'60 Minutes' Trashed For NSA Piece

'60 Minutes' Gets TRASHED

"60 Minutes" was trashed all over Twitter on Sunday night for a two-part story on the NSA which critics dubbed obsequious at best.

The piece was fronted by reporter John Miller, who had to tell viewers this at the top of the segment: "Full disclosure: I once worked in the office of the director of National Intelligence, where I saw firsthand how secretly the NSA operates." Miller is also likely set to leave CBS soon to work for the NYPD.

Miller also said that the NSA agreed to speak to "60 Minutes" because it believes it has "not told its story well." It certainly found a comfortable place to do that on CBS News. The 25-minute segment consisted mostly of NSA officials dismissing concerns that their surveillance has gotten out of hand and showing off their gadgetry to the CBS cameras. There were no anti-NSA advocates or civil libertarians interviewed on-camera for the piece.

The last words in the segment came from NSA chief Keith Alexander: "This is precisely the time that we should not step back from the tools that we've given our analysts to detect these types of attacks."

Watch the video:

In a web-only video, producer Ira Rosen said that the NSA had "allowed" itself to be perceived as a "villain."

In his own interview, Miller said the anti-NSA forces have had their chance, and that he wanted to hear what Alexander had to say.

"Our job this time was to take the hardest questions we could find and ask them, ‘What’s the answer to it,’ and then spend a couple of minutes listening," he said.

The criticism came hard and fast:

That 60 Minutes access-for-uncritical-reverence NSA propaganda piece was a new low for US journalism http://t.co/mEx6jzsxv9

— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) December 16, 2013

Wonder if NSA will also use 60 Minutes to unveil its "special drone delivery" program.

— Dave Itzkoff (@ditzkoff) December 16, 2013

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