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Major Networks Missed Joy In Iraq

 
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shawa
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Joined: 03 Sep 2004
Posts: 2004

PostPosted: Tue Feb 01, 2005 12:28 pm    Post subject: Major Networks Missed Joy In Iraq Reply with quote

http://washingtontimes.com/national/20050201-120415-9939r.htm

Major Networks Missed Joy In Iraq

By Jennifer Harper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Purple fingers, jubilation, hope and courage: Most news organizations offered positive and often uplifting coverage of the Iraqi elections in the past 48 hours.

Then, there were the holdouts.

"Dan Rather looked like he was about to burst into tears," radio host Laura Ingraham said yesterday.

Indeed, the CBS newsman appeared initially mournful over news events that might reflect the success of White House plans to establish Iraq as a democratic stronghold in the Middle East.

"Fear is running high. ... Bombs exploded at two Baghdad schools that are expected to serve as polling stations, and anti-election leaflets were everywhere threatening to, quote, 'Wash the streets of Baghdad with the blood of voters,' " Mr. Rather told viewers.

He later began his main election report with more bad news: "More than 30 people died in insurgent attacks today."

Habitual negativity can exact a toll on credibility, though.

"Most everyone had positive reports, particularly on cable. But there were glaring exceptions who emphasized violence or uncertainty," said Brent Baker of the Alexandria-based Media Research Center.

"Reporters look bad when they insist on being dour and sour when actual images on TV screens are so happy and thrilling," Mr. Baker said. "These correspondents look out of touch, grasping the negative so hard."

Such reporting caps off weeks of critical coverage, which often predicted the worst outcome for Iraq, Mr. Baker said.

"But in the end, these correspondents just couldn't compete with such powerful, positive images," he added.

Mr. Rather was not the only gloomy anchor as the election coverage unfolded.

ABC's Peter Jennings noted Sunday, "All over Baghdad today, there is no question that it looked like an occupation."

He later observed that in Sunni regions, "The election process has been rejected. Somehow, the future here is still pretty bleak."

Even after the Baghdad polling places had closed, NBC's Brian Williams detected "general unease," calling the events "a fairly unquantifiable election so far."

Although many press accounts of the election were initially positive, few said the election guaranteed that Iraq would become a full-fledged democracy — or that U.S. troops will return home soon.

Sour or guarded reports result because many journalists "think Bush's foreign policy is crude, and it reflects in their coverage," National Review's Rich Lowry told Fox News yesterday.

The tendency was more pronounced overseas, where reports were dire enough to warrant criticism from Britain's Guardian newspaper.

"Yesterday, Iraq became the most democratic country in the Arab world. What a pity that so many writers who, in other circumstances, are optimists about human progress, should shut their eyes to what is happening. In their determination to say: 'I told you so,' they are coming perilously close to siding with jihadi murderers. Shame on them," an editorial noted yesterday.

•Contact Jennifer Harper at jharper@washingtontimes.com or 202/636-3085.
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MSeeger
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Joined: 01 Oct 2004
Posts: 174
Location: Katy, TX

PostPosted: Tue Feb 01, 2005 5:42 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

That's why the alphabet boys and their cable offshoots are losing viewers and credibility, especially among those of us old enough to remember Vietnam.

We've all grown up now from the idealistic hippy dippy days where everything was beautiful in its own way and going to San Francisco meant wearing flowers in your hair. The same cant and rhetoric that worked on us then isn't working on us now.

It's a different war, a different time, and a different place for most of us. September 11 forever changed the way we looked at things. So...the big 3 can try, but they will never again regain their supremacy until they start presenting a more balanced view of the world...one that isn't totally anti-American.

Maria
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Be not deceived, God is not mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. Gal. 6:7
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