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The Access of Evil-- CNN's Duplicity
various FR links | 04-14-03 | The Heavy Equipment Guy

Posted on 04/14/2003 3:17:35 PM PDT by backhoe

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/893109/posts
CNN says its silence on Iraq atrocities had nothing to do with maintaining access
AP ^ | Monday, April 14, 2003
 
 
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/893066/posts
CNN says its silence on Iraq ... ( a little late isn't it?)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2003/04/14/entertainment1432EDT0624.DTL ^
 
 
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/892996/posts
CNN Admits Honest Reporting Was Impossible, So Why Go To Baghdad?
Media Research Center ^ | Friday, April 11, 2003 | Katie Wright
 
 
 
CNN's Access of Evil
Opinion Journal ^ | April 14, 2003 | Franklin Foer
Reprehensible. Access is more important than principle---or truth in reporting. But wait a minute----didn't CNN do the same thing during the Clinton Administration?
 
 
CNN knew
The Washington Times ^ | Monday April 14 2003 | EDITORIAL
Where to begin? First, as the chief news executive of the only truly worldwide television news network, Jordan was literally the one man in the entire world in a position to "unbottle" those awful truths. Moreover, those awful truths were not only newsworthy, but would have been history-making - had they been reported.
 
 
 
 
I think that most people are missing the real point of all of this. Sure Saddam was a sadistic madman, but at least he wasn't George Bush. It doesn't matter to these people that they were used. They were happy to be used. Their hatred of conservatives, George Bush, and America in general trumps all to this very day.
 
 
The News we Kept to Ourselves
The New York Times | | 4/11/03 | | Eason Jordan
This CNN story should not be forgotten. We have to keep this alive in some way
 
 
"ACCESS THROUGH SELECTIVE REPORTING"
HonestReporting ^ | 13 April 2003 | HonestReporting Communique
 
 
 
 
WHAT ELSE IS CNN HIDING?
Iconoclast ^ | April 12, 2003 | Stephen Rittenberg
 
 
 
FURY OVER CNN BIG'S COVER-UP
New York Post ^ | 4/12/03 | MICHAEL STARR and DEBORAH ORIN
 
 
CRAVEN NEWS NETWORK
New York Post ^ | April 12, 2003 | Eric Fettmann
This astonishing confession doesn't just undermine CNN's claim to be "the most trusted name in news" - it wreaks incalculable damage on all journalists' ability to be trusted by the American people.
 
 
 
 
'Reporting some of what we know'
Townhall.com ^ | April 12, 2003 | Rich Tucker
The elistism of CNN is incredible. What else aren't they telling us?
 
 
CNN chief stands by Iraq omissions
Washington Times ^ | Saturday, April 12, 2003 | By Jennifer Harper
I bet CNN has the same 'see-no-evil, hear-no-evil' "policy" with Castro's Cuba.
CUBA LINKS:
 
 
 
 
 


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: accessofevil; cnn; journalism; journalists
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To: DeltaZulu
"What did they know and when did they know it?"

I strongly suspect they and all the alphabet-soup networks knew a lot for a long, long time-- they are paid to be professionaly curious.

21 posted on 04/14/2003 3:54:56 PM PDT by backhoe (The Dungeon doors ARE swinging open- what will the Left now say?)
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To: backhoe
Joseph Conrad had it pegged. The deep pleasure and bindings of sharing dark secrets have led them all up the creek into hell.
22 posted on 04/14/2003 3:58:44 PM PDT by bvw
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To: Howlin
Thanks- I really think we are witnessing a revolution in the exchange of information... it's a combination of sites like this, the blogs, and talk radio all joining together in a loose, free-wheeling confederation where ideas are passed speedily and mercilessly examined and unspun.

It's a grand time to be a free American!

23 posted on 04/14/2003 3:59:46 PM PDT by backhoe (The Dungeon doors ARE swinging open- what will the Left now say?)
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To: bvw
The deep pleasure and bindings of sharing dark secrets have led them all up the creek into hell.

Whew! That's a cutting turn of phrase!

24 posted on 04/14/2003 4:02:03 PM PDT by backhoe (Hey CNN! No Blood for Ratings!)
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To: backhoe
"unspun"

I agree whole-heartedly. And it's about bloody time....

25 posted on 04/14/2003 4:03:30 PM PDT by Hazzardgate
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To: Hazzardgate
And it's about bloody time....

Indeed, it is past time...

26 posted on 04/14/2003 4:10:52 PM PDT by backhoe (CNN = Collaborator's News Network)
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To: backhoe
CNN: The Castro News Network

By L. Brent Bozell III,
President of the Media Research Center
May 14, 2002

Jimmy Carter's visit to Havana this week should spur some nice exclusives for CNN, since it's the only American news agency with a bureau in the Cuban capital. Five years ago, the U.S. government and Fidel Castro agreed to let CNN open a Havana bureau, the first permanent American news presence since Associated Press was expelled 28 years before, with the understanding that "news gathering activities within Cuba be unconditioned and unrestricted." Sen. Jesse Helms supported the CNN presence, saying Mr. Castro was accepting "the rope with which to hang himself."

