NEWS MEDIA ARE HEEDING A 'CALL TO ARMS'
Americans, usually critical of the media, have given the
news coverage of Hurricane Katrina a thumbs up, and
major outlets are pledging to stay on the story to find
out what went wrong with the response to the disaster.
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/962
News Media are Heeding a 'Call to Arms'
Submitted by editor on September 12, 2005 - 2:12pm.
By Peter Johnson
Source: USA Today
Americans, usually critical of the media, have given the
news coverage of Hurricane Katrina a thumbs up, and
major outlets are pledging to stay on the story to find
out what went wrong with the response to the disaster.
"We haven't had this many people committed to a story
since I don't know when," says CBS News executive Marcy
McGinnis, who estimates that the network has 200
staffers on the story, on par with competitors. "We're
in it for the long haul — with as many people as it
takes to be done."
ABC News has "not stinted to cover the immediate
disaster, and we will not stint on resources to cover
the post-disaster," says ABC News executive Paul Slavin.
"Katrina has uncovered grave weaknesses in this
country's ability to handle a crisis, and we need to
make sure we hold officials accountable and investigate
as best we can both what happened and what might
happen," he says. He compares the reporting to come to
the reporting that came after 9/11. "This is a similar
call to arms."
A Pew Research Center study of 1,000 Americans Sept. 6
and 7 found that 65% rated news coverage of the
hurricane good or excellent, more favorable than the 54%
approval rating for 2004 presidential election coverage.
Television dominated as the main source of information,
with cable in the lead: CNN was the main source for 31%
of respondents, compared with Fox (22%); local news
(19%); ABC (14%); NBC (12%); MSNBC (9%) and CBS (8%).
The cumulative effect
Tom Rosenstiel of the Project for Excellence in
Journalism hopes that many news organizations continue
to work the story, "each one synthesizing and adding to
what others are learning. If only one or two news
organizations do it, it won't have the same effect."
The question is "how many news organizations have the
investigative muscle to handle a story this complex, and
how many can afford to lose a team for the time it will
take to do that, especially in TV," Rosenstiel says. "I
fear the list of news organizations that can do that
today is not very long. And sadly, it gets shorter if ad
sales go down and other news pushes Katrina off our
radar screens."
But as for network news staffers, "People don't want to
leave it," says CBS 60 Minutes chief Jeff Fager. "They
want to stay, even though covering Katrina has been so
difficult and painful in so many ways."
He says the disaster will yield "a number of stories" on
the top-rated newsmagazine in coming months. "The scope
of human devastation is a significant story for us — and
for anybody." Sunday on 60 Minutes, New Orleans police
superintendent Edwin Compass told correspondent Ed
Bradley that officers who disappeared or quit are
"cowards."
Meanwhile, at ABC News, "we might as well open up a
full-time bureau in New Orleans," says investigative
correspondent Brian Ross. On Friday's World News
Tonight, he examined why the Federal Emergency
Management Agency placed Pat Robertson's charity second
behind the Red Cross on a list of relief organizations
to which people can send money.
"There are so many angles to follow up: government
incompetence, sophisticated charity scams, how insurance
companies treat victims, construction of the levees, who
will start ripping off the billions of dollars available
in new contracts," Ross says. "Every single one of these
stories is going to be a big one."
The reaction from abroad
CNN's Jeff Koinange, who usually reports from Nigeria,
where he is based, was on vacation in North Carolina
when the network asked him to cut the trip short and
report on Katrina.
The hurricane has received huge play on CNN
International and is of tremendous interest
internationally, Koinange says. "I get at least 100
e-mails at the end of every day from viewers who say,
'Wow, this is America? Are you sure you're not making it
up or reporting from Somalia and not somewhere else?'
They simply cannot believe it."
And stunning images are likely to continue to flow. The
Bush administration agreed Saturday to not prevent media
from following the effort to recover bodies but will not
allow photographers to join federal rescue workers in
boats or helicopters during missions to recover bodies
from flooded homes.
CNN had filed suit against FEMA in U.S. District Court
in Houston Friday after government officials said the
news media had no right to show pictures of Katrina
victims. In a hearing Saturday, Army Lt. Col. Christian
DeGraff promised that recovery teams would not bar the
media from watching, and CNN agreed to put its case on
hold.
Jim Walton, CNN Newsgroup president, said CNN has proven
in this story and others that it doesn't put gratuitous
images on the air.
Said Army Lt. Col. Richard Steele: "We're not going to
bar, impede or prevent" the media from telling the
story. "We're just not going to give the media a ride."
"These people deserve to have the world watching what is
happening to them," CNN's Anderson Cooper says. "And I'm
not just talking about the victims of this tragedy and
the people who are still dying in their homes. I'm
talking about first-responders who are here without
latex gloves and without respirators.
"This is going to be a difficult week ahead, for
families watching at home and for first responders
collecting the people and trying to restore them some
dignity," Cooper says. "There's not a lot of dignity to
be had in these floodwaters."
- - - -
Voices after the storm:
"There is no question that the way (the media) have been
perceived by the American people has been at a low ebb.
But the last 12 days have been a time when I've been
proud to be in this profession. I think we reconfirmed
our status as the voice of the people who have no voice.
Everyone I ran into was so thankful that we were there."
— CBS anchor John Roberts
"We truly have an important job to carry out. If the
past is any indication, the victims of this hurricane
have yet to see the full range of victimization that is
in store for them."
