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Friday, August 18, 2006
Lorie Byrd :: Townhall.com Columnist
Media gets an 'F' on Katrina
by Lorie Byrd
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In a little over a week, August 29 to be exact, the one year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina will be observed. Expect some pretty extensive coverage on the cable channels, especially on a certain gray-haired CNN reporters’ program, about all the lessons learned over the past year. There should be plenty of discussion about what Katrina revealed about race and poverty in America and how it exposed weaknesses in the government. What I would like, but don’t expect to see, however, are exposes of the failures in reporting the story and some explanations of how such failures could occur. It would also be nice to hear some corrections to the flawed record so many Americans have come to believe as fact.

At a Duke University website I found that the “Duke faculty from a variety of disciplines offer their perspectives on some of the issues and challenges that still exist as the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approaches.” The list of issues faculty would be discussing included repopulation of New Orleans, lingering health issues, mental health issues, improving housing, Louisiana recovery efforts, and even “Are national disasters punishments from God?” and “Bush administration incompetence during Katrina, 9/11.”

What was not offered by the Duke faculty was an examination of journalistic incompetence during Katrina, much of which, I would argue, was the result of many reporters’ rush to pin all blame for the aftermath of the storm on the federal government and the Bush administration.

On the NOLA.com list of events set to mark August 29, is "Hands Around the Dome," a gathering “marking the ordeal of those who sought refuge in the Superdome.” Those at the Superdome and the Convention Center did suffer through a horrible ordeal, but some of the reporting of those ordeals was pretty horrible, too.

Reporting of unsubstantiated rumors was especially rampant in coverage of the New Orleans Superdome and Convention Center. Politicians repeating the stories gave them additional credibility and resulted in them receiving even more coverage. A month after the storm hit, the Los Angeles Times described some of the misreporting:

The New Orleans Times-Picayune on Monday described inflated body counts, unverified "rapes," and unconfirmed sniper attacks as among examples of "scores of myths about the dome and Convention Center treated as fact by evacuees, the media and even some of New Orleans' top officials."

Indeed, Mayor C. Ray Nagin told a national television audience on "Oprah" three weeks ago of people "in that frickin' Superdome for five days watching dead bodies, watching hooligans killing people, raping people."

The Los Angeles Times story then offered some possible reasons for the bad reports. “Journalists and officials who have reviewed the Katrina disaster blamed the inaccurate reporting in large measure on the breakdown of telephone service, which prevented dissemination of accurate reports to those most in need of the information. Race may have also played a factor.”

Call me crazy, but another factor may have been the eagerness of some reporters to latch onto any story that could be used as an example of government incompetence, while giving much less attention to the extraordinary and unprecedented, and extremely successful, operation by the Coast Guard to rescue thousands of people in very dangerous conditions.

Stories, such as the one published by the L.A. Times cited above, did alert the public to some of the bad reporting during Katrina, but those stories got much less attention than the original reports. What was even more pervasive than the factually incorrect reports, however, were blanket statements about the racial component of the story and the tone of the reports, which were often more critical of federal government efforts than those of state and local governments.

While I don’t expect journalists to point out all the mistakes they made, it will be interesting to see whether or not the politicians commenting on the anniversary will make any effort to correct the record where gross misperceptions remain. More interesting will be to observe whether any of those politicians still cite incorrect information from those original wrong reports one year later.

The tone and choice of topics during coverage of the anniversary could have some significant political ramifications as the story will play a part in setting a stage for upcoming congressional elections. The story could possibly have even bigger effects felt in 2008. In anticipation of the upcoming anniversary, many politicians have made pilgrimages to the site of the most devastating storm in modern history. Not surprisingly, some of those politicians are often cited presidential hopefuls.

Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu recently took Senators Barack Obama and John Kerry on a tour. John Kerry, who was making his third visit in the past year said, “It’s a time to measure what have we done. It’s a shame that it’s going to take a one-year anniversary for everybody to refocus. I think people will be shocked by how little has happened.”

As I wrote last year, one potential presidential candidate, Rudy Giuliani, might have had his prospects helped by the experience of Katrina. Another politician, Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, became discussed as a potential presidential candidate due to his outstanding performance in response to the storm.

