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 Message Boards » » Dan Rather whines about "new journalism order" Page [1]  
kdawg(c)
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You know, those pesky bloggers who make reporters have actual, real, legitimate sources for the stories they report on.

Quote :
"Emotional Rather blasts 'new journalism order'


NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - Former CBS News anchor Dan Rather said Monday that there is a climate of fear running through newsrooms stronger than he has ever seen in his more than four-decade career.

Rather famously tangled with President Nixon and his aides during the Watergate years while Rather was a hard-charging White House correspondent.

Addressing the Fordham University School of Law in Manhattan, occasionally forcing back tears, he said that in the intervening years, politicians "of every persuasion" had gotten better at applying pressure on the conglomerates that own the broadcast networks. He called it a "new journalism order."

He said this pressure -- along with the "dumbed-down, tarted-up" coverage, the advent of 24-hour cable competition and the chase for ratings and demographics -- has taken its toll on the news business. "All of this creates a bigger atmosphere of fear in newsrooms," Rather said.

Rather was accompanied by HBO Documentary and Family president Sheila Nevins, both of whom were due to receive lifetime achievement awards at the News and Documentary Emmy Awards on Monday evening.

Nevins said that even in the documentary world, there's a certain kind of intimidation brought to bear these days, particularly from the religious right.

"If you made a movie about (evolutionary biologist Charles) Darwin now, it would be revolutionary," Nevins said. "If we did a documentary on Darwin, I'd get a thousand hate e-mails."

Nevin asked Rather if he felt the same type of repressive forces in the Nixon administration as in the current Bush administration.

"No, I do not," Rather said. That's not to say there weren't forces trying to remove him from the White House beat while reporting on Watergate; but Rather said he felt supported by everyone above him, from Washington bureau chief Bill Small to then-news president Dick Salant and CBS chief William S. Paley.

"There was a connection between the leadership and the led . . . a sense of, 'we're in this together,"' Rather said. It's not that the then-leadership of CBS wasn't interested in shareholder value and profits, Rather said, but they also saw news as a public service. Rather said he knew very little of the intense pressure to remove him in the early 1970s because of his bosses' support.

Nevins took up the cause for Rather, who was emotional several times during the event.

"When a man is close to tears discussing his work and his lip quivers, he deserves bosses who punch back. I feel I would punch back for Dan," Nevins said.

Rather praised the coverage of Hurricane Katrina by the new generation of TV journalists and acknowledged that he would have liked to have reported from the Gulf Coast. "Covering hurricanes is something I know something about," he said.

"It's been one of television news' finest moments," Rather said of the Katrina coverage. He likened it to the coverage of President Kennedy's assassination in 1963.

"They were willing to speak truth to power," Rather said of the coverage.

Rather sidestepped the question of what should happen to the evening news in the expected makeover. "Not my call," he said. And he said he hadn't been asked, either.

"I gave it everything I had, I didn't hold anything back. I did the best newscast we were capable of doing," Rather said.

Nevins, who almost single-handedly has kept the art of the independent documentary on television, said the HBO documentaries show real life and do it with as little damage to the subjects as possible. She said the producers and directors "respect mostly the people on the other side of the camera."

Nevins said she didn't shy away from such R-rated topics as "G-String Divas" and "Taxicab Confessions" but noted that sex and passion have been topics of literature since Chaucer's day. "The most R-rated is a body bag, not a naked body," Nevins said.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter "


http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/ns/news/story.jsp?id=2005092000190002239470&dt=20050920001900&w=RTR&coview=

9/20/2005 9:11:52 PM

boonedocks
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Quote :
"those pesky bloggers who make reporters have actual, real, legitimate sources for the stories they report on."


have you ever read a blog?

9/20/2005 9:27:00 PM

kdawg(c)
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I've ready Cindy Sheehan's blog. It's the best.

9/20/2005 9:28:34 PM

pryderi
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It helps explains why there are more news stories about blonde-haired, blue-eyed girls and Olivia Newton-John's boyfriends than gov't and corporate corruption.

9/20/2005 9:32:40 PM

Luigi
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when you have people posting articles on here which seemingly accept the opinions of Rupert Murdoch as possible facts, you know something's up.

Blogs might be good for getting a wide variety of information, but its impossible to tell whats untrue or biased and what is not.

9/20/2005 9:34:50 PM

pryderi
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http://www.rawstory.com
http://www.bradblog.com
http://www.editorandpublisher.com


Quote :
"'Black Tuesday' Continues: NYT Co. Cutting 500 Jobs
Arthur O. Sulzberger, Jr.


By E&P Staff

Published: September 20, 2005 4:37 PM ET

NEW YORK The New York Times Co. announced a staggering staff reduction plan Tuesday that will likely mean some 500 job loses at the company's many properties, including an expected 45 newsroom positions at The New York Times newspaper and 35 at The Boston Globe."

9/20/2005 9:37:30 PM

 Message Boards » The Soap Box » Dan Rather whines about "new journalism order" Page [1]  
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