seinfeldrules
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From INDC Journal. A self admitted bias site.
http://www.indcjournal.com/
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/01/11/rather.cbs/index.html
CBS Report: Anticipatory Ennui (Updated with Cautious Optimism)
I feel like a little Jewish kid on Christmas Eve.
UPDATE: Updated emotional status - cautiously optimistic:
Four CBS News employees, including three executives, have been ousted for their role in preparing and reporting a disputed story about President Bush’s National Guard service. ... The panel said a "myopic zeal" to be the first news organization to broadcast a groundbreaking story about Mr. Bush’s National Guard service was a key factor in explaining why CBS News had produced a story that was neither fair nor accurate and did not meet the organization’s internal standards.
The report said at least four factors that some observers described as a journalistic “Perfect Storm” had contributed to the decision to broadcast a piece that was seriously flawed.
"The combination of a new 60 Minutes Wednesday management team, great deference given to a highly respected producer and the network’s news anchor, competitive pressures, and a zealous belief in the truth of the segment seem to have led many to disregard some fundamental journalistic principles," the report said.
But then there's this:
While the panel found that some actions taken by CBS News encouraged such suspicions, “the Panel cannot conclude that a political agenda at 60 Minutes Wednesday drove either the timing of the airing of the segment or its content.”
The idea that Mary Mapes and Dan Rather had no political agenda is simply ludicrous, but the media and its established analysts need to play the old "vee know nussing" game to maintain the grand illusion of ideological impartiality in journalism. Any admission of bias would be perceived to cross the big invisible line that devalues a news organization's currency of long-term credibility and neutrality. Such denials are similar to a prison inmate's requisite protestations of innocence while waiting on the results of eternal appeals: admit guilt and the game is up. Nevermind the fact that we have motive, multiple witnesses and a murder weapon. I suppose this dissonant finding is expected, if disappointing.
And then there is this crucial lowlight:
While the panel said it was not prepared to brand the Killian documents as an outright forgery, it raised serious questions about their authenticity and the way CBS News handled them.
The evidence for fraud is overwhelming, from the anachronistic non-employment of an individual referenced in the documents, to the invalidation of the possibility that a typewriter of the era created the font, to the convenient exact match in MS Word default settings. This non-conclusion surprises me: why didn't Dick Thornburgh and Louis D. Boccardi convene a panel of forensics experts in order to reach a more definitive verdict on the documents? One exists.
On the bright side, the report seems to detail some of the relevant flaws and misconduct by CBS employees, though it would seem to repackage ideological malice as incompetence and carelessness spurred by competitive pressures. In addition, some heads have rolled. My initial verdict? The results are perhaps better than I thought they would be, though flawed.
I'll offer further commentary after a digestion period.
UPDATE: Rathergate is all over this, just keep scrolling.
Scylla & Charybdis:
My quick reaction after 30 minutes with the Report: It has substance, and some veteran CBS people are being fired. There is a mea culpa for the utter breakdown of journalism rules.
But the Report directly denies that "political bias" of the CBS department was behind the story, and deftly skirts other 30,000-feet issues: Legal wrongdoing; the smoking gun of the "personal files" claim; and the critical facts as to the pre-broadcast scheming to coordinate a 60-Minutes segment as the cornerpiece of an anti-Swift Boat political attack.
It's like a murderer confessing to drunk driving, speeding, carrying a concealed weapon and assault and battery. OK, per se ....but there's a dead body to account for.....
I'd submit that "involuntary manslaughter" substituted for "first-degree murder" is a better analogy.
UPDATE: QandO points to Leslie Moonves's response to the report (pdf), saying it's the real deal. Jon Henke's take:
In short, he lays out each person with a role in the story, the CBS conclusion about their complicity and errors, and the CBS resolution in each case. They are, in almost every case, appropriate. In fact, with respect to Mary Mapes, Moonves is positively brutal. If her career continues, it will have to do so at an outlet like Indymedia, or somewhere with similar journalistic standards.
UPDATE: Jim Geraghty is required reading, of course.
UPDATE: Michelle Malkin highlights the section of the report detailing Mary Mapes collaboration with the Kerry Campaign:
While it is certainly proper to receive information from a variety of sources, this contact crossed the line as, at a minimum, it gave the appearance of a political bias and could have been perceived as a news organization’s assisting a campaign as opposed to reporting on a story.
UPDATE: The Raving Atheist leaves a comment:
Notably, its analysis of the authenicity is limited to how well the contents and format of the forgeries "mesh" with the known Bush 70's era documents. No real discussion of the forensic typographical disproof; the only mention of Newcomer's report is in connection with it being quoted in the Washington Post. Interestingly, the CBS notes that Emily Will basically did the LGF experiment and found that the Killian memos matched up to Microsoft Word, but just drops the matter after noting there was a dispute over whether she communicated her results to CBS. The only discussion of Bouffard's finding is in connection with his reported "recantation" regarding whether the documents could have been done on an IBM Selectric (the panel notes faults CBS for reporting this absent evidence that such a model was available at the TxANG).
One detail regarding any "recantation" by Bouffard - it was merely professional equivocation before conclusive analysis. His last word on the matter, sent to me during my dispute with the Boston Globe: "For your information, it appears that the Selectric Composer could not have created the memos."
In short, the document was an anachronistic impossibility based soley on font analysis. (UPDATE: Malkin points to an Appendix that seems more definitive about the inauthenticity, though the panel's equivocation in the main statement seems silly to me.)
UPDATE: Politburo Diktat: "Beigewash on Rathergate"
Reverse all the Leftie-Rightie labels on this story, and by now we'd have three Hollywood movies, updated versions of "All the President's Men."
http://www.indcjournal.com/
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/01/11/rather.cbs/index.html
Man Dan, maybe you should take your own advice.NEW YORK (CNN) -- Veteran anchorman Dan Rather sent a memo to his CBS News colleagues Tuesday calling for "a renewed dedication to journalism of the highest quality."