Other politicians faced intense scrutiny during the Katrina crisis, and results ranged even among those criticized most harshly. While FEMA director, Michael Brown wound up the butt of jokes and out of a job, New Orleans Mayor Ray (school bus) Nagin, was re-elected to office.

It appears that most journalists, even those guilty of the worst of the misreporting, have come through a year later with consequences similar to those enjoyed by Mayor Nagin.

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About The Author

Lorie Byrd is a Townhall.com columnist and blogs at Wizbang and at LorieByrd.com.

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Lorrie, you Pollyanna you
You wrote: "It appears that most journalists, even those guilty of the worst of the misreporting, have come through a year later with consequences similar to those enjoyed by Mayor Nagin."

Did you expect anything different? The liberal main-scream media, reporting on a disaster in a southern city, whose victims could be portrayed as sufferers of racism, prodded on by a minority liberal Democratic mayor, in a state governed by another minority liberal Democrat, you expected someone to laud the Republican administration? Are you kidding me?

Bush could have gone out there in person and walked on water, and all the papers would have headlined is "Bush Can't Swim!"

Anybody going to Houston?
I've heard recently that the "evacuees" still cluttering up the Houston infrastructure are responsible for a huge upturn in violent crime in the past year. I'd like to see some reporting about the parasites still leeching off the system, too, as well as the success stories of people who will admit that Katrina was sent by God to blast them out of the filthy hopelessness they had settled into and shown them a whole world available to them and their children -- and I'd really like to see something like Black families admitting that their caricatured view of Whitey has evaporated in the sunshine of reality.

Anybody out there want to show us the good that came out of Katrina, and the unblinking truth that you can take the evil out of New Orleans but the evil remains evil.

I can answer one of those questions
Are natural disasters punishments from God? The answer is most likely, no, they're not. How do I know this?

Punishment from God is everlasting. Natural disasters are temporary.

God did ordain Katrina to happen, along with everything it brought, for His own good purposes. We don't know what those purposes are, but we know that He was good and right to do it.

I just hope the Pope doesn't come out and cry "where was God?" again.

State Stuck on Stupid
I can say that because I’m a Louisianian – a foolish and stubborn one, to be sure, because I still live in Louisiana.

What happened to Louisiana, last August, was the ghastly result of long-term, widespread corruption, greed, incompetence, neglect and notions of entitlement by those who have held and hold offices of leadership and by those who elected them. In short, we witnessed Huey Long’s horrid legacy on parade.

Considering the leftist media and Huey Long’s post-modern adherents share the same template, why on earth does anyone wonder that truth was all but lost and blame thoroughly misplaced?

Media gets F on Katrina
They get a "F" on all reporting - they are so biased, they could not tell the truth if their life depended on it, that would be too boring, they have to blow everything out of proportion and do lies and more lies. The MSM is not reliable at all, you just can't believe anything they say.

My Take on Katrina
Katrina stirred up the puddin' temporarily, causing attention to be focused on the "best available story" by the media encamped in NOLA. And, as we all know, "if it bleeds, it leads"

In her aftermath, when the media had gone, the politicians took their turn. This seems to amount to grandstanding and pointing fingers of blame (plenty of that to go around) and arguing over who would control the purse strings for that new considerable restoration fund.

Overlay all of the above with a racial angle, season it with some class warfare, and you end up with an inedible toxic gumbo.

It appears that the State of Mississippi has done a better job of recovery thus far - they seem much more proactive than Louisiana has been in addressing their problems. Although I am certain that their politicians are also licking their chops over the monies to be avaialable, they do not seem to be as obstructionist as those in LA.

Here's hope that the Anniversary brings with it a clarity of direction, and a unified plan so badly needed in Louisiana.


A good article by Lorie Byrd, but it just doesn't go far enough. The South Park episode on their own flood is an accurate depiction of how reporters covered the disaster.


As for the people in the Superdome, other then the lack of AC and cable TV what exactly is all the bitching about? From all acounts petty crime and people living in their own filth is normal for New Orleans.

