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Monday, March 03, 2008
John McCaslin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Unacceptable
by John McCaslin
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


"Made in China."

Or so reads the tag on the navy blue "Pentagon United States — Dept. of Defense" cap purchased for this columnist on the main concourse of the Pentagon at the Fort America concession.

Bring back Murrow

Turned off by TV news? You're not alone.

We've just finished reading a scathing critique of network news by Jeffrey M. McCall, professor of communication at Indiana's DePauw University and author of "Viewer Discretion Advised: Taking Control of Mass Media Influences."

It was this time last year, the professor notes, that Federal Communications Commission Commissioner Michael Copps criticized the television news industry for giving the public "too much baloney passed off as news."

"Sadly, the evidence since that speech indicates that Copps' critique remains quite valid," Mr. McCall writes. "From superficial coverage of elections to hyped-up coverage of celebrity scandals, the broadcast news industry continues to give the citizenry a news agenda that degrades the conversation of democracy."

And how have the news networks reacted?

"NBC is countering the decline in journalistic effort with an increase in razzle-dazzle," he finds. "Evening anchor Brian Williams was a guest host last fall on 'Saturday Night Live.' NBC executives were delighted with the stunt, one of them saying, 'It showed a side of his personality that some viewers may have warmed to.' "

(Perhaps we will warm up to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton now that she appeared on the same comedy show over the weekend).

"The most recent NBC novelty is the new voice that introduces Williams' 'Nightly News.' It is none other than Hollywood actor Michael Douglas, recruited by Williams himself to open the show," Mr. McCall adds in his Op-Ed column, which first appeared in the South Bend (Ind.) Tribune.

It's so pitiful, he points out, that on a certain "day last June when oil prices dropped $2 a barrel, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs stepped down, the space shuttle launched, and former national security adviser Sandy Berger surrendered his law license for stealing government documents, the story that dominated cable news was Paris Hilton's release from jail."

Still, he says, there's hope:

"Former NBC journalist Maria Shriver recently told NBC she wouldn't return to the network from her current hiatus. She cited the media excesses in covering the death of Anna Nicole Smith last year as the major factor, saying 'It was then that I knew the TV news business had changed.' "

Reagan reruns

Feeling left out for missing the Reagan Revolution? Not to worry, the Gipper is back.

Ronald Reagan's voice "will soon be heard across the land again," says Duke Blackwood, executive director of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Foundation. He says a series of 30 nonpolitical segments of Mr. Reagan's many radio commentaries, in which he clarifies his vision for America, will begin airing around the country on April 28.

"Ronald Reagan Speaks for Himself" is aimed at the several generations of Americans who never heard him speak on issues such as the economy, immigration, abortion, terrorism and taxes.

Consider this

Percentage of Democrats who rate their mental health as "excellent": 38

Percentage of Republicans who do: 58

— Harper's Index, March 2008

Tough being Israel

King Abdullah II of Jordan, who has arrived in the United States for meetings with President Bush, made this eye-opening observation during a speech to the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University:

"Fifty-seven countries are not at peace with Israel today. Fifty-seven countries out of 193 countries in the world. Fifty-seven countries with a total population greater than Europe and the United States combined.

"Fifty-seven countries, representing one-third of the members of the United Nations."

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About The Author

John McCaslin is a contributing columnist on Townhall.com and author of Inside The Beltway: Offbeat Stories, Scoops, and Shenanigans from around the Nation's Capital .

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The FCC is just now noticing NBC?
Let's not forget that NBC has a long history of falsifying news. I'm not talking about slanting it to their liberal benefit- I'm talking about making up news for ratings benefits. Does anyone remember the Dateline NBC stories on "exploding" GM pickup trucks? NBC should have been sued out of business for that story alone. But then there's more- staged dogfights on their then-owned station (KCNC) in Denver- which resulted in jail time for a couple of reporters and the sale of that station to CBS. And the staged earthquake damage by NBC affil KRBC-3 Las Vegas in the 1990s. And now the lawsuit against NBC from the relatives of a victim of one of their "pedophile busts". If any network or media operator is in violation of the FCC's modus operandi (serving the public good), it is GE/NBC. And if the FCC is willing to fine the hell out of harmless things like occasional profanity and a bared breast, they should use the harshest possible penalty against NBC. NBC should either be off the air or the FCC should be out of business for not doing their job.

reply to Netscaper113
Dude, get conservative! No conservative should be invoking the FCC; the FCC should be abolished.
And what's up with getting all upset about NBC's tactics to get higher ratings? This is supposed to be--so you guys on the right keep telling us--a free market economy. Whatever gets the ratings and drives the bottom line is what companys should go with. Their shareholders should demand nothing less!

