Source: TownHall.com
Unacceptable
"Made in China."
Or so reads the tag on the navy blue "Pentagon United States — Dept. of
Defense" cap purchased for this columnist on the main concourse of the
Pentagon at the Fort America concession.
Bring back Murrow
Turned off by TV news? You're not alone.
We've just finished reading a scathing critique of network news by
Jeffrey M. McCall, professor of communication at Indiana's DePauw
University and author of "Viewer Discretion Advised: Taking Control of
Mass Media Influences."
It was this time last year, the professor notes, that Federal
Communications Commission Commissioner Michael Copps criticized the
television news industry for giving the public "too much baloney passed
off as news."
"Sadly, the evidence since that speech indicates that Copps'
critique remains quite valid," Mr. McCall writes. "From superficial
coverage of elections to hyped-up coverage of celebrity scandals, the
broadcast news industry continues to give the citizenry a news agenda
that degrades the conversation of democracy."
And how have the news networks reacted?
"NBC is countering the decline in journalistic effort with an
increase in razzle-dazzle," he finds. "Evening anchor Brian Williams
was a guest host last fall on 'Saturday Night Live.' NBC executives
were delighted with the stunt, one of them saying, 'It showed a side of
his personality that some viewers may have warmed to.' "
(Perhaps we will warm up to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton now that she appeared on the same comedy show over the weekend).
"The most recent NBC novelty is the new voice that introduces Williams'
'Nightly News.' It is none other than Hollywood actor Michael Douglas,
recruited by Williams himself to open the show," Mr. McCall adds in his
Op-Ed column, which first appeared in the South Bend (Ind.) Tribune.
It's so pitiful, he points out, that on a certain "day last
June when oil prices dropped $2 a barrel, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs stepped down, the space shuttle launched, and former national
security adviser Sandy Berger surrendered his law license for stealing
government documents, the story that dominated cable news was Paris
Hilton's release from jail."
Still, he says, there's hope:
"Former NBC journalist Maria Shriver recently told NBC she
wouldn't return to the network from her current hiatus. She cited the
media excesses in covering the death of Anna Nicole Smith last year as
the major factor, saying 'It was then that I knew the TV news business
had changed.' "
Reagan reruns
Feeling left out for missing the Reagan Revolution? Not to worry, the Gipper is back.
Ronald Reagan's voice "will soon be heard across the land again," says
Duke Blackwood, executive director of the Ronald Reagan Presidential
Library and Foundation. He says a series of 30 nonpolitical segments of
Mr. Reagan's many radio commentaries, in which he clarifies his vision
for America, will begin airing around the country on April 28.
"Ronald Reagan Speaks for Himself" is aimed at the several
generations of Americans who never heard him speak on issues such as
the economy, immigration, abortion, terrorism and taxes.
Consider this
Percentage of Democrats who rate their mental health as "excellent": 38
Percentage of Republicans who do: 58
— Harper's Index, March 2008
Tough being Israel
King Abdullah II of Jordan, who has arrived in the United States for
meetings with President Bush, made this eye-opening observation during
a speech to the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International
Affairs at Princeton University:
"Fifty-seven countries are not at peace with Israel today.
Fifty-seven countries out of 193 countries in the world. Fifty-seven
countries with a total population greater than Europe and the United
States combined.
"Fifty-seven countries, representing one-third of the members of the United Nations."
By John McCaslin
Monday, March 3, 2008
A
policeman patrols Tiananmen Square in Beijing March 2, 2008, in front
of the Great Hall of the People, the venue of the National People's
Congress or parliament. Some 3,000 delegates to the annual meeting of
China's parliament, the National People's Congress, will meet in
Beijing's Great Hall of the People on March 5 for about two weeks.
REUTERS/Jason Lee (CHINA)
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