Iraq War Disappears As TV Story

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DAVID BAUDER | March 17, 2008 12:00 AM EST | AP

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NEW YORK — Remember the war in Iraq?

The question isn't entirely facetious. The war has nearly vanished from TV screens over the past few months, replaced by stories about the fascinating presidential campaign and faltering economy.

Yet Americans continue to fight and die there, five years after the war started in March 2003.

"It's no big secret that this is a war that everyone has grown tired of," said CNN correspondent Arwa Damon, whose documentary "On Deadly Ground: The Women of Iraq" is airing several times this month. "Iraqis are aware of it. They think it's a story that people are tired of hearing about. That's what makes our job more crucial."

ABC News will draw attention to the war this week with the fifth edition of its "Where Things Stand" series, polling and interviewing Iraqis about what is happening in their country.

Statistics clearly illustrate the diminished attention. For the first 10 weeks of the year, the war accounted for 3 percent of television, newspaper and Internet stories in the Project for Excellence in Journalism's survey of news coverage. During the same period in 2007, Iraq filled 23 percent of the news hole.

The difference is even more stark on cable news networks: 24 percent of the time spent on Iraq last year, just 1 percent this year.

"The fact that it went down didn't surprise me," said Tom Rosenstiel, the project's director. "But the fact that it almost disappeared is something I didn't expect."

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The fatigue factor is hard to fight.

From a journalist's standpoint, the story hasn't changed for several months. The American "surge" appears to have made progress, and while Iraq is hardly safe, pockets of the country are much safer than before.

It's possible to pinpoint the exact week that the switch turned off. The war averaged 30 minutes per week of coverage last year on the three network evening newscasts up until Gen. David Petraeus, commander of the U.S. forces, testified in September about the surge's progress, according to news consultant Andrew Tyndall. In the last 15 weeks of the year, the broadcasts collectively spent four minutes per week on the war.

A week before Petraeus' testimony, Katie Couric did some of her best journalism since joining CBS during a trip to Iraq and Syria.

Her reward? The least-watched week for the "CBS Evening News" since at least 1987, and probably long before.

"The story there is so difficult to cover and there's so little to get to that represents something you haven't said already and haven't shown already," said Paul Friedman, senior vice president of CBS News.

It's also dangerous and expensive, he said.

Unless the story changes dramatically, Friedman said, the point may come when a network pulls full-time staff from the country.

Whether the media is to blame or not, people clearly know less about what's going on in Iraq than they used to. About half of Americans have consistently been able to correctly estimate how many U.S. military personnel have died there, most recently last August. But a survey conducted two weeks ago by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found only 28 percent knew that just about 4,000 Americans have been killed.

To this point, the networks say they haven't cut back on their staffing and commitment to covering Iraq.

"It's clear that this is going to be a big story for some time to come," said ABC News President David Westin. "It's our job to find ways of presenting that story in the most memorable and compelling ways to our audience because they need to know what's going on there."

That means replacing micro stories _ how many people were killed by the latest roadside bomb _ with macro stories of investigations and subtle changes in Iraqi society, said NBC News President Steve Capus.

For correspondents, the trade-off is less exposure on the air for more interesting stories that show enterprise. ABC's Terry McCarthy reported a love story with a Sunni woman and Shiite man marrying to the backdrop of sectarian violence in Baghdad. NBC's Richard Engel spent 10 days in Najaf reporting on Iranian influence there, and Damon got a strong viewer reaction to her story about a 5-year-old boy whose face was doused with gasoline.

"There is always news out there if you look for it," said Jon Klein, CNN U.S. president. "What too many news organizations were doing was covering the car bomb du jour, and when the car bombing ceased, the coverage ceased."

Still, Engel senses a growing dissatisfaction among some correspondents about the lack of air time.

Engel said he believed war news would come back to the fore. It was pushed back following the Asian tsunami and Hurricane Katrina, but those stories faded. This interval is just longer than the others, he said.

"Obviously, the economy is really critical and the campaign is really critical," Rosenstiel said. "But you do have a sense that when all is said and done, when we have a new president, the thing that will dominate the presidency is the war."

