Eat The Press

Entries from Friday January 5, 2007

Newsbriefs, First Slow News Day Of 2007 Edition

ETP Staff   |  Huffington Post

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Fox News Is 8th-Most-Watched Cable Network

Nick Douglas   |  Huffington Post

The Fox News Channel ranks 8th on the 2006 primetime ratings list for cable networks, with 1.4 million average primetime viewers. It's the only news network in the top 20, says TVNewser. CNN lags at #26, MSNBC at #35. FNC primetime viewership is down 20% from last year, according to the Hollywood Reporter, and MSNBC is the only news network to gain both total-day and primetime viewership over last year.

FNC still has more viewers than CNN and MSNBC combined, but the other two are catching up. MSNBC's Keith Olbermann's popularity is pulling the network up, but he's implied that MSNBC needs him more than he needs them. Meanwhile, the Democratic Congress could give FNC more bad news to tell its viewers. This year could be anyone's game.

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AP

Who's Shopping For Tribune: McCormack, Burkle, Murdoch?

Nick Douglas   |  Huffington Post

Potential buyers are still eying the Tribune Company as the January 17 bid deadline approaches, and today brings both news and speculation. Here's where things stand:


  • The McCormack Tribune Foundation, a charity directed by two former and three current members of Tribune management, announced yesterday that it hired a buyout firm for advice. According to the New York Times, the foundation owns 11.7 percent of Tribune (which forms 75% of the foundation's assets) and could not buy out the company itself (but could make a deal with a private equity firm). A spokesman says the foundation is considering all options, from buying more to selling its share.

  • The foundation clarified that it has "complete confidence in Tribune Company management," which the Tribune-owned L.A. Times interprets as a reaction to an analyst who called the hire "a vote of no confidence" in Tribune management.
  • The Chandler family, the largest Tribune shareholder, has talked to L.A. billionaires Eli Broad and Ron Burkle about buying all or part of the company, says the L.A. Times.
  • While a spokesperson denies it, Women's Wear Daily says Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. may (or at least should) buy Tribune, which owns several Fox stations.

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Newsbriefs, Ivanka You To Shut Up About Rosie Already Edition

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Mysterious AP Source Disputed By Right-Wing Bloggers Actually Exists, Not-So-Mysteriously Didn't Want To Identify Himself In Not-So-Safe Iraq

Rachel Sklar

Look at it this way, Michelle Malkin: The AP's just trying to save you a trip. Today in a thorough, detailed article the AP blasted back at right-wing bloggers who disputed it coverage, providing proof that police captain and source Jamil Hussein actually existed. Hussein had previously told the AP of an incident in which six Shiites were burned alive in the Hurriyah neighborhood of Baghdad, which was first reported by the AP on Nov. 24, 2006. The report was contested by the Iraqi interior ministry, the military and a number of right-wing bloggers, who accused the AP of spreading false information to make the situation in Iraq look bad (because it really needed the help). The AP stuck by its story, calling the accusations "frankly ludicrous." The right-wing drumbeat continued and new IraqSlogger proprietor Eason Jordan offered to fly Malkin and some other right-wing bloggers to Iraq to get to the bottom of the Hussein mystery herself.

Well, mystery solved: Iraq Interior Ministry spokesman Brig. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, who had formerly denied Hussein's existence, now admits that, oops, he does exist, and is an officer assigned to the Khadra police station. And now that they finally "found" him, he's facing arrest for talking to the media. Sort of explains why he wouldn't come forward himself, as does this next paragraph:

Hussein was not the original source of the disputed report of the attack; the account was first told on Al-Arabiya satellite television by a Sunni elder, Imad al-Hashimi, who retracted it after members of the Defense Ministry paid him a visit.

The AP gives an interesting history of newsgathering in Iraq, noting that where Iraqi officials once felt free to speak to the media, under the recent regime there now is a chilling effect. (Recall that after the Hurriyah attack was disputed, the Iraq Interior ministry threatened "legal action" against journalists who published information disputed by the ministry).

So it should be no mystery why Hussein preferred to stay in the background. It's a bit more of a mystery why Jordan would give credence to the right-wing claims by flying Malkin and co. to Iraq (read her account of how they planned to get the real story from the ground here). This development leaves him in a sort of embarrassing position, as it does bloggers like Malkin who pushed this as another example of the media spinning only bad news from Iraq. (Well it should be embarrassing, but, predictably, there's little acknowledgment of error on the part of right-wing bloggers). What this episode does show is that, sadly, almost any atrocity is possible in Iraq, and the challenges of reporting on them remain significant — over there, and over here.

Iraq threatens arrest of police officer [AP]
Wingnut Assault Against The Associated Press Hits Major Snag: The Facts [Horse's Mouth]
Malkin: "I Won't Apologize" And Other Reactions From Conservative Bloggers [E&P]

Related:
It's Time For the AP to Produce the Phantom Iraqi Source [CJR]
Truth And Rumor In Iraq [ETP]

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Eric Boehlert

Why is Woodward Still Spinning the Ford Pardon?

Perhaps no major media figure has played a bigger role in rehabilitating Gerald Ford's image by polishing the pardon and turning it into a sweeping, heroic act than The Washington Post's best-selling author, Bob Woodward. The problem though, is that Woodward isn't always honest about the pardon that he insists was so "gutsy." Which raises the question, why is Woodward so eager to create not only an aura of goodwill around the former Republican president,...

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