanded of this young nation. Another standoff.

We have been too often disappointed by the optimism of the American leaders, both in Vietnam and Washington, to have faith any longer in the silver linings they find in the darkest clouds. They may be right, that Hanoi's winter-spring offensive has been forced by the Communist realization that they could not win the longer war of attrition, and that the Communists hope that any success in the offensive will improve their position for eventual negotiations. It would improve their position, and it would also require our realization, that we should have had all along, that any negotiations must be that -- negotiations, not the dictation of peace terms. For it seems now more certain than ever that the bloody experience of Vietnam is to end in a stalemate. This summer's almost certain standoff will either end in real give-and-take negotiations or terrible escalation; and for every means we have to escalate, the enemy can match us, and that applies to invasion of the North, the use of nuclear weapons, or the mere commitment of one hundred, or two hundred, or three hundred thousand more American troops to the battle. And with each escalation, the world comes closer to the brink of cosmic disaster.

To say that we are closer to victory today is to believe, in the face of the evidence, the optimists who have been wrong in the past. To suggest we are on the edge of defeat is to yield to unreasonable pessimism. To say that we are mired in stalemate seems the only realistic, yet unsatisfactory, conclusion. On the off chance that military and political analysts are right, in the next few months we must test the enemy's intentions, in case this is indeed his last big gasp before negotiations. But it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then will be to negotiate, not as victors, but as an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy, and did the best they could.

This is Walter Cronkite. Good night.



Source: Reporting Vietnam: Part One: American Journalism 1959-1969 (1998), pp. 581-582.

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmast...ronkite_w.html
....President Lyndon Johnson listened to Cronkite's verdict with dismay and real sadness. As he famously remarked to an aide, "If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost America."...<br>
<center><img src="http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/database/images/cronkite_w_bio4.jpg"><br>
LBJ watching Cronkite's Vietnam report.</center>

<h3>...and one month after Cronkite's February 27, 1968 broadcast:</h3>

http://www.millercenter.virginia.edu...peechDetail/28
March 31, 1968
President Lyndon Johnson
Remarks on Decision not to Seek Re-Election

<h3>Johnson re-states his offer to the North Vietnamese to begin talks for making peace</h3>, and he discusses the economic problems and solutions in the United States . After urging both Congress and Americans to end their divisions, <h3>the President announces his decision not to seek re-election</h3> so that he may focus on executing his presidential duties instead of partisan politics. ....
Imagine trying to fill Cronkite's shoes? Just as it was tough for Cronkite to fill Murrow's role, it was even a more difficult challenge when it was Dan Rather's turn. All the while, CBS evolved to put ratings, profits, and stock price before news gathering and reporting:
Quote:
http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/C/...lumbiabroa.htm
COLUMBIA BROADCASTING SYSTEM

U.S. Network

.....Unfortunately, as soon as some of them gained famed at CBS they were lured away by the far richer and more popular NBC.

This was not to be the case with news. Starved for programming Paley initially allowed his network to be used by the likes of the demagogic Father Charles Coughlin. But by 1931, Paley had terminated Coughlin's broadcasts, and under the aegis of former New York Times editor Edward Klauber and ex-United Press reporter Paul White, began building a solid news division.

CBS news did not come of age, however, until Klauber assigned the young Edward R. Murrow to London as director of European talks. On 13 March 1937 at the time of the Anschluss, Murrow teamed with former newspaper foreign correspondent William L. Shirer and a number of others to describe those events in what would become the forerunner of The CBS World News Roundup. Subsequently, during World War II, Murrow assembled a brilliant team of reporters, known collectively as "Murrow's Boys," including Eric Sevareid, Charles Collingwood, Howard K. Smith, Winston Burdett, Richard K. Hottelet, and Larry LeSueur.

