Archive for category Media Criticism

Going And Going And …

Rathergate just keeps getting bigger, weirder, and more corrupt. It’s reminds me of when I first saw Independence Day: You think you’re watching just another disaster epic, some character starts talking about Roswell and area 51, and the next thing you know all the crazy conspiracy theories about aliens are coming true. Well, that’s where we’re at on this story, we started off with a story of sloppy journalism and all of a sudden CBS news is just another cog in the Kerry Campaign — and it sure seems like we’re still closer to the beginning of the story than the end.

The story as of now – CBS learns by means/people unrevealed that Bill Burkett has some info on Bush’s National Guard service. Despite the fact that Burkett had already fabricated a story about Bush’s TANG files, CBS talks to and believes Burkett (he must be mighty persuasive in person). Burkett tells them he has some documents, gives one to them, and then names as his price for the rest that CBS has the Kerry Campaign talk to him. Mary Mapes, CBS producer, calls Joe Lockhart and Max Cleland, tips them off that Burkett is their source on a big story about Bush’s National Guard service complete with documentary evidence. Lockhart talks with Burkett, but he claims he only humored him, talking about how Kerry could respond to the Swift Boat Veterans ads, and never discussed what Burkett was telling to CBS. It’s pure coincidence that the Kerry campaign had ready that whole “Fortunate Son” theme ready to go immediately after the 60 minutes report. Oh that’s right, Burkett slipped Cleland a copy of the documents (perhaps when Cleland was down at Bush’s ranch?) so why should Lockard spend time yaking with the guy when he can look at the documents for himself.

Gee, I wonder why CBS didn’t also contact the Bush campaign to let them know about the report they were going to do. That way they too could have their comments ready following the show. Maybe CBS found it too hard to think with all those alarm bells going off. I mean, Burkett had lied before about something and cited George Conn as someone who could back him up, and here he tells CBS he got these documents from Conn again (did Burkett pick him for the name alone?). CBS is apparently so dazed and confused that they can’t figure out what their document experts are telling them, don’t bother to check with George Conn to see if they are getting conned, rely on noted liar Ben Barnes to be the face of the piece, and then seemed defensive and shocked that anyone would question CBS authority. I mean, if CBS says they have authenticated the documents (they didn’t), have an unimpeachable source (I guess he’s certifiable, not impeachable), and airtight chain of custody (so airtight they don’t need to check it), who but partisan idiot scumbags can question them? And just because they already told the Kerry Campaign who they’re top secret source is doesn’t mean they should tell the public.

USA Today also received the documents, but seemingly they could hear the alarm bells well enough they didn’t run with the story like CBS. And when they went back to Burkett, they got the greatest shaggy dog story ever told: Lucy Ramirez gave them to me, and I burned the originals because, well, Ramirez didn’t want forensic evidence coming back to name her. Who’s Lucy Ramirez? Apparently USAT doesn’t know either, but didn’t think to ask.

If this were a movie, people would think it too contrived. Sadly, it’s not, it’s the network news in action. I suppose this way they can go out with a bang, not a whimper.

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Gee, Ya Think?

It’s not just rumored anymore, it’s official: CBS admits that it cannot vouch for the authenticity of documents used to support a “60 Minutes” story. The network said it was wrong to go on the air with a story that it could not substantiate. 

And for reasons known only to ABC news, they choose to run the story with a picture of John Kerry speaking at a fund raiser. That’s enough to make me wonder if I shouldn’t start complaining about a rightward tilt in the media. 

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Same As It Ever Was

It’s clear CBS lied to us. No, I’m not claiming they or any employee (e.g. Dan Rather) were the forgers of what are clearly forged documents. No, they lied to us about how they checked the authenticity. None of their so called experts authenticated the documents. They never did have a document expert as they claimed, and now they’re trolling blogs looking for any help they can get.

I think this is business as usual for the MSM. There was no golden age. The authority and trustworthiness on any story has always depended on the individuals doing the reporting and fact checking, not with the organization as a whole. Some people had integrity and were conscientious; other were not. Jason Blair exposed the same problems on the newspaper side that Steven Glass exposed on the magazine side that are now revealed on the network news side by RatherGate. 

MSM has long been part of the trial lawyer media complex, an unholy alliance designed to win money for both trial lawyers through damage awards and journalists through advertisers. When NBC news allowed the destruction of a pickup truck to be staged using model rocket engines by trial lawyers, this connection was clearly exposed, not that anything happened beyond junior partners catching heat. The way for huge breast implant verdicts and awards was carefully paved by a media campaign that hyped non-existent dangers. 