Katrina
If I know one thing about Katrina, it is that I will no longer rush to make donations to the Red Cross, or any other charity, for these types of natural disasters. My family and I have always contributed in the past, but no more giving to the wasteful and downright larcenous populations who can't even be thankful for the help. Granted, that isn't true for all the people, but there is so much baloney involved I will no longer do it. I have given to animal help groups in the past, and from now on, that's where ALL my donations will go.

media and Katrina
only an F??
Shouldn't they be expelled from the school or lose their jobs or something?

Cannot Trust the MSM
The MSM cannot be believed about anything.

1) They have an agenda. Pillory any Republican. Defend any Democrat. Condemn any US ally. Praise any US enemy. Witness Mike Wallace’s interview with the Iranian President.

2) They’re stupid. Katrina and the history of Louisiana politics must be viewed in the context of the floods of 1927, Huey Long, the New Deal, the Great Society, and the War on Poverty.

3) They’re lazy. “Misreporting because of a breakdown in telephone service?” I don’t think so, misreporting because they wouldn’t go into the Superdome and look around. They rely upon governmental leaks and official statements too much. Witness the White House press corps whining about not being informed soon enough after Cheney’s hunting accident.

4) They’re cheap. They rely upon unqualified, non-objective, reporters and photographers on the ground. Witness the recent scandal about doctored photographs from Lebanon. Also, see 1), 2), and 3), above.

I live in Houston. While the evacuees were being housed in the Astrodome, the local MSM and the official statements by the Houston Police Chief about what was happening around the Astrodome were equally unreliable. I had to rely upon conversations with acquaintances in the HPD to know what was really happening.

Media gets an F on Katrina.
Dear Ms. Byrd,

I live in Powder Springs, Ga., but I lived in the NOLA area for forty years, the first twenty-five years in Arabi, La. which is located in St. Bernard Parish Louisiana. (South of New Orleans, East Bank of Mississippi River) In the weeks following Katrina I watched in amazement as the MSM reported not stop about the Ninth Ward section of New Orleans, but neglected to report about St. Bernard Parish, even though eighty-thousand residents, their homes and places of business were destroyed by the tidal wave that washed across the Parish. St. Bernard Parish was Ground-Zero of the destruction that was unleashed by Hurricane Katrina. And it should be noted that fifty years ago, the Federal Goverment sanctioned the Corp of Engineers to dig the "Mississippi River Gulf Outlet" shipping channel through the Fresh Water Cypress Swamps of St. Bernard Parish. This created a shorter ship route to the Gulf of Mexico from the Port of New Orleans. This channel allowed the Gulf of Mexico to encroach on the residents of St. Bernard Parish, and is truly the cause of the devestation that destroyed where I grew up. My last name is "Sanchez", and like many residents of St. Bernard my heritage is Spanish who arrived in Southeast Louisiana in the late seventeen hundreds from the Canary Islands, it makes me wonder if the MSM neglected my family and friends because they didn't fit the correct media profile? By the way, "The Wall Street Journal" printed at least ten to twenty front page articles detailing the destruction of St. Bernard Parish Lousisana, at least the WSJ got it Right!

Media gets an F on Katrina.
Dear Ms. Byrd,

I live in Powder Springs, Ga., but I lived in the NOLA area for forty years, the first twenty-five years in Arabi, La. which is located in St. Bernard Parish Louisiana. (South of New Orleans, East Bank of Mississippi River) In the weeks following Katrina I watched in amazement as the MSM reported not stop about the Ninth Ward section of New Orleans, but neglected to report about St. Bernard Parish, even though eighty-thousand residents, their homes and places of business were destroyed by the tidal wave that washed across the Parish. St. Bernard Parish was Ground-Zero of the destruction that was unleashed by Hurricane Katrina. And it should be noted that fifty years ago, the Federal Goverment sanctioned the Corp of Engineers to dig the "Mississippi River Gulf Outlet" shipping channel through the Fresh Water Cypress Swamps of St. Bernard Parish. This created a shorter ship route to the Gulf of Mexico from the Port of New Orleans. This channel allowed the Gulf of Mexico to encroach on the residents of St. Bernard Parish, and is truly the cause of the devestation that destroyed where I grew up. My last name is "Sanchez", and like many residents of St. Bernard my heritage is Spanish who arrived in Southeast Louisiana in the late seventeen hundreds from the Canary Islands, it makes me wonder if the MSM neglected my family and friends because they didn't fit the correct media profile? By the way, "The Wall Street Journal" printed at least ten to twenty front page articles detailing the destruction of St. Bernard Parish Lousisana, at least the WSJ got it Right!

