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Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Debra J. Saunders :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Russert Weekend RIP
by Debra J. Saunders
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If folks in the news business wonder why the public hates us, they should look to the orgy of coverage over the untimely death of NBC TV's Tim Russert. It's not as if Russert wasn't an extraordinary journalist. On "Meet the Press," Russert gave the best-prepared interviews in Washington. He asked tough questions without the sort of ego-filled posturing that made the questions about him, when they should be about the answers. Most important, Russert cared deeply about policy, not just the horserace and latest polls.

To top it off, Russert was a giant of a man who left a strong, positive impression on just about everyone. So it made sense for Sunday's "Meet the Press" to devote the hour to the man who sat in the anchor chair for nearly 17 years.

Overall, however, the hours and hours of tributes across the cable spectrum show the news media at their worst. For me, the Russert Weekend only served to confirm my suspicion that in 2008, cable TV stations can only do one story at a time -- and then they overdo it and beat it silly. You now know more about Tim Russert than Vladimir Putin.

To wit: His father, Big Russ, was a sanitation worker. He still loved his hometown, Buffalo. Russert told his son, Luke -- named after St. Luke the Evangelist, who wrote, "To whom much is given, much is expected" -- that he loved him every day.

Do you get the feeling that some talking heads think that if you're on TV, then you're too big to have come from a working-class family or love your hometown? I do.

You now know more about Russert than you know about Paul R. Smith, Jason L. Dunham, Michael P. Murphy, Michael A. Monsoor and Ross A. McGinnis. Who are they? Men who received the Medal of Honor for their service in Iraq or Afghanistan.

But they weren't on TV.

Here's a question that seems not to have occurred to the network suits: How are viewers supposed to see NBC -- or other networks -- as impartial when they air segments with numerous politicians calling Russert their "friend"? Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama issued a statement in which he said he was "grief-stricken" over the loss of his "friend." "I was proud to call him a friend," said the statement by Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain. Obama guru David Axelrod talked on CNN Friday and MSNBC Monday. He was a Friend of Russert, too. The rap all shared about Russert was that he was "tough but fair." But the cozy schmoozing made the bond between politicos and journalists appear downright incestuous. Continued...

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Overkill
Very well put. Russert was head and shoulders above most of the peers, pundits and politicians to rushed to call him "best friend," and to capitalize on the sad event of his sudden passing. I would bet his family first appreciated the outpouring of tribute, then became sickened at the brazen and blatant cashing-in that the weekend tributes morphed into as the hours passed. You are correct about one story at a time, and where was the news, after all? Our 24/7 news industry had become so bloated and overweight (just like our American citizenry) that they squat upon a story and sit on it far too long for nearly everyone's comfort. That's not to take anything from Russert, about whom many wonderful and richly-deserved things were said, but for a while there, a foreign stranger tuning in to our weekend long funeral dirge of TV news coverage might have mistakenly thought that Russert was the president, and that he had suddenly died or been killed. Perhaps some of this gushing was out of silent guilt that they had not paid sufficient respect to him and his talents while he was among the living. His death reminds us all that we never know when we have seen our last sunrise, and that we should make every day count as best we can. He told his son that he loved him every single day. How insightful was that?...
Tim Russert ~ May you rest in peace.

Dougg - And there's ad hominem...
--
...done to perfection, as only a "Liberal" wanker can manage it, losing the debate (were there a referee present to jerk your collar for you) by way of your prat-flashing stupidity in:

"...the logical fallacy of attempting to undermine a speaker's argument by attacking the speaker instead of addressing the argument."


What you *might* have tried instead, dimwit, was to make some sort of comment akin to "Good riddance? Isn't that a little harsh?" and then trying your feeble best to make the case that there's some sort of value to the career of Tim Russert - lawyer, aide to Daniel Moynihan and then Mario Cuomo, MSM root-weevil, etc. - such that an impartial observer might have some tenuous reason to allow the possibility that he was more valuable walking around than soaking up formalin.

But you couldn't do that, couldja, Douggie-doo?

Well, *what* a surprise.

Not that I've come to expect much more from the average "Liberal," almost every one of which seems to qualify - on the basis of demonstrating no evidence of electrical activity above the level of the thalamus - as ambulatory organ donors in dire need of harvesting before subtentorial necrosis starts to set in.





========
"At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child— miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosophy of sniveling brats."

-- P.J. O'Rourke
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