Where once reporting on social issues like gun control and abortion, or how different wars were portrayed based upon who occupied the oval office, or even economic news itself were and are slanted by the liberal views and biases of MSM, we know have a clear indication that political reporting suffers the same fate.

Trust is the only currency MSM has to spend, and for me they’ve spent it all. And that’s terrible, we need reliable information.

UPDATE: I’ve been busy, but the new developments are even worse for CBS. The reason they didn’t provide the names and reports of their authenticators is that the people they asked to authenticate didn’t. That’s right, after CBS looked into the memos for weeks the expert’s verdict was not authentic. Yet CBS went ahead anyway. They didn’t make a mistake, they lied, and they knowingly peddled a lie. Okay, CBS hasn’t just spent all their trust with me, they are into me for a lot of trust. 

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What MSM Can Learn From Blogs

Blogs can’t replace the full range of MSM, but blogs have demonstrated that they can do certain things, like fact check, much better than MSM. RatherGate is a prime example.

The guys at Powerline are bright guys, Charles Johnson is a bright guy, same goes for Bill at INDC Journal, Donald Sensing, Pacetown, and all the rest. But two things sets them, and bloggers in general, apart from MSM (OK, more than that, but I’m only going to focus on two things. So keep Pajama cracks to yourself).

Number one is that they are happy to credit the people who send them information. You want your name mentioned, they’ll do anything short of the blink tag. When a reader sends them good info, they use it and credit the sender (or withhold the name if desired). They don’t act like they’re figuring out everything on their own or that they discovered all the info on their own. This is a huge multiplier effect – they are giants on the shoulders of thousands of other giants, people who may be experts in a given field, people who may be talented amateurs in a given field, people who might have just had a great idea or key insight. The point is, for MSM, I’m sure they have to rely on people giving them info, but they always act like somehow as good journalists they did all this on their own. They seem to actively discourage the notion that any part of what they present was even influenced by non-MSM participation. Yes, they get outside experts on occasion, but the experts come from MSMs rolodex, not the other way around. But for whatever reason, MSM thinks any whiff off non-MSM participation dilutes their authority. 

The other difference is that bloggers don’t try to be “exclusive”; that is they link to other bloggers. No blogger pretends to be a one stop shop. This is a big help because on something like the CBS forgery story nobody has the complete picture all by themselves; a bunch of people contribute various amounts but by linking the reader can get a full picture. It’s no skin off of Powerline’s nose to link to a INDC Journal post that makes a good point if it helps the reader. Actually, its better than that because Powerline doesn’t have to worry about all the angles, it just works its angle on the story and links to the other angles. MSM doesnt work that way. MSM wants you to stay with them or a “partner” – usually another media entity with common ownership. Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not claiming the blogosphere is one great big love-in where nobody cares about traffic. It isn’t, they do. But competition takes a different form – if you don’t link where appropriate, traffic goes down. It’s that simple. Part of your importance as a blogger isn’t just original content, but putting it into context.

Jeff at Caerdroia and The Daily Pundit also have thoughts on differences between blogs and MSM.

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Who Watches the Watchmen?

CBS and the Boston Globe have decided if you can’t dazzle them with your brilliance, baffle them with your B.S. Put your waders on boys and girls, because it’s getting deep around here.

Dan Rather’s response on national TV: “Today, on the internet and elsewhere, some people — including many who are partisan political operatives — concentrated not on the key questions the overall story raised but on the documents that were part of the support of the story.” I have to question Dan Rather’s news judgement (please note, not his patriotism), since he thinks allegations of activity that wasn’t either illegal or unethical that happened 30 years ago is far more important than allegations of outright fraud that happened 2 days ago.

I can almost see the thought bubbles above Dan Rather’s head “must tough it out — if I can just tough it out long enough, it will all go away.” Since I’m not a journalist, I won’t go the extra mile and claim I really can see them.

CBS put on the lamest defense: an expert witness on handwriting who has said in the past that you can’t positively authenticate a signature from a photocopy. Well, guess what, he positively authenticated a signature from a photocopy. CBS had no expert on documents themselves though — not that they’ve named yet. As I said before, if they can’t name one, can’t produce his or her work, I have to doubt they exist. There’s far more evidence for Santa Claus than there is that CBS did a thorough investigation of these documents.