But CNN hasn't treated its Cuban exclusivity as a gold mine for tough scoops. In a Media Research Center study of five years of news coverage out of CNN in Havana, only four out of 212 news stories (less than two percent) focused on the harsh political realities of Cuba’s rigid one-party dictatorship, and only seven CNN reports (three percent) focused on the peaceful dissidents that “President” Castro keeps locked away in his dungeons. By contrast, CNN has done twice as many stories in just the first three months of this year about alleged human rights abuses by the United States against terrorist suspects held at its Cuban base at Guantanamo Bay.

Even these numbers are generous. In one story on one-party elections, CNN reporter Lucia Newman brazenly declared there was "no dubious campaign spending here" and "no mud slinging...[in] a system President Castro boasts is the most democratic and cleanest in the world."

Reporting like Newman's explains why it made sense for Castro to welcome Ted Turner's network in 1997, since Turner had spent millions producing pro-Castro propaganda films on his networks over the years, including a ring-kissing 1990 interview Turner himself awarded the dean of dictators.

The celebrity treatment has continued for Castro. In February of 2000, CNN's show "Newsstand" devoted one of its "Cool Digs" segments to describing the contents of Castro's office, right down to the worn tips of his erasers. "Years ago, our host worked as an attorney, defending poor people," declared anchorman Stephen Frazier. "He's Fidel Castro, Cuba's leader since 1959, who has been making waves lately in his fight for the return of young Elian Gonzalez." Instead of focusing on the regime's abuses of human rights, CNN has often focused on the personal instead of the political, with saccharine stories on cigars, promising young ballerinas, or a 94-year-old guitar player.

Most ironically, CNN has offered only two stories over five years on Cuba's lack of freedom of the press, and both of them ignored Castro's threats to expel foreign journalists who would "insult" his regime with any journalistic vigor. Reports on Cuban press crackdowns by Reporters Without Borders or other pro-free press organizations over the past five years have also been ignored by CNN.

The toothless performance documented in the MRC study mostly occurred when CNN was under old management, before Walter Isaacson and his crew took over last summer. Isaacson can and should issue new marching orders: CNN should use its Havana advantage and commit to increasing the amount of Cuba news, regularly reporting on the welfare of Cuba’s dissidents and doing real investigative journalism that will tell the real story of life in Cuba the way that no other U.S.-based television network can tell it.

It might look like CNN believes it's too dangerous for its Havana-based reporters to be as adversarial with the Castro regime as it is with America's elected leaders. But whether it reflects fear or favor, the lack of journalistic independence that CNN’s displayed in the past five years only fosters the harmful illusion that Fidel Castro has survived real, Western-style media scrutiny.

27 posted on 04/14/2003 4:17:10 PM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hitlery: das Butch von Buchenvald)
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To: PhilDragoo
Wonderful info! Thanks!
28 posted on 04/14/2003 4:18:27 PM PDT by backhoe (Hey CNN! No Blood for Ratings!)
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To: backhoe; Luis Gonzalez; Cincinatus' Wife
Megaphone for a Dictator
CNN’s Coverage of Castro’s Cuba, 1997-2002

Executive Summary
May 9, 2002

Five years ago, CNN became the first U.S.-based news organization with a full-time news bureau in communist Cuba in nearly 30 years. As an independent and highly-regarded news organization, CNN’s mission was to transmit the reality of Castro’s dictatorship to American audiences. In 1997, then-White House Press Secretary Mike McCurry told reporters that “reporting of truth about the conditions in Cuba would further...peaceful, democratic change in Cuba.” CNN officials also had high hopes. Incoming Havana bureau chief Lucia Newman assured viewers “we will be given total freedom to do what we want and to work without prior censorship.”

CNN’s Havana bureau now has a five-year track record that can be evaluated, and the results are not good. Media Research Center analysts reviewed all 212 stories about the Cuban government or Cuban life that were presented on CNN’s prime time news programs from March 17, 1997, the date the Havana bureau was established, through March 17, 2002. MRC’s analysis found that instead of exposing the totalitarian regime that runs Cuba, CNN has allowed itself to become just another component of Fidel Castro’s propaganda machine.


On FNC's Fox & Friends on May 14 Rich Noyes discussed the MRC's study of CNN's Cuba coverage, "Megaphone for a Dictator"

Major findings:

CNN gave spokesmen for the communist regime a major advantage, broadcasting sound bites from Fidel Castro and his spokesmen six times more frequently than non-communist groups such as Catholic church leaders and peaceful dissidents.

CNN’s stories included six times as many sound bites from everyday Cubans who voiced agreement with Castro and supported his policies than quotes from Cuban citizens disagreeing with the government. This left American audiences with the impression that Castro’s communist government is overwhelmingly popular among the Cuban public.

CNN provided very little coverage of Cuba’s dissidents, who were the focus of only seven of the 212 Cuba stories broadcast during the past five years, or about three percent of CNN’s total coverage. That’s fewer than half as many stories as CNN produced in just the first three months of 2002 about alleged human rights abuses by the United States against prisoners held at its base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

CNN also practically ignored Cuba’s lack of democracy, a topic which was featured in only four stories (or just under two percent). One of those reports, in January 1998, consisted of Lucia Newman trumpeting Cuba’s rigged election as superior to those in the U.S. because they have “no dubious campaign spending” and “no mud slinging.”

