Sunday Hosts Under The Microscope At Pre-Convention Panel

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First Posted: 08-25-08 12:35 AM   |   Updated: 09-24-08 05:12 AM

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Sunday morning was business as usual on the networks, with Face The Nation, Meet The Press, and This Week performing their familiar weekly duties against the backdrop of the impending Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado. But a couple of hours after those shows were off the air, their hosts gathered in downtown Denver to subject themselves to a little scrutiny, courtesy of the Joan Shorenstein Center on Press, Politics, and Public Policy. Moderated by Judy Woodruff (with the same affable and capable guidance she puts to great use at News Hour), Tom Brokaw, Bob Schieffer, and George Stephanopoulos participated in a discussion that was frank, brimming with collegial humor, and filled with highlights.

Woodruff got immediately down to brass tacks, asking the panel how they would assess the campaign coverage in general. "Robust but uneven," offered Brokaw, who went on to assert that the country was much better served in this election cycle by the "wider screen" provided by the confluence of cable news and the internet. Schieffer averred that the coverage was "generally very good," but noted that the press tends to reflect the tenor of the campaign itself -- a theme he would come back to again and again. George Stephanopoulos noted how intense and rapid the news cycle has become: "Everything is covered, all of the time," and said the most difficult part of the job was working through the sheer abundance of campaign emails and blog posts.

Woodruff next asked the hosts to characterize the quality of coverage provided Hillary Clinton. Schieffer was the most succinct, calling it "fairly evenhanded." But Brokaw dissented, stating that he felt like things came to be "loaded up against her." There was "too much discussion of her needing to drop out of the race," Brokaw said, adding that these calls were "unfair and inappropriate in many instances."

Stephanopoulos felt differently, saying that a time came where it was simply "a fact that [Clinton] couldn't win," and that timing played a role in the coverage -- May was noticeably different from March. And as for perceptions of increased scrutiny, Stephanopoulos noted that the front runner draws the most fire.

Schieffer probably stated it best when he said that "we need to find a way to shorten [the primary] process."

Things got decidedly stickier when Woodruff asked if the key issues of the day had been given proper coverage. Brokaw said that without going back and taking "an inventory" of the past coverage, there was no way of really answering that question. There were twenty-two debates, and the candidates themselves could have initiated the discussion of issues.

Of course, this got me thinking about what a deficit the news consumer starts at when the celebrity face of a news organization asks the candidates about policy questions related to education, Iraq, energy policy, et cetera. Queries tend to solicit broad overviews with little depth. To me, a game-changing way of getting great issue coverage in politics would be to expand the exposure of specialized reporters. For example, reporters who cover education issues for a living are better suited to dig down into areas of vulnerability.

Stephanopoulos stated bluntly, "it's just not true that these issues are not being discussed." He's right, of course. They are being discussed, but in many cases, far from sight. Take the recent news out of Iraq, where withdrawal timetables are suddenly, plainly, a part of negotiations between the Bush and al Maliki governments. This development had its origins in a congressional hearing back in June, where Iraqi Parliamentarians began the steady push for U.S. withdrawal. To get that news, one had to turn to the Washington Independent. So far as I can recall, this story was not given much play in network or cable news. It was certainly never discussed on Sunday! But these hearings presciently bespoke the Iraq turning point we have arrived at today.

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The issue of issues behind them, the panel turned to more esoteric queries. Was there sexism or racism in the coverage of the Democratic primaries? Brokaw said, "I don't think [Clinton] was the victim of sexism. I just don't." Schieffer echoed Brokaw, literally: "I do not agree that sexism is more rampant in America than racism, I just don't." Stephanopoulos disagreed, suggesting that "sexism and ageism are more acceptable" than racism, noting that the comedians that populate his "Sunday Funnies" section, simply do not "have a handle" on how to lampoon Obama.

On the matter of John Edwards and Rielle Hunter, the panel split on whether or not they should have given the story more coverage. "We pressed our sources and couldn't report it," Stephanopoulos said simply. Schieffer went folksy on the matter: "A woman has a baby and says that fellow over there is the daddy and that fellow over there says I'm the daddy. That was pretty much it." Brokaw was more thoughtful, saying that the one "question he couldn't answer" was: would the press have gone after Romney or Giuliani as hard?

Brokaw's most puzzling moment came when discussing McCain's success, which he attributed to the candidate's "indomitable will." Brokaw opined that McCain won by simply being "the most authentic...he wasn't trying to reinvent himself." I encourage Mr. Brokaw to get to know that John McCain who ran for office in 2000!

