The Last P.U.-litzer Prizes Of 1999
P.U.-litzer Prizes recognize some of America's stinkiest media
performances. Each year, I work with Jeff Cohen of the media watch
group FAIR [Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting] to sift through hundreds
of deserving entries. The competition is always fierce. But only
an elite few can walk off with a P.U.-litzer.
Here are the eighth annual P.U.-litzer Prizes, for the foulest media
achievements of 1999:
* PRE-PRE-FEMINIST PRIZE -- CNN's "Larry King Live"
When Larry King hosted a segment about potential senatorial candidate Hillary
Clinton on June 1, the discussion took political analysis to new depths.
One panelist commented: "She has a bad figure. She's bottom heavy
and her legs are short." Another expert added: "I don't know one good
thing about her. She's got fat -- her legs are too short, her arms
are too long.... If your legs are too short, how do you evolve?" The
panelists did not find time to discuss the anatomy of Clinton's likely GOP
[Republican Party] opponent, Rudolph Giuliani.
"The Last P.U.-litzer Prizes Of The 20th Century"
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* ALL THINGS ETHNOCENTRIC PRIZE -- NPR's Linda Wertheimer
On Dec. 13, when "All Things Considered" host Wertheimer interviewed a
Time magazine reporter about videos made by the two teens who massacred
people at Columbine High, she expressed amazement: "You say in the
article in Time that Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold were steeped in
violence and drained of mercy. How could that be? I mean, they
were middle-class children that had lots of advantages; they had nice parents."
* "INOFFENSIVE INTEGRITY" AWARD -- Viacom Chair Sumner
Redstone
Speaking in October at a celebration in China, where Redstone hopes to expand
business operations, the media mogul cautioned international news outlets
about irritating sensitive governments. "Journalistic integrity must
prevail in the final analysis," he advised. "But that doesn't mean
that journalistic integrity should be exercised in a way that is unnecessarily
offensive to the countries in which you operate." Weeks before this
warning, Viacom announced plans to acquire CBS, thereby becoming the boss
of CBS News employees.
* MONOPOLISING THE NEWS AWARD -- The New York Times
The day after Viacom -- the movie, cable TV and publishing powerhouse --
announced plans to purchase CBS and become the third-largest media conglomerate
in the world, the New York Times devoted seven articles to the proposed takeover.
But there was no space to quote a single critic about the threat to
consumers or to democracy posed by this concentration of media power.
There was room, however, for quotes from various upbeat Wall Street
analysts, and for a reporter's reference to the bygone era of the 1970s:
"In those quaint days, it bothered people when companies owned too
many media properties."
* PLAY-IT-AGAIN SPIN AWARD -- National TV News
On April 5, network TV convened panels of experts to discuss the war on
Yugoslavia. Viewers could see hawkish Sen. John McCain at 9 p.m. on CNN's
"Larry King Live," at 10 p.m. on Fox News Channel, at 11 p.m. on PBS's Charlie
Rose show and at 11:30 p.m. on ABC's "Nightline" with Ted Koppel. The senator's
whereabouts between 10:30 and 11 p.m. could not be determined. [It was the
USA's ABC radio network, not the Australian one.]
* "ANCHORS AWAY TO WAR" PRIZE -- Fox News Channel and PBS "NewsHour
With Jim Lehrer" (Tie)
On March 24, about an hour before the first NATO missiles struck Yugoslavia,
viewers heard a Fox News Channel anchor make an understandable slip: "Let's
bring in our Pentagon spokesman -- excuse me, our Pentagon correspondent."
A more scripted demonstration of journalistic independence came later in
the war, when "NewsHour" anchor Margaret Warner introduced a panel: "We
get four perspectives now on NATO's mission and options from four retired
military leaders."
* PROUD TO CENSOR AWARD -- Seattle TV Station KOMO
Days before the World Trade Organization summit in Seattle, the news director
at the city's ABC television affiliate released a statement that promised
to manage the news appropriately: "KOMO 4 News supports coverage of
the critical issues raised by the conference, including legal protests, but
will not devote coverage to irresponsible or illegal activities of disruptive
groups. KOMO 4 News is taking a stand on not giving some protest groups
the publicity they want."
* TAKE-IT-ON-FAITH AWARD -- Michael Kinsley
In a Time magazine essay, Kinsley -- who works for two of the planet's most
powerful communications firms, Microsoft and Time Warner -- sought to persuade
readers that the World Trade Organization is a fine institution, despite
protests. Kinsley's Dec. 13 piece ended with these words: "But really, the
WTO is OK. Do the math. Or take it on faith."
This is a recent column from FAIR associate and syndicated columnist Norman
Solomon
Norman Solomon's latest book is The Habits of Highly Deceptive
Media.
1 W.A. note : This mightn't
be the last list for the 20th century, which won't end until 31 December
2000 -- John Massam
Copied off e-mail 24 Dec 1999, tagged
with AOLPress/2.0™ 24-25
Dec 99, (11 kb), last revised 06 June 2000
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