Much of CNN’s coverage of Cuba focused on the tiniest slices of everyday life, which created the sense that Cuba was basically a normal country, not one in the grip of a dictatorship’s secret security apparatus. Instead of focusing on the regime’s human rights abuses, CNN showed Cubans waiting for ice cream cones, profiled a promising young ballerina, and interviewed a 94-year-old guitar player.

On CNN, Castro was treated more as a celebrity than a tyrant. Rather than revealing the dirty secrets of his dictatorship to the world, CNN reported on Castro’s 73rd birthday celebrations and, in February 2000, featured the dictator’s office in the “Cool Digs” segment of CNN’s Newsstand.

The MRC report concluded that “CNN could have used its unique bureau to add to the American public’s knowledge of the only totalitarian state in the Western hemisphere. But instead of enlightening the public about the regime’s repression, CNN’s Havana office has mainly provided Castro and his subordinates with a megaphone to defend their dictatorship and denigrate their democratic opponents.”

If CNN is interested in improving its coverage, the MRC report included the following suggestions: 1) increase the amount of Cuba news; 2) commit to doing real investigative journalism in Cuba; 3) broadcast regular reports on the welfare and status of political prisoners held by Castro; and 4) promote the reporting efforts of Cuba’s independent journalists. But if CNN cannot or will not commit to improving its coverage, it should close its Havana bureau rather than perpetuate the fiction that it is helping Americans better understand the realities of Cuba under Castro.

29 posted on 04/14/2003 4:20:47 PM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hitlery: das Butch von Buchenvald)
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To: DeltaZulu
Add one more question to that: Why did they do it?
30 posted on 04/14/2003 4:23:35 PM PDT by mewzilla
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To: PhilDragoo
Thanks again!
31 posted on 04/14/2003 4:29:47 PM PDT by backhoe (For Evil to prosper, it is only necessary that good men do nothing...)
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To: backhoe
CNN - We bury (articles). You dig.
CNN - RIP
32 posted on 04/14/2003 4:39:50 PM PDT by Diddley (Dead, wounded, hidden, or escaped, Saddam is “As good as dead!”)
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To: backhoe
It's a grand time to be a free American!

With internet access. And with friends who have really great search skills!

33 posted on 04/14/2003 4:48:35 PM PDT by Howlin (It's a great day to be an American -- or an Iraqi!)
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To: backhoe; Howlin
Great job backhoe!

Thanks for the ping Howlin! I hope to GOD, CNN goes down BIG TIME for this.

34 posted on 04/14/2003 4:51:28 PM PDT by Wphile
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To: Howlin
My lovely teenage nieces literally cannot comprehend a time when you couldn't "just go on the 'net and find it."

And I think it's a grand thing, pitfalls and all. People are better off ( generally ) with more information as opposed to more ignorance. We live in exciting times.

35 posted on 04/14/2003 4:54:56 PM PDT by backhoe (For Evil to prosper, it is only necessary that good men do nothing...)
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To: Wphile
I share your hope... I know talk radio has been hammering on this for several days so a lot of Americans who would not have otherwise heard of this obscenity are becoming informed.
36 posted on 04/14/2003 5:01:17 PM PDT by backhoe (Just an old keyboard cowboy, ridin' the trackball into the sunset...)
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To: backhoe

WHAT DID CNN KNOW AND WHEN DID THEY KNOW IT?

Alas, CNN themselves have answered this question -- at least, where Saddam is concerned.

37 posted on 04/14/2003 5:15:18 PM PDT by laz17 (Socialism is the religion of the atheist.)
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To: konaice
So in the chase for a scoop to save its' failing rateings, CNN engages in combat ahead of the front line.

As far as I know Iraq never hurt any news media (although several were hurt by U.S. fire), and yet CNN finds it necessary go hire armed thugs and shoot their way into and out of Tikrit. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

I watched that live and noticed that they never mentioned that they ran the checkpoint in their taped repeats of that report. I also checked their website article on the incident and it never mentioned it either.
38 posted on 04/14/2003 7:11:33 PM PDT by GeorgiaYankee (Up in Tikrit without a battle!)
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To: backhoe
Thanks- I really think we are witnessing a revolution in the exchange of information... it's a combination of sites like this, the blogs, and talk radio all joining together in a loose, free-wheeling confederation where ideas are passed speedily and mercilessly examined and unspun. It's a grand time to be a free American!

Yes, a revolution in the exchange of information here in free America.

However, around the world, in most statist countries, brought to you by the governments of these statist countries, CNN broadcasts its propaganda loud and clear.

For goodness sakes, half of CNN international is broadcast from the repressive country of China in a former free city -- a.k.a Hong Kong.

39 posted on 04/14/2003 8:44:27 PM PDT by FreeReign (V5.0 Enterprise Edition)
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To: backhoe
This is a great resource!! Bookmarked!
40 posted on 04/14/2003 11:18:18 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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