The discussion grew even more electric when Woodruff threw the panel on the not-so-tender mercies of Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell, who disputed Brokaw's take on John McCain and proclaimed, simply, that the media does not do a good job covering the issues. But it wasn't long before Rendell proffered the quote of the session -- disharmonious words sure to spook the entire convention. "Ladies and gentlemen, the coverage of Barack Obama was embarrassing. He basically got a free pass."

Rendell was pretty specific in the network he was singling out -- MSNBC -- if not the precise personage who lay at the root of his objection. Let's just say that when Chris Matthews decides to run for office in Pennsylvania, he'd better not be counting on Rendell's support. Where Matthews is concerned, it's pretty clear that Rendell's "tingle" is somewhere behind his temples, and white-hot at that.

Sunday morning was business as usual on the networks, with Face The Nation, Meet The Press, and This Week performing their familiar weekly duties against the backdrop of the impending Democratic Natio...
Sunday morning was business as usual on the networks, with Face The Nation, Meet The Press, and This Week performing their familiar weekly duties against the backdrop of the impending Democratic Natio...
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Put emotions aside. If Obama had chosen Hillary as VP none of this talk would be happening. The party would be united. And, exhilerated.

It's an objective fact that she earned the VP slot. Anyone else is "not Hillary". Every time someone in the media says that Biden can attract "Hillary's voters", it just makes Obama look silly. Like he hired a soundalike to play at his inauguration instead of Bruce Springsteen. I'm hoping he has an inauguration despite what I see as a political misstep in his handling of his VP selection - including the dramatic build-up to it, that only ignited talk that it would be Hillary after all. Why allow that idea to float only to have it shot down? Not smart.

All this distraction from the issues -- and McCain and company are using Hillary's primary statements against Obama anyway! The best way to refute Hillary's statements would be to have Hillary at Obama's side.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 08/25/2008

One doesn't "earn" the VP position; one is either the right fit or one is not. If for no other reason, Hillary could not be the VP nominee because Bill would not release the names of the foreign donors to his presidential library. That is a dealstopper right there. If Obama loses, it will be due to two factors: 1) The significant percentage of white voters who would never vote for someone who is black; and 2) the Hillary supporters who would rather that McCain win than that we recommit to funding public education for poor and working class children, health care, the end to the war and so on.

Please keep in mind that these groups of people are not the same--that is, I am not saying that all Hillary supporters are racist. However, they are also not mutually exculsive--that is, some of the animosity against Obama is fueled by racial ignorance and arrogance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 08/25/2008

"If Obama had chosen Hillary as VP none of this talk would be happening. The party would be united."

yeah, but Obama would have to have a food taster and wear a bulletproof vest whenever the Clintons were anywhere near the WH for the next 8 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:21 PM on 08/25/2008

Tom Brokaw says John McCain is a maverich and authentic? Tom, either step aside and let someone younger do the homework Tim Russert used to do. I am so sick of the MSM, The Clintons and how they continue to slander Barack Obama. Everyone seems to want him to lose except the voters. When he does win because his troops in the field made sure the votes came in, the pundits, the Clintons and yes you Mr Rendall will put in the back where you belong. What happened to objective journalism Tom, I am sorely disappointed. McCain authentic? Which McCain, 2000 or 2008? Authentic he ain't!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 08/25/2008
- jinxed I'm a Fan of jinxed 36 fans permalink
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Authentic he has NEVER been. He reminds me of a feather blowing in the wind in whichever direction is the strongest and the latest.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 08/26/2008
- 4wehttam I'm a Fan of 4wehttam 14 fans permalink

Yes O got a lot of press, but MOST of it was NOT positive press. He's sexier candidate, he's new so it makes the press go into a frenzy. If anyone is completely objective about this they would realize that O's coverage was mostly negative. From Wright, to he's too black, not black enough, to Ayers, to Rezko, to his wife, his arrogance, his bowling for heavens sake, his being mean to Clinton, not being mean enough to Clinton, talking too much about hope/change, talking too much about his policy......on and on and on.

Objectivity is rare in politics, but let's at least not kid OURSELVES.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 08/25/2008
- RatgurlSD I'm a Fan of RatgurlSD 11 fans permalink

If the media want to know if they are sufficiently performing their jobs as political evangelicals, all they need to do is read the blogs or open their emails. The public are the people who keep the media in their positions of "power" and they should be listening to what the public tells them.