The Boston Globe took up the slack on that and announced that a top expert on documents authenticated the documents. This one will blow your mind. They used the expert that Bill at INDC first contacted and who said 90% chance of forgery. After a Globe reporter talked with Dr. Bouffard, they ran the following headline:
Authenticity backed on Bush documents
OK, we can all get back to pummelling President Bush for his actions 30 years ago. Well, not so fast. It seems the good Dr. is “pissed” at the Globe for misrepresenting his views. What he told them was that he was still looking into it, getting more information, somethings he thought at first weren’t quite true, and he was still considering it. But he still thinks the documents are most likely forgeries.

The guys at Powerline are ahead of the curve on all this (why not, they’ve been at the head of the pack so far) and have come out with a great idea:

“The next question is, how old are the “first-generation” copies that CBS has? If those copies, based on testing the paper, are themselves twenty or thirty years old, it would add considerable plausibility to the claim that there were, in fact, authentic originals, even if those originals cannot now be recovered. But I’ll bet they’re not. I’ll bet that if tested, the CBS copies would be very, very recent. (I don’t know how precise dating of paper can be. If any readers are experts in this, let us know.) So, here is the bottom line: if the CBS copies are recent, then the alleged originals were recently in existence. So where are they? Were they recently destroyed? If so, why and by whom?

If CBS would make its purported first-generation copies available for testing, it could go a long way toward verifying their authenticity, or–much more likely–proving that they are recently-created fakes.

One loophole in this approach: a clever forger could obtain thirty-year old paper, and use it to create the fake memos. So if the originals (or CBS’ copies) are on old paper, it wouldn’t necessarily prove they are authentic (they could, of course, have been forged long ago, but it’s hard to see why anyone would have done that). But if CBS’s copies are new, and they can’t explain what happened to the originals, it would be the last nail in Dan Rather’s coffin.

So let’s get CBS’s copies and test the paper.

I wouldn’t worry about that clever forger too much – nothing has been particularly clever about it so far.

Wouldn’t it be nice to put the whole sorry mess in front of an investigative inquiry, put everybody under oath, have CBS and the Globe put all their cards on the table, and get to the bottom of this? Maybe Lord Hutton is available. After all, when Hutton spoke, heads rolled.

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I’d Rather Not

It’s deja vu all over again. Last year a star reporter makes blockbuster accusation; when his story is questioned, his company backs him to the hilt saying that his source was reliable; an inquiry is launched which discovers that the reporter distorted the information of the source and that his company didn’t provide adequate oversight and then blindly backed the reporter; the chairman of the board, the CEO, and the reporter then resigned. In that case it was Andrew Gilligan and the BBC; today’s case is Dan Rather and CBS.

The big difference (aside from the sexier accents across the pond) is that what the blogosphere did in a day took a government agency months. OK, that and we haven’t gotten to the punishment of the guilty yet. Here’s hoping that doesn’t take too long either – a matter of days rather than weeks. 

The first thing that strikes me about the whole thing is how bad a forgery the documents are. The forger don’t even bother to spend a couple of bucks and buy an old typewriter to type them up. They then used the most common word processing software in the world, Word, and they just left all the standard defaults on. They didn’t even change the font to Courier, which looks like a typewriter. They didn’t even bother to proofread and so you have a “th” superscripted next to a number, and you have “th” not superscripted one space away from a number? Can you make it any more obvious that this was done on Word on a computer?

It’s more understandable that the forgeries didn’t get the military details correct. But I don’t understand why LTC Killian would have written these in the first place. They seem to dovetail nicely with what some Democrats are saying today, but they make no sense in the context of LTC Killian writing them in 1973. For instance, why would an officer ever write a memo that says he caved to pressure from a superior, and title it CYA? Who’s A is he trying to cover here? Not his, because he was admitting he lied in an evaluation. That wouldn’t be covering his A, that would be uncovering his A, and waving a big red flag while doing so.

So I convinced that these are forgeries, and amazingly lousy ones at that. 

Only blinding partisanship would let Dan Rather be deceived by such lousy forgeries, and put at risk both the reputation of CBS news and John Kerry. Those reputations were put at risk for claims that George Bush’s superior really didn’t think he was that good a pilot, that George Bush refused a written order to get a physical, and that George Bush didn’t get permission to go to Alabama. Really, who cares? We’ve been throught this a dozen times already. At least Gilligan provided a blockbuster accusation of “tarted-up” dossiers (you got to love the brits, especially when they talk French). Rather provided a snooze fest of accusations, and did so with both skill, aplomb, and nothing but liars. The documents – fake. Ben Barnes – a liar. This is what passes for journalism these days?