I'm afraid you conservatives can't have it both ways. If you acknowledge something like a (gasp!) "public interest" in accurate, objective new reporting, you skate perilously close to the sort of liberal beliefs that call for an FCC. If you want to stay faithful to your ideology, you've just gotta let that free market rip! If more viewers want to know about Britney than about multilateral trade agreements, so be it. The buying public has spoken.

To alter a great old Tina Turner song, "What's truth got to do with it?"

Gestell
I agree with you!

I see no compelling reason to have a federal bureau of censorship. We might need them to maintain airwave discipline. We can't have companies trying to use the same frequencies and rendering the whole electromagnetic spectrum meaningless. Other than that, I see no reason for their existence. Any federal bureaucracy that cannot justify its existence through meeting a public need for order should not exist.

Ever since McCain garnered the republican nomination for president, I have developed a new appetite for Britney's carrying on. I am sure you are thrilled that the liberals have carried the day. When can we expect the new Federal Department of Nutrition to enforce eating rules to prevent the overuse of the new Federal Department of Health Services. The stated goals of both departments will lead us to the promised land of a healthy citizenry absolved of the need to decide what to eat or whether to see a doctor.

didyaknow...
Britney Spear's mother is pregnant with a clone of K.Fed's Uncle Max?....and their cat died.

This has been the nightly news with Brian Williams(who BTW is a clone of Dan Rather).

Forget the degradation of
tv news which has never been stellar, look at ANY print report and nothing is factual--eveything is some form of editorial with the writer's personal sexual or political life embedded in the "news."
An AP story recently called the Swiftboat campaign against Senator Kerry "unsubstantiated." She may not have liked the Swiftboat effect on Kerry's campaign, but the Swiftboat people were comrades of Mr. Kerry's who were eyewitnesses to incidents he claimed as part of his biography. They were substantiated, indeed.
The NYTimes front page ran dozens of stories on Nancy Reagan's White House china years ago, as if some effront to the nation, altho' the china in question had been paid for privately. The Times only gave up when a poll showed no one cared about the stories.
More recently, the Times spent reams of newspaper on the state of integration of the Atlanta golf course that sponsors the Masters. They even intimataed Tiger Woods wasn't black enough for his not supporting women as members at the gold course.
As the Times is consistently losing readers, altho' not sycophants among the MSM (that quote it assiduously), a rational person would think business managers might relate the disconnect between Times "news" and their audience. The paper has recently shaved 2" off its format. All the news the fits now fits a much smaller place.
Thank heavens.

Do you realize what this means?
Consider this

Percentage of Democrats who rate their mental health as "excellent": 38

Percentage of Republicans who do: 58

— Harper's Index, March 2008

I want to know why no one noticed that (62%) of Democrats actually believe they are somewhat or mostly insane!


Parker, it is because they"re pessamists
The sky is falling at all times, simply the cause has changed, except that it is always the evil Republicans behind it all!

Duh, McCaslin --
Maria Shriver's too busy (mis)running the state of California to spare a thought for the nasty little fishpond she used to swim in.

Media
The ship is going down and they won't accept it. Movies (even DVD's), newspapers, TV, magazines, all are in decline. Thank God for the Internet where we can do our own research and find out what is really true. We can ignore the silly, arrogant, puppetlike rantings of "mainstream" writers. The delete key is very satisfying! To quote WFB.Jr. we won't insult their intelligence by suggesting that they actually believe what they just wrote. The FCC has to regulate the air waves, they belong to the public just like streets, bridges, lakes, parks, and the air. Because we cannot trust one another to be prudent,honorable, and look out for one another, we must have rules. Unfortunately, it is easier for human beings to destroy rather than to build.

Shalom
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