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30 Nov 2005 16:37:03 -0000

weekly-spin

The Weekly Spin, November 30, 2005

 

 

 

 

 

THE WEEKLY SPIN, November 30, 2005

 

Sponsored by the nonprofit Center for Media and Democracy:

http://www.prwatch.org

 

To support our work now online visit:

https://www.egrants.org/donate/index.cfm?ID=2344-0|1118-0

 

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The Weekly Spin features selected news summaries with links to

further information about media, political spin and propaganda.

It is emailed free each Wednesday to rs.

 

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THIS WEEK'S NEWS

 

== SPIN OF THE DAY ==

1. Lincoln Group Bombards Iraq with Fake News

2. Swiss Freeze Biotech Rollout

3. Democracy, By God

4. That Old Canard Liberal Bias

5. Hyping Online Shopping

6. Camera/Iraq

7. Target Practice for Military Recruiters

8. Not So Tough On Drugs After All

9. Protesters Arrested

10. The Future of PR

11. Goodnight, Nightline

12. Tomlinson's Other Job

13. The Ghost of Newsrooms Past

14. Bush Threatens to Bomb Media, Blair Gags It

15. That's Advertainment

16. Where Was the Media Between Invasion and Murtha?

17. Lobbying Europe

 

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== SPIN OF THE DAY ==

 

1. LINCOLN GROUP BOMBARDS IRAQ WITH FAKE NEWS

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-infowar30nov30,0,5638790.sto\

ry

Fake news is being used in the Iraq propaganda war, reports the Los

Angeles Times. " [T]he U.S. military is secretly paying Iraqi

newspapers to publish stories written by American troops in an

effort to burnish the image of the U.S. mission in Iraq. The

articles, written by U.S. military 'information operations' troops,

are translated into Arabic and placed in Baghdad newspapers. ... The

stories trumpet the work of U.S. and Iraqi troops, denounce

insurgents and tout U.S.-led efforts to rebuild the country. ...

Records and interviews indicate that the U.S. has paid Iraqi

newspapers to run dozens of such articles, with headlines such as

'Iraqis Insist on Living Despite Terrorism,' since the effort began

this year. The operation is designed to mask any connection with the

U.S. military. The Pentagon has a contract with ... Lincoln Group

which helps translate and place the stories. The Lincoln Group's

Iraqi staff, or its subcontractors, sometimes pose as freelance

reporters or advertising executives when they deliver the stories to

Baghdad media outlets. "

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, November 30, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4235

 

2. SWISS FREEZE BIOTECH ROLLOUT

http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/33668/story.htm

Swiss citizens backed a five-year moratorium on commercial release

of genetically modified plants and animals, despite opposition from

their government and industry groups. Fifty-five percent of the

voters backed the moratorium. The ballot initiative followed the

collection of 100,000 signatures opposing a 2004 law approving

commercial release of genetically engineered crops. " All the

farmers' organisations were behind this proposal, which they see as

a chance for Swiss agriculture, " Daniel Ammann, a spokesman for the

pro-moratorium coalition, told Reuters. Adrian Bebb, from Friends of

the Earth, said the vote showed that " the public doesn't want to eat

genetically modified food. " Two of the companies opposing the

moratorium were Swiss-based Syngenta and Nestle.

SOURCE: Reuters, November 28, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4233

 

3. DEMOCRACY, BY GOD

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10 & categ_id=5 & article_ID=2036\

6#

The Bush administration recently appointed Paul Bonicelli to be

deputy director of the U.S. Agency for International Development

(USAID), where he will oversee programs that promote democracy and

good governance internationally. Bonicelli's last job was dean of

academic affairs at Patrick Henry College, a Christian

fundamentalist institution that requires students to sign a 10-part

" statement of faith " declaring, among other things, that

non-Christians will be condemned to hell, " confined in conscious

torment for eternity. " " What's wrong with this picture is that the

USAID programs Bonicelli will run are important weapons in the

arsenal of Bush's new public diplomacy czarina, White House

confidante Karen Hughes, " writes William Fisher, who has worked for

USAID and the U.S. State Department. " These programs are intended to

play a central role in boosting Bush's efforts to foster democracy

and freedom in Iraq and throughout the broader Middle East. "

SOURCE: The Daily Star (Lebanon), November 29, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4232

 

4. THAT OLD CANARD LIBERAL BIAS

http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6286824.html?display=Feature & referral\

=SUPP

" We were biased, all right - in favor of uncovering the news that

powerful people wanted to keep hidden, " veteran journalist Bill

Moyers told Broadcasting & Cable. In an interview with the trade

publication, Moyers responds to accusations by the now chastened

Kenneth Tomlinson, the controversial former head of the Corporation

for Public Broadcasting who has close ties to the White House, that

he is the " exemplar of liberal PBS bias. " Moyers added, " If

reporting on what's happening to ordinary people thrown overboard by

circumstances beyond their control and betrayed by Washington

officials is liberalism, I stand convicted. It is an old canard of

right-wing ideologues like Tomlinson to equate tough journalism with

liberalism. They hope to distract people from the message by trying

to discredit the messenger. "