It was clearly stated to ABC after the mockery of a debate between Hillary & Barack took place that the public was not only disappointed but also disgruntled at their behavior. The media's job is to COVER the stories & get to the meat of the issues. The media has become all too familiar with the politicians and seems to feel the need to interject their opinions into the mix, thereby muddying the already unclear waters that are politics.

As an American citizen relying on the media for clear, unbiased information, I am imploring you, the press, to PLEASE do your jobs, and let the American population elect the candidate of THEIR OWN CHOICE - the way our forefathers intended.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:05 PM on 08/25/2008
- loper2008 I'm a Fan of loper2008 7 fans permalink

Not sure why Rendell thinks a month of talking about Reverend Wright constitutes Obama getting a free pass. Rendell needs to let the primary go and talk about how John McCain is getting a free pass right now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 08/25/2008
- PAposter I'm a Fan of PAposter 139 fans permalink
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Exactly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 08/25/2008
- rzan1 I'm a Fan of rzan1 63 fans permalink

I does not matter how inept a candidate Hillary was. There will always be cries of sexism to explain away her not winning. The truth is that she started out as the candidate who could have won the nomination but blew it when her true self was revealed for all to see. Sexism is not what defeated Hillary. She and her husband are notoriously self destructive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 08/25/2008

Interesting theory....I would argue that Rendell's and Hillary's campaigns behavior were best described as "embarassing".....although, "shameful" would be apt as well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 08/25/2008
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"Ladies and gentlemen, the coverage of Barack Obama was embarrassing. He basically got a free pass."
-------------------------
Excuse me, but anyone who thinks that Barack O'bama has been getting a free pass isn't paying attention. Where's the "free pass" with the MSM playing any possible controversy about O'bama 24x7, but completely ignoring the fact that McBush has flipped on every major issue and daily makes major gaffes (really more lack of knowledge). This country is doomed unless we can somehow get a free press with fair and balanced reporting once again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:54 PM on 08/25/2008
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Amazing how the "liberal media" has such a right wing slant.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 08/25/2008
- jinxed I'm a Fan of jinxed 36 fans permalink
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You know, I've noticed that too!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 PM on 08/26/2008
- WFV I'm a Fan of WFV 13 fans permalink
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Eddie, Eddie, Eddie.

You are my governor and I think you have done a pretty good job here in the Commonwealth.

I have always liked you, even though you went entirely off the deep end during the primaries.

Have your catharsis and get back on board. Now. This is getting old.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 08/25/2008

It's all just Hillary Clinton's sour grapes. If she was a team player, her speech at the convention would be to go through all of her positions on the issues and compare how they are alike Obama's. She should then conclude with a strong statement: "If you vote for McCain b/c you're upset that I did not obtain the nomination, you are no supporter of mine or my party. We must move past this, right now, regain control of this country, reverse the damage of the Bush years, and move ahead towards prosperity."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 08/25/2008
- jfor I'm a Fan of jfor 17 fans permalink

If you ask the press what they think of the job they are doing and they don't say " we are doing an excellent job" then you should take notice. The best thing about these pundits telling us how good they're coverage is is the fact that viewership is way down and the nightly news concept is going the way of the dinosaur. Reality is such a beotch.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 08/25/2008
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Sooo, I guess Rendell is still a die-hard Clinton loyalist.

Love your blogs Jason, always humor with tragic subjects like the MSM.
Thanks for the laughs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 08/25/2008
- poppyseed I'm a Fan of poppyseed 4 fans permalink

If Pennsylvania goes for McCain, you can blame Eddie Rendell. If Obama wins Pennsylvania you can credit Joe Biden.

Eddie seems to forget the basic truths of both traditional and modern politics - memories for slights are long and exact retribution both ways (he'll pay for this) and you can't 'macaca' anymore and get away without vast public scrutiny.

Was it worth it Eddie?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 08/25/2008
- pupbayer I'm a Fan of pupbayer 23 fans permalink

Wow! You really don't think O is not responsible for anything, do you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 08/25/2008
- Totto I'm a Fan of Totto 43 fans permalink

The people who voted for Nader and gave us Bush are getting ready to do it again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 08/25/2008
- Avembe I'm a Fan of Avembe 5 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 08/25/2008
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Wow, the hypocrisy! If Obama had so much as been anywhere near that room, he'd be finished.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 08/25/2008
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