But there is a certain deja vu with previous Bush scandals. Joe Wilson – liar. Richard Clark – liar. Michael Moore – liar. This latest non-scandal has the familiar ending: the accuser turns out to be a liar and the accusations baseless.

CBS has claimed they did a thorough investigation before they went to air. If CBS really did a thorough investigation of the documents, why aren’t they able to release the results immediately? Why can’t they simply provide their expert typologists report where they tracked down which typewriters in use by the TANG were able to use a proportional font and a superscripted th? Where is their comparison of other documents that have nothing to do with Bush also written by the LTC around the same time? They haven’t even provided a name. Why can’t they provide the chain of possession of the documents in question? Since they haven’t, I’m forced to conclude that there was no thorough examination of the documents. Instead, they relied on people believing on CBS’s say so. We don’t live in 1973 anymore where just because Cronkite said it, we believe.

Dan Rather has responded and sadly provides no new information or a shred of support, just more of the same ‘trust me’

“I know that this story is true. I believe that the witnesses and the documents are authentic. We wouldn’t have gone to air if they would not have been. There isn’t going to be — there’s no — what you’re saying apology?.”

I think there’s a lot of credit to go around: the guys at Powerline, Charles Johnson, INDC journal and Pacetown just to name a few. Hayek would be proud of the display of distributed intelligence in the internet — how no one source has all the answers, but the flood of information coming from all directions arrived at a conclusion. The forgery wouldn’t have been detected before the rise of the internet. Not just because of bloggers or skeptics, but because the documents wouldn’t have been released to the public before. Now you have everything input into the network and the distributed intelligence standing by. But back then the documents might have been flashed up on the TV briefly, and then never seen again. And if the White House did dispute the authenticity, well, that would be just what you would expect, and by the time it was resolved, the election would be long over. 

And of course, the blogosphere as befits a super intelligent being has a sense of humor.

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No Trumans Here

The Post ran one of my letters to the editor after a long absence. I would have liked to have written at greater length, but brevity is the soul of wit (and the secret to getting a letter printed). I wrote in response to both letters and editorials – it was a Post editorial that labeled Zell Miller’s speach “vituperative.” I suppose I labor under the illusion that anybody, and I include the paper’s staff, reads the editorials or opeds or letters to the editor. I barely know anbody who gets the paper, let alone reads anything beyond sports and everyday (comics). 

I reproduce the letter for your reading enjoyment:

The responses to the Republican National Convention make it clear that the Democrats are no longer the party of Harry Truman; they can’t stand the heat. The Republicans told the truth, and the Democrats thought it was hell.

The Democrats can’t tell the difference between ad hominem attacks and factual takedowns. Pointing out that John Kerry was on the wrong side of a number of issues and votes is called vituperative; calling George W. Bush a moron, a fascist, a liar and AWOL and Dick Cheney a war profiteer and a coward for obtaining draft deferments passes as reasonable debate. 

Considering the identical responses of mainstream media and partisan Democrats, it’s clear that the media represent the view of partisan Democrats and not unbiased reporting. 

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Pretty Boys On The TV

There are times when I think I’m too hard on the press. But then I read something like this: Peter Jennings’ interview of Karl Rove, and then I wonder if I’m not hard enough. This interview clarifies a few thing – while Peter is a very pleasant guy — easy to look at, nice sounding voice (hey, these are all the things I lack!), he’s not too bright and clearly looking not to inform the audience, which I think is what his job is, but looking to trap Rove and make him and the President look bad. Not surprisingly, Rove is ahead of him and rather easily avoids Jennings’ snares. What a waste of TV time. No wonder more people were watching Fox News than any of the networks: Brokaw is an American version of Jennings, and Rather isn’t even pleasant.

Via Frater Libertas, who also has good commentary (natch!) on the interview.

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Top News Stories?

Is it just me, or does anybody really care about the Peterson or Kobe Bryant cases, outside immediate family that is? Cable News has been awash with the stories for months now, reporting every twist and turn, but who cares? I’m not interested in the least, and nobody I know is interested. Am I in a cocoon? Do I not get out enough? Have I not paid enough attention? Out of all the terrible murders out there, why is Laci Peterson’s a matter of national interest? Is Kobe Bryant really that much a celebrity that his rape case merits leaving the sports page? I’m mystified how the MSM decides what warrants wall to wall coverage, and what merits a single mention.

The Great Unraveling

Jon Henke at QandO unravels Paul Krugman the pundit with the wisdom of Paul Krugman the economist. It’s sad that a great economist has turned into a petty lying weasel.

Of course, blogs don’t do any reporting, which is why you won’t see this in the traditional news.

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