SOURCE: Broadcasting & Cable, November 28, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4231

 

5. HYPING ONLINE SHOPPING

http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/nov2005/nf20051129_9946_db016.htm

" Do a Google search on 'Cyber Monday,' and you get as many as

779,000 results. Not a bad haul for a term that was created just a

week and a half ago to describe the jump in online shopping activity

following the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, " Business Week Online

reports. Cyber Monday is the creation of Shop.org, an online

retailers trade association. The group's November 21 press release

pitched Cyber Monday as " quickly becoming one of the biggest online

shopping days of the year. " The reality, however, is that the Monday

after Thanksgiving is only the " 12th-biggest day historically, "

according to market researcher comScore Networks. " What's more, most

e-tailers say the season's top spending day comes much later,

between around Dec. 5 and Dec. 15, " Business Week Online writes.

SOURCE: Business Week Online, November 29, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4230

 

6. CAMERA/IRAQ

http://www.camerairaq.com

The Cinema and Media Studies Department at Carleton College in

Minnesota has created a website, CameraIraq.com, which gathers news

and commentary about public and personal photographic image

practices associated with the " war of images in the Middle East. "

Items in their collection include photos of the dead bodies of

Saddam Hussein's sons, the beheading of Nick Berg, the Bush " Mission

Accomplished " photo op, and a variety of real and faked images

depicting human rights abuses, atrocities and other staples of

wartime propaganda.

SOURCE: CameraIraq.com

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4229

 

7. TARGET PRACTICE FOR MILITARY RECRUITERS

 

The Pentagon's Joint Advertising, Market Research & Studies project

has " finely sliced and diced its data enough to determine that the

U.S. Army's prospective recruits come from households likely to

listen to Spanish radio, " while " the reading list at the households

of U.S. Marine Corps prospects includes Car Craft, Guns and Ammo and

Outdoor Life. " Good U.S. Air Force prospects " listen to Nascar on

the radio, " while U.S. Navy enthusiasts " expect to get married

within the next year. " To " navigate a fragmented media environment, "

the Defense Department analyzed military applicants from 2000 to

2004, and identified 18 demographic groups " that provide the highest

rate of prospective recruits. " These include " Beltway Boomers, "

" Blue Chip Blues, " " Young & Rustic, " and " Multiculti Mosaic, " as

defined by Claritas, a " marketing information resources company. " To

reach these groups, " direct, interactive and other one-to-one

marketing tactics, " including email, are used; the Navy is

" exploring emerging media such as cellphones and text messaging. "

SOURCE: Advertising Age, November 28, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4228

 

8. NOT SO TOUGH ON DRUGS AFTER ALL

http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/331/7527/1225-a?etoc

Professor Andrew Herx-heimer, emeritus fellow at the UK Cochrane

Centre, told the British Medical Journal that changes to the British

drug industry's voluntary code of practice were minimal. " This is

very competent window dressing but not much has changed at all, " he

said. The drug industry's revised code followed the House of Commons

health select committee's report, The Influence of the

Pharmaceutical Industry, which found numerous flaws in the system of

self-regulation. While the new code introduces new restrictions

aimed at limiting the extent of drug company hospitality - including

luxury accommodation and first class flights - doctors have

criticized the limited sanctions for breaches. " The key weakness is

that this is regulated by the industry, and so it is written in such

a way that it doesn't seriously inconvenience companies if anything

goes wrong, " said Ike Iheanacho, the editor of the Drugs and

Therapeutics Bulletin.

SOURCE: British Medical Journal, November 26, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4227

 

9. PROTESTERS ARRESTED

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/23/AR2005112302185.\

html

" About a dozen antiwar protesters, including Daniel Ellsberg and the

sister of Cindy Sheehan, were arrested Wednesday morning while

camping on a roadside near President Bush's ranch " in Crawford,

Texas, reports Rosalind S. Helderman. The activists ran afoul of a

new county law that was passed following this summer's protests to

prohibit parking and camping on public lands near Bush's property.

" The ordinance was very plainly meant to prevent people from

protesting in front of Bush's ranch, " said Dave Jensen, a former

Marine and a protester who witnessed the arrests. " We feel that's a

First Amendment issue. It's intentionally designed to curtail

freedom of speech and freedom of assembly. "

SOURCE: Washington Post, November 24, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4221

 

10. THE FUTURE OF PR

http://www.edelman.com/speak_up/blog/archives/2005/11/is_public_relat.html

Public relations mogul Richard Edelman has some thoughts about the

future of PR on his weblog. New technologies and consumer habits, he

says, are reflected in changing media: Newspaper circulation figures

and advertising revenues are dropping, and " every dollar coming out

of print advertising revenue for newspapers is replaced by only 33

cents online. " The rise of video-on-demand and digital video

recording is enabling more and more TV viewers to skip ads. " For

public relations professionals, these profound changes in media are

both a challenge and opportunity, " Edelman says. Among his

suggestions for PR pros: " Recognize the influence and credibility of

blogs " and attach video clips to " press materials to make it easier

for bloggers in consumer technology to create v-blogs. " It sounds

like video news releases, largely the province until now of

traditional television, are preparing to invade the blogosphere.