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On the Net:

http://www.tyndallreport.com/

http://people-press.org/

http://www.abcnews.com/

http://www.cnn.com

___

EDITOR'S NOTE _ David Bauder can be reached at dbauder"at"ap.org

NEW YORK — Remember the war in Iraq? The question isn't entirely facetious. The war has nearly vanished from TV screens over the past few months, replaced by stories about the fascinating presi...
NEW YORK — Remember the war in Iraq? The question isn't entirely facetious. The war has nearly vanished from TV screens over the past few months, replaced by stories about the fascinating presi...
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When the war started going better for the US, the media lost interest. No sense in wasting newsprint or airtime on a story if they can't slam Bush, Cheney et al.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:42 AM on 03/19/2008
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Mission accomplished!

However, it is returning as an HBO series, Generation Kill. GK will portray the glorious struggle of making the world free, and i do mean free as in money, for US corporate interests.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 03/18/2008

Perhaps our govment is not willing to show airial views of the devastation we created, this would be available since we have drones flying over the poor,Iraqis looking for food and water, the cemetarys must stand out courtesy of G, W, Bush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 PM on 03/17/2008
- dadw5boys I'm a Fan of dadw5boys 281 fans permalink
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IF THE MEDIA WAS LIBERIAL THEY WOULD BE ALL OVER IRAQ AND EVERY MOVEMENT IN THE WAR.

THE LACK OF COVERAGE SHOWS JUST HOW TIGHT A HOLD THE RIGHT WING HAS ON THE NEWS AND THE MEDIA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:03 PM on 03/17/2008
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MSNBC is particularly guilty of underreporting on the war. I nearly puked today when Frederika Whitfield on MSNBC queried if our economy fears are "just psychological" and due to so much in the news about it. Duuuh. When I switched channels to CNN, they had graphic video of the Iraq war and were reporting on today's suicide bombing, etc. It got me to thinking about how MSNBC, yes, even K.O. rarely, if ever has stories and video in Iraq on any of their shows, but how CNN often does. As much as I can't stand Woof Blister I have to admit CNN is superior in the cable news propaganda pusher competition.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 03/17/2008
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 144 fans permalink

If the media doesn't report on it it doesn't exist, Right?

And if all they report is happy news that is what is actually happening, Right?

But somehow I think the Iraqi people may have a way of creating their own reality. Which may possibly be at odds with the media created reality.

What we need, and what we are not getting is to hear from Iraqi's themselves. And no filter from the Corporate media. But that will never happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 PM on 03/17/2008

People, you must read the book "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" by John Perkins.

If you do, you will never vote Republican again and understand why it is that the Bush Administration is pushing to be in Iraq for 100 years.

You will also fully support that the only justice for this war would be to drop Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Ashcroft in Iraq, without proper supplies and gear, and demand that they stay there for the rest of their lives, drinking contaminated water, fighting for their lives and suffering the atrocious fate we have dealt to our military and the citizens of that country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 03/17/2008
- MikeDu I'm a Fan of MikeDu 147 fans permalink
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I said 8 months ago that the iraq war was guaranteed to magically 'disappear' from the airwaves in time for the election cycle. 'Liberal media' my arse.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 03/17/2008
- truthyguy I'm a Fan of truthyguy 42 fans permalink

What's $21 Billion per month and 4,000 dead and 60,000 maimed, when you have stories like Britney, the McGreevey divorce and Spitzer's Hookergate ? Prioritize damn it. There is no reason to be concerned about Iraq or Afghanistan. Do you see any al Queada on your street? No, you don't. Then what the hell is the problem?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 03/17/2008
- Ramirez I'm a Fan of Ramirez 273 fans permalink
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from the milblog StrategyPage:
****

"News directors say they are putting more effort into covering the presidential election, and the usual stories (celebrity scandals, disasters of any sort, notorious criminals). But there are other reasons for ignoring Iraq. Since last Summer, more good news than bad news began to come back from the front. This was not useful for news organizations. Bad news makes money (by attracting larger audiences for advertisers), good news is useless. Moreover, only about five percent of Americans (military personnel and their families) have any personal interest in Iraq.

-snip-

In a word, the war has no constituency. News stories about how much the war costs, which impacts all tax payers, tend to flop, so news directors have come to think of Iraq as a poorly performing subject. The war won't go away, it will just seem like it has, if all you do is pay attention to the mass media. "
***

Read more at:
http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htiw/articles/20080316.aspx

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 AM on 03/17/2008
- serialcoma I'm a Fan of serialcoma 122 fans permalink
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As the elections loom ever closer the conservative dominated press doesn't want the voting public continually reminded that the republicans have screwed the entire world with their mid-east quest for blood money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 AM on 03/17/2008
- mediamarv I'm a Fan of mediamarv 38 fans permalink
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Amen to that!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 03/17/2008
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