In 1948, Paley turned the tables on NBC and signed some of its premier talent such as Jack Benny, Red Skelton, and Burns and Allen. He also stole a march on his rival in what they considered their undisputed realm--technology---when his CBS Research Center, under the direction of the brilliant inventor Peter Goldmark, developed the Long Playing phonograph recording technique and color television.

Even with this success Paley was still loathe to enter television broadcasting. But with prodding from Dr. Frank Stanton, whom he had appointed CBS president in 1946, and his growing awareness of how rapidly television was expanding, Paley began increasing CBS investment in television programming. Indeed with the talent that CBS had taken from NBC and homegrown artists and programming such as I Love Lucy, Ed Sullivan, Arthur Godfrey, and Gunsmoke, CBS dominated the audience rating system for almost twenty years.

The post-war years were hardly an undisturbed triumphal march for CBS. The network found itself dubbed the Communist Broadcasting System by conservatives during the McCarthy era. Nor did it distinguish itself by requiring loyalty oaths of its staff, and hiring a former FBI man as head of a loyalty clearance office. These actions were, however, redeemed to a large extent by Edward R. Murrow's 9 March 1954 See It Now broadcast investigating Senator McCarthy. Unfortunately, Murrow's penchant for controversy tarnished him in the eyes of many CBS executives and shortly thereafter, in 1961, he resigned to head the United States Information Agency.

More and more the news division, which thought of itself as the crown jewel at CBS, found itself subordinate to the entertainment values of the company, a trend highlighted at the end of the 1950s by the quiz show scandals. Indeed Paley, who had taken CBS public in 1937, now seemed to make profits his priority. Perhaps the clearest evidence of this development occurred when Fred Friendly, one of Murrow's closest associates and then CBS News division president, resigned after reruns of I Love Lucy were shown instead of the 1966 Senate hearings on the Vietnam War. ......

..... In violation of his own rule, Paley refused to retire. He did, however, force the 1973 retirement of his logical heir, Frank Stanton. He then installed and quickly forced the resignation of Arthur Taylor, John Backe, and Thomas Wyman as Presidents and chief executive officers of CBS, Inc. Anxiety about the succession at CBS began to threaten the network's independence. Declining ratings left the company vulnerable. The biggest threat came from a takeover bid by cable mogul Ted Turner. To defend itself against a takeover CBS turned to Loew's president, Lawrence Tisch, who soon owned a 25% share in the company and became president and CEO in 1986.

Within a year Tisch's cuts in personnel and budget, and his sale of assets such as the recording, magazines, and publishing divisions had alienated many. Dan Rather, who had succeeded the avuncular Walter Cronkite as the anchor on the CBS Evening News in 1981, wrote a scathing New York Times opinion editorial called "From Murrow to Mediocrity." By 1990, the year of Paley's death, The CBS Evening News, which had led in the ratings for eighteen years under Cronkite, and for a long period under Rather, fell to number three in the rankings.....


Quote:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/...in678731.shtml
Below are some memorable events in his CBS career:

# 1962: Joins CBS News as chief of the network's Southwest bureau, in Dallas, where it was his job to cover 23 states, Mexico and Central America.

# Nov. 22, 1963: Reports live from the scene of President John F. Kennedy's assassination. Not only was CBS the first network on the scene, but Rather was also the first to report Kennedy had died.

# 1964: Promoted to White House correspondent for CBS News.

# 1965: Sent to Vietnam — at his own request — to cover the war.

# 1966: Returns to the U.S. and resumes his role as White House correspondent.

# 1974: His combative style is captured in a memorable moment while exchanging verbal jabs with President Nixon. First, Rather is booed and applauded when he stands to ask Nixon a question. Mr. Nixon turned the question around: "Are you running for something?" "No, sir, Mr. President," Rather shot back. "Are you?" This angers the White Houses. Several CBS affiliates asked for his resignation.

# 1974: Co-wrote a book about Watergate, "The Palace Guard," which became a best-seller. Another book, "The Camera Never Blinks," was published in 1977.