Academia Exploits Katrina
The University of Virginia's Office of the Vice President and Chief Officer for Diversity and Equity announce a Syposium on Race and Society Nov. 2-4 with the theme, In Katrina's Wake: Racial Implications of the New Orleans Disaster, in which racial components obviously are assumed by the very title of the symposium. Three hundred academicians, policy leaders andsocial leaders are expected to be involved with the symposium, which purports to "engage in conversations around racial implications as it pertains to Katrina." Julian Bond is listed as the keynote speaker, and one can presume the Bush-bashing, Lefitist advocates will shine, turning this terrible disaster into a race-baiting fest.

let's not forget
Let's not forget the fact that N.O. is built below sea level.

Let's not forget that N.O. is 2/3 black and almost all local and state officials are black - discrimination charges? Don't make me laugh. Incompetence knows no color.

Let's not forget that Louisiana is famous for its corruption - especially N.O., and a lot of federal money had been sent from Washington over the years to fix the dams and barriers and things and the money was invariably siphoned off and used for pet projects by local and state politicos.

Let's not forget that Nagin and Blanco both knew at least 48 hours in advance that Katrina was going to be a disaster - the National Hurricane service called them personally.

Let's not forget the picture of the 200 buses that could have gotten 12,000 people out of town, sitting there in the floodwaters - Thanks to the mayor.

the list goes on and on, and if somehow the money to rebuild the city becomes available the corruption and incompetence will return just like stink on s... .

Why rebuild it?

Unreported
In another story angle the media seem hot to ignore, the people of New Orleans now complaining about the "flood" of mexican workers rebuilding the city seem to be the same people that could not bother to get themselves out of the flood zone like everyone else. I guess driving one of those 200 abandoned school buses (200 buses times 50 passengers is 10,000 saved people) is well beyond people that need the gov't to do even the most basic tasks for them.

Media gets an 'F'? What "Media"????
You're quite a kidder! What "Media" are you talking about? You used the terms 'reporters', 'journalistic', 'reporting', etc. I guess I must have missed something, I don't remember seeing or hearing or reading any "reporters" or "journalistic" or "reporting". Now I did watch Foxnews and CNN and MSNBC and ABC and CBS and NBC and HEADLINE News, and read the newspaper and surf the Web of the major News Agency websites during "Katrina". But I didn't see or hear or read any "reporters" or "journalistic" or "reporting" at all. I did catch various idiots standing on NOLA bridges, or at empty intersections in small towns, or leaning into the wind while the storm approached and the waves grew larger and the tide grew higher, all of them "acting" for my benefit so that I could sense the mud and blood and beer of it all. Know what I mean? But I sure didn't see or hear anything like a real reporter hold a mike in front of the face of Mayor Nagin(sp?) or Governor What's-her-face or Senator This-or-that, or FEMA Director Bozo, etc., etc., and demanding they explain what the hell is going on, who's keeping the buses in NOLA and why ain't they on the road, who's holding up the water and rations, etc., etc.. Nope! Didn't see any reporting. Just "acting". Third grade and fifth rate "acting". Hour after hour! Day after day! Nope! Sure DIDN'T see or hear or read any old fashioned, get the facts, hold the bums feet to the fire, burn the politicians till they get it right, no holds barred, don't sleep or eat, stay on the trail, hot as a firecracker reporting. Guess I missed it! Sure would have loved to have seen it though. When was it on? You're not pulling my leg are you? You are! Aren't you? You didn't see any either, did you? You're quite a kidder!

To Rue Mur...
I couldn't have said it better myself. Great observation and articulation!!!

Get off this bus kick!
The busses are a non-issue. On August 28, how was Nagin going to persuade schoolbus drivers to stay behind and drive buses instead of leaving with their families? Nagin did a lot of things wrong, but quit with the buses!
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