— ABC investigative correspondent Brian Ross
"(The scenes he witnessed were) terribly, terribly
familiar. People kept coming up to us and saying,
'Please tell the world we need food and water.' That's
exactly what Liberians were telling me two years ago
when the rebels were invading. It was eerily familiar."
— CNN correspondent Jeff Koinange
"The fact is this is the United States of America when
visually all your reference points are Somalia, Sri
Lanka and Niger. (Whether news organizations will stick
with Katrina is hard to tell, because) a lot of news is
driven by ratings. But I can tell you it feels like
we're in the right place."
— CNN anchor Anderson Cooper
=============
MEDIACHANNEL.ORG -- MEDIA SAVVY
News for the Media Savvy
September 12, 2005
MEDIACHANNEL KATRINA CAMPAIGN: KEEP THE LIGHT ON
INJUSTICE
Sign on to MediaChannel's new campaign to press the
press to keep fighting for the truth in the aftermath of
the Katrina catastrophe. With all of our voices we can
help Keep the Light on Injustice. We now have over 3000
signatures. If you have not signed on yet, please do.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/934
= = = =
////////
NEWS MEDIA ARE HEEDING A 'CALL TO ARMS'
Americans, usually critical of the media, have given the
news coverage of Hurricane Katrina a thumbs up, and
major outlets are pledging to stay on the story to find
out what went wrong with the response to the disaster.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/962
= = = =
NBC'S WILLIAMS: JOURNALISTS' GLOVES OFF
NBC’s Brian Williams says the lasting legacy of
Hurricane Katrina for journalists may be the end of an
unusual four-year period of deference to people in
power.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/957
= = = =
U.S. WON'T BAN MEDIA FROM NEW ORLEANS SEARCHES
Rather than fight a lawsuit by CNN, the federal
government abandoned its effort Saturday to prevent the
media from reporting on the recovery of the dead in New
Orleans.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/969
= = = =
IMAGE IS CAPITAL IN WAKE OF STORM
It's very hard to "convey a positive image" when the
"general public" sees you stacking corpses like
cordwood.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/960
= = = =
UNWAGGING THE DOG
For the Bush spin machine, the dual disaster of
Hurricane Katrina and the official response to it
presented a rare instance where the facts proved hard to
manipulate.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/966
= = = =
COVER-UP: TOXIC WATERS 'WILL MAKE NEW ORLEANS UNSAFE FOR
A DECADE'
Toxic chemicals in the New Orleans flood waters will
make the city unsafe for full human habitation for a
decade, a US government official has told The
Independent. And, he added, the Bush administration is
covering up the danger.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/964
= = = =
BUSH CRONIES TO MOP UP KATRINA
Companies with ties to the Bush White House and the
former head of FEMA are clinching some of the
administration's first disaster relief and
reconstruction contracts in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/965
= = = =
WEB PROVES ITS CAPACITY TO HELP IN TIME OF NEED
Thirty years after the Internet was created as a
communications system of last resort, the network
fulfilled its mission during the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina — but in ways more sweeping than its founders
could have imagined.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/959
= = = =
AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE FOR MEDIA IN NEW ORLEANS
Newspapers and television stations, as many people know,
have been losing readers and viewers for years. But in
New Orleans over the last two weeks, when news was
precious, the local media's customer base - and its
advertisers - literally vanished, exiled from home in a
vast diaspora beyond the reach of telemarketers and ad
salesmen.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/956
= = = =
TEXAS FIRES LAWYER AFTER STORY ON ROVE
A staff attorney with the Texas secretary of state said
yesterday that she was fired this week for violating
press protocols when she spoke to a Washington Post
reporter who was working on a story about presidential
adviser Karl Rove.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/958
= = = =
MILITARY REPORTERS ON COVERING IRAQ WAR DEAD
Darrin Mortenson, a staff military reporter for the
North County Times in Escondido, Calif., says making
that first phone call to a grieving family is the
hardest part. The feeling of obligation to fallen troops
stems not only from the wish to help their families, but
also out of personal responsibility to the casualties
themselves.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/961
= = = =
YAHOO HIRES JOURNALIST TO REPORT ON WARS
Yahoo, in its first big move into original online video
programming, is betting that war and conflict will lure
new viewers.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/954
= = = =
DISNEY TAKES EXCEPTION TO CHINA'S MEDIA RULES
As Hong Kong Disneyland prepares to open on today, the
Walt Disney Company will hold off building a similar
theme park in mainland China until assured that it will
be able to broadcast Disney shows on Chinese television,
the company's president said.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/971
= = = =
A JOURNALIST AND BLOGGER TRIES TEACHING
For some old-school journalists, blogging is the worst
thing to hit the print medium since, well, journalism
school. They may want to avert their eyes today, when
Stephen B. Shepard, dean of the new Graduate School of
Journalism at the City University of New York, is to
name Jeff Jarvis director of the new-media program and
associate professor.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/955
= = = =
I WEBBED THE NEWS TODAY — OH BOY!
The future course of news, the basic assumptions about
how we consume news and information and make decisions
in a democratic society, are being altered, perhaps
irrevocably, by technologically savvy young people no
longer wedded to traditional news outlets or even
accessing news in traditional ways.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/970
= = = =
BOMBS AWAY ON TELEVISION NEWS
Want happy stories delivered by perky, perhaps
half-naked, anchors? The future of network broadcasting
may suit you just fine.
add new comment | read more
http://mediachannel.org/blog/node/963