# 1980: Slips into Afghanistan in disguise following the Soviet invasion. The escapade earns him a nickname: "Gunga Dan."

# March 9, 1981: CBS Evening News anchor Walter Cronkite retires, and Rather takes over.

# 1986: Rather is attacked and badly beaten on Park Avenue by a deranged man later convicted of murdering an NBC stagehand. Rather’s woozy recollection of his attacker’s words, "What’s the frequency, Kenneth?," becomes the title of a song by rock band R.E.M.

# 1987: Rather walks off the CBS Evening News set in anger after the network decided to let the U.S. Open tennis tournament run overtime, cutting into the news broadcast. CBS was left with dead air for six minutes.

# Jan. 25, 1988: In an interview with then-Vice President George H.W. Bush, Rather presses the future president about his involvement in the Iran-Contra affair. A heated exchange follows, with Mr. Bush asking Rather whether he wished to be judged for the tennis walk-off.

# 1990: Is the first American journalist to interview Saddam Hussein after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait.

# March 31, 1999: Secures an exclusive first sit-down interview with President Clinton following the Lewinsky scandal and his impeachment by the House.

# 2001: Breaks into tears twice while discussing the 9/11 attacks on David Letterman’s late-night show a few days after the tragedy.

# Feb. 24, 2003: Gets the most sought-after interview in the world: an exclusive one-on-one with Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, the first time the Iraqi leader talks with an American journalist since 1991.

# Nov. 23, 2004: Rather announces he will step down March 9, 2005, as anchor of the CBS Evening News.
Quote:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/...s-rather_N.htm
Couric mocks Rather in Web video
By Jake Coyle, Associated Press
NEW YORK — Though battles between news anchors have historically been between rival networks, today's ripest feud is a purely CBS affair: Katie vs. Dan.

The rivalry took a humorous turn Thursday when a video was posted on the Web showing Katie Couric mocking Dan Rather while preparing to anchor a broadcast from Nashville, last week.

A video of Rather had surfaced last month, showing the former CBS Evening News anchor obsessing over his appearance before a remote broadcast — particularly questioning the wearing of an overcoat.

"I'm going to be like Dan Rather on YouTube," joked Couric in her video, alluding to Rather by fiddling with her coat. "Geez, don't you think he deserves a little payback?"

She then added, laughing: "This tart is ready to go!"

Rather, who left CBS News in March 2005 and now works for HDNet, had referred to his successor as "a nice person," but said "the mistake was to try to bring the Today show ethos to the Evening News, and to dumb it down, tart it up in hopes of attracting a younger audience.".....

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...romoid=googlep
Monday, Mar. 23, 1987
Hard Times at a "Can-Do" Network
By Richard Zoglin

The picket line outside the CBS Broadcast Center in Manhattan got an injection of star power last Monday morning. A band of network heavyweights, including Dan Rather, Ed Bradley and Diane Sawyer, showed up to support striking members of the Writers Guild, who walked out two weeks ago over issues of job security. The featured speaker, however, was a less well known correspondent named Ike Pappas, whose current celebrity derives from the fact that he has just lost his job. "I feel very poorly for the people who have to get up every morning and pretend to work for CBS News," he told the crowd. "It's not CBS News anymore."

The debate swirling through the corridors of CBS and the rest of the broadcast world last week was whether Pappas was right. In the most bruising round of layoffs yet at CBS's beleaguered news division, some 230 of 1,200 staffers had been let go, part of an effort to slash $30 million from the news operation's annual budget of nearly $300 million. Among the casualties: three bureaus (Warsaw, Bangkok and Seattle), 14 on-air correspondents (including Law Specialist Fred Graham and Economics Contributor Jane Bryant Quinn) and scores of other employees, ranging from low-paid support staff to veteran producers.

