Oh Russert, Where Art Thou?

http://firedoglake.blogspot.com/
At some point, the desire to report the news and the desire
to be the person that gets to report the news battled it out
-- and the big contract, cocktail party access and TV face
time won out. With so many reporters becoming the news
themselves, and sitting on information that they have all
heard around town because it might strain their background
sourcing and their inside connections to the halls of power,
one wonders whether a majority of the press corps is
suffering from some sort of battered press syndrome.
Are they fearing the next set of blows to their access could
doom their cozy face-time contracts with the networks and
sink their careers before the wrinkles take hold? That the
backlash from actually doing their jobs properly could mean
losing their means to do their jobs? I will say this, Rove
has done a good number on a lot of these folks -- just look
at who is holding something back.
Tim Russert from Meet the Press: What sorts of conversations
did he have with Libby and/or Rove and anyone else? Has
anyone at the NBC news division asked him to account for
that? Oh, that's right, Russert is the Washington news
bureau chief -- what are the odds he's been asking himself
to do a proper public accounting on this? What sort of
accounting has he given to Patrick Fitzgerald? Why hasn't
Timmy been asked abotu any of this on the air -- can't Katie
Couric jab him with her Manolo's and get him to at least
answer something on this one morning before his coffee has
kicked in?
And now that Scooter Libby has fingered Russert as his
source in this AP article, you really have to wonder how
much longer Russert will be keeping his mouth closed on what
he knows, consdering he works for a news division that,
presumably, isn't as dysfunctional as the NY Times has been.
Or is it.
Bob Novak: This is the ultimate question mark, isn't it? How
much cooperation has he truly given to Fitzgerald? One
assumes quite a bit, considering his ass never got parked in
jail, but really, wouldn't we all like to know just what it
is that Bob was doing writing an article outing a CIA
agent's name after the CIA told him directly not to do so?
Andrea Mitchell: Again, with the NBC news division. Seems
Mrs. Greenspan was sitting right next to Dick Cheney and got
some juicy tidbits for dinner above and beyond the rubber
chicken meal served. But she saved them up for months, only
letting them out in dribs and drabs now after the election.
"Um, hello. Conflict of interest and Hypocrites anonymous
hotline? I'd like to stage an intervention..." Just once,
I'd like to see someone ask her straight out about this --
my vote is for David Gregory or David Schuster.
Chris Matthews: Are you seeing a network pattern here, NBC?
Why were you the go to leak network? What other things were
discussed between Matthews and Rove other than the fact that
"Wilson's wife was fair game?" And just when did this
conversation occur? Was Matthews calling Wilson to warn him
of this Rove statement, or to get some sort of confirmation
from him on his wife's occupational choices? Enquiring minds
and all that.
Walter Pincus and Glenn Kessler: Buried in the most recent
WaPo article, was a bit that piqued my interest. Was it just
sloppy writing, or a more accurate attribution when they
said this:
Who was the White House official who leaked word about
Wilson's wife to The Washington Post's Walter Pincus, who
has never publicly revealed his source?
Previous reports from Pincus read "Administration source" if
I'm not mistaken. A more specific White House sourcing tends
to narrow down the list ever so slightly. How did this
contact occur? Who initiated it? For what purpose?
There are a lot of others involved in this as well, these
aren't the only reporters holding stuff back, but a serious
discussion needs to be had on this issue. And not just in
the insular journalists talking to other journalists and
patting each other on the back and covering each others'
asses sort of way.
Those of us in the general public depend on reporters to dig
into the dirt for us, to bring out the filthy little lies
and secrets that can rot the government from its core to the
outside. We expect that the doing of the job will be more
important that the keeping of the job -- and the maintaining
of the powerful friendships and whatever other incentives
this may bring along with it.
Instead, in this Traitorgate mess, and in the run up to the
Iraq War, what we got was a lot of superficial factual
reporting, sourced to layered secret sourcing that turns
out, now, to have been the same group of 8 or 9 people
confirming each others' stories. That's just plain lazy. And
dangerous -- just ask all those soldiers who have lost limbs
or the families of those who have lost their lives how
important it might have been to know the actual truth from
all sides of the issue, instead of just reporting the easy
bits that were spoon-fed to you from WHIG, that clearly had
its own agenda ahead of everything else.
One of the good things that can come of this Fitzgerald
investigation is a closer look at the incestuous
relationship that journalists and the politicians they cover
have built up in Washington, D.C. Just as we lament the
interrelationship of K Street and big money and politics, we
shouldn't forget that most media conglomerates are also
attached to big money these days. Is there overlap? Are
there foxes in the henhouse?
Oh Russert, where art thou?
For some great reading on the Russert issue further, take a
peek at Susan Hu's take at Booman Tribune.
UPDATE: I want to add a personal caveat in here. I think
that the reporting done by Pincus and Kessler in the WaPo
has been quite good in a lot of cases, and that needs to be
addressed. Kudos to both of them for having some cajones to
actually do some digging when so many others (*cough* Judy
*cough*) sat back and allowed themselves to be unquestioning
conduits of dreck. Asking the tough questions doesn't get
you invited to the cool kids parties, but it sure as hell
earns you the gratitude of the rest of the country who has
to live with their decisions.
There are certainly other reporters who do the tough work
every day. But with the closing of the Nightline shop, and
the continued trend toward wacky tabloid shows and talking
head roundtable showcase extraordinaires, I despair
sometimes that the public's needs are getting pushed further
and further to the bottom of the pile by everyone. We really
need to have some public discussion on this issue and soon.
UPDATE #2: And here's a great example of what is right in
journalism these days. I love Dan Froomkin's White House
Briefing column in the WaPo. And the stories to which he
links today are excellent in their coverage, especially of
the Wilkerson criticisms that I touched on briefly in last
night's round-up. The video link is a must see.
UPDATE #3: Digby's latest hits this issue out of the park.
Great analysis. (Hat tip to reader jdw for the heads up on
this. Thanks!)
posted by ReddHedd @ 10:05 AM
http://firedoglake.blogspot.com/
==============
Subject: Judith Miller, C I A, Valerie Plame, Joseph Wilson,
Karl Rove, Media
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/index.cgi?2005-10-13-Charles
Subject: Saddam Trial, Bush Administration, C I A Leak, Bush
Administration Indictments
Guest: Richard Falk, Jane Hamsher, General Odom, Joe Stork
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/index.cgi?2005-10-20-Charles
C I A Leak - Tradergate:
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-20-Charles-02.mp3
Bush Administration Indictments
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-20-Charles-03.mp3

http://charlesgoyette.com
Thursday, October 20, 2005
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/index.cgi?2005-10-20-Charles
6:00 am-6:30 am
JOE STORK storkj@hrw.org
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/10/16/iraq11883.htm
Saddam's Trial
6:30 am-7:00 am
General Odom Speaks out against Bush Administration.
7:00 am-7:30 am Jane Hamsher
http://www.firedoglake.com Bush Watchdog
7:30 am-8:00 am
RICHARD FALK, rfalk@princ
Saddam's Trial
Guest: Richard Falk, Jane Hamsher, General Odom, Joe Stork
Subject: Saddam Trial, Bush Administration, C I A Leak, Bush
Administration Indictments
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 1 (10.66 MB)
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 2 (9.22 MB)
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (9.25 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/index.cgi?2005-10-20-Charles