The "Slaughter on 57th Street," as some started calling it, raised an impassioned outcry. New CBS Chief Executive Officer Laurence Tisch roiled staff emotions further when he tried to shift responsibility for the layoffs to News President Howard Stringer. "I never said to Howard, 'We have to cut the budget at the news division,' " he told the New York Times. Stringer was aghast. After a two-hour meeting between the two, Tisch, who had suggested cutting the news budget by up to $60 million, issued a memo admitting that Stringer proposed the cuts only as an alternative to bringing in an outside consultant to do the job.

The cutbacks raised other hackles, both inside and outside the network. Word leaked out last week that a dozen of CBS's high-priced stars, including Rather and Sawyer, had offered to take substantial pay decreases if that would save jobs. But the company refused, arguing that positions had to be eliminated for long-term efficiency. Rather wrote an op-ed page article for the Times, headlined FROM MURROW TO MEDIOCRITY?, in which he condemned the layoffs and worried about a "product that may inevitably fall short of the quality and vision it once possessed." Two Democratic members of a House subcommittee on telecommunications, Dennis Eckart of Ohio and John Bryant of Texas, called for hearings on whether the cost paring at CBS and other networks is in the public
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http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/12/bu...%20Corporation
A Tortoise Savors the Lead

By GERALDINE FABRIKANT and BILL CARTER
Published: September 12, 2006

For Leslie Moonves, the chief executive of the CBS Corporation, it was a week to savor.

His decision to make Katie Couric the anchor of the “CBS Evening News” looked like a wildly successful bet, so far at least. On the entertainment side, CBS was set to go into the fall season as the most watched network in prime time.

Success with another, equally fickle audience — Wall Street — endeared him to his boss, Sumner M. Redstone, the 83-year-old mogul who controls both CBS and Viacom. To top it all off, Mr. Moonves watched last week as Mr. Redstone publicly dismissed his archrival, Tom Freston, the Viacom chief executive.

Mr. Moonves is too savvy a political player to show even a hint of schadenfreude over the ouster of Mr. Freston. But in an interview late last week, he allowed himself to gloat a little about CBS’s current status.

“I am like: ‘O.K., bring it on and let the games begin,’ ’’ said the tanned, trim 56-year-old executive. “We are extremely pleased about Katie,” he said, though he was quick to add: “Don’t declare victory. Wait a couple of weeks.”

In a business where “we are changing our tires on a car going 80 miles an hour,” as Mr. Moonves described the treacherous world of broadcast TV, there is little certainty.

Ms. Couric’s initial ratings swamped NBC and ABC, but they could fall back to earth once the novelty of watching the first solo woman news anchor wears thin. If the aging demographics of the “CBS Evening News” do not improve — <h3>the median viewer’s age is just over 60 years old — selling spots to advertisers could grow more difficult.....</h3>

....For several years Mr. Moonves had argued hard for splitting the former Viacom in two, which meant he would gain control over his own set of businesses. Immediately after the split, CBS raised its dividend, and it has increased the dividend twice since. “That makes the stock attractive to mutual funds that have an earnings target,” Richard Bilotti, a Morgan Stanley media analyst, said.

Fredric G. Reynolds, the chief financial officer of CBS, said the company debated whether to increase the dividend or repurchase shares, but decided against a repurchase because it could attract investors like “hedge funds who would come in for the share buyback and then leave.”

That quarterly dividend, now 20 cents a share, also helped reassure investors that CBS was not going to make expensive acquisitions that would dilute earnings, Mr. Bilotti said.

Mr. Moonves has developed one trait that he now shares with his chairman: a fascination with CBS’s stock price.

“It’s like with ratings,” Mr. Moonves said. “But there is a difference. It is overnights every 10 minutes. I look a few times a day. An analyst said you should look at it once a week. That is like saying: ‘Don’t look at your ratings.’ ”

<h3>Mr. Redstone, of course, watches the stock price like a hawk</h3>, and for now, Mr. Moonves’s position seems unassailable.

There are, of course, skeptics. .....

Last edited by host; 11-18-2007 at 08:03 PM..
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