SOURCE: Edelman.com, November 21, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4220

 

11. GOODNIGHT, NIGHTLINE

http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2005/11/23/koppel/index.html

Ted Koppel, who recently stepped down from Nightline, his

long-running TV news show, " was a fine journalist and a decent man, "

writes Fred Branfman, " but to stay atop journalism's establishment,

even he had to make a deal with the devil. " Branfman recalls his own

experiences with Koppel during the war in Indochina, praising his

" charisma, good humor and an unusual mix of professionalism and

human decency. " At Nightline, however, he became " a card-carrying

member of the journalistic establishment. ... And that is the point.

The issue isn't Ted himself but what he symbolizes: the

institutional and structural corruption of an American media that

has chosen to define 'news' primarily as the information it receives

from American officials, and which has traded a critical and

independent stance for 'access' to powerful figures. As long as the

TV lead and Page One stories primarily come, directly or indirectly,

from government officials, and as long as critics and dissenting

information are ignored or relegated to page A18, Ted Koppel will be

the best we get. "

SOURCE: Salon.com, November 23, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4218

 

12. TOMLINSON'S OTHER JOB

http://www.current.org/cpb/cpb0521bbg.shtml

Kenneth Tomlinson, the former head of the U.S. Corporation for

Public Broadcasting who recently resigned in the wake of a damning

ethics investigation, is facing further harsh scrutiny. " Tomlinson

is also under investigation by the State Department Inspector

General’s Office for what he’s done as chairman of the

Broadcasting Board of Governors, " reports Geneva Collins.

" Meanwhile, two other agencies overseen by the BBG are embroiled in

controversies both public and private. The fledgling Arab-language

TV channel Alhurra is the subject of three separate government

investigations (by the State Department, a House International

Relations subcommittee and the Government Accountability Office).

And journalists at Voice of America are assailing their

BBG-appointed boss for trying to tilt news stories more favorably

toward the Bush administration. "

SOURCE: Current, November 21, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4217

 

13. THE GHOST OF NEWSROOMS PAST

http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/columns/stopthepresses_display.jsp?vnu_c\

ontent_id=1001523690

Staffing cuts and declining circulation are hitting leading

newspapers including the Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Wall

Street Journal and Chicago Tribune. " If newspapers take the

shortsighted, short-term approach to tighter budgets by whittling

away at investigative reporting, others outside the industry - such

as blogs and radio - likely will take up the slack, and newspapers'

decline will accelerate, " writes Editor and Publisher editor Steve

Outing. Newsrooms " have become the morgues they so closely resemble,

filled with ghosts of the departed and those who await the next ax

to fall, " writes Kathleen Parker. " But to those in the trenches,

cutting staff is exactly the wrong solution, more like a

self-inflicted wound trending toward suicide than a remedy. By

cutting newsroom staffs, the corporate suits are reducing the

likelihood that papers can do what makes them necessary. "

SOURCE: Editor and Publisher, November 16, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4215

 

14. BUSH THREATENS TO BOMB MEDIA, BLAIR GAGS IT

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/latest/tm_objectid=16406400%26method=full%26siteid=\

94762-name_page.html

The British Government has warned media outlets against publishing

further details of a leaked memo of an April 16, 2004 meeting at

which George W. Bush allegedly told Tony Blair he wanted to bomb Al

Jazeera's headquarters in Qatar. The Mirror quoted an anonymous

source who stated that Bush " made clear he wanted to bomb al-Jazeera

in Qatar and elsewhere. Blair replied that would cause a big

problem. " At the time US forces were attacking the Iraqi town of

Fallujah. " The No 10 memo now raises fresh doubts over U.S. claims

that previous attacks against al-Jazeera staff were military

errors, " The Mirror reported. Following the original report,

Attorney General Lord Goldsmith warned news outlets that publication

of any further details from the memo would be treated as a breach of

the Official Secrets Act.

SOURCE: The Mirror (UK), November 23, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4214

 

15. THAT'S ADVERTAINMENT

http://www.startribune.com/stories/459/5742884.html

In Denver, Sacramento, Atlanta and Cleveland, radio stations owned

by the Gannett media conglomerate have adopted " advertainment " - a

new programming format that consists of " hybrid shows, which mix

entertainment with commercial content (in addition to regular

commercial breaks). " In Minneapolis, Gannett affiliate KARE plans

this spring to " revamp its chatty mid-morning talk show 'Today,' and

put much of that happy talk up for sale, " writes Deborah Caulfield

Rybak. " Advertisers will pay $2,000 to $2,500 for 5-minute segments

on the show. ... 'I am aghast,' said University of Minnesota media

ethics professor Jane Kirtley, who at first thought a reporter was

kidding about the new format. 'This is the logical extension of the

whole pernicious practice of infomercials. If viewers are accustomed

to getting [talk show] programming in a very different way, to

suddenly change the rules on them isn't fair.' "

SOURCE: Minneapolis Star Tribune, November 23, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4213

 

16. WHERE WAS THE MEDIA BETWEEN INVASION AND MURTHA?

http://www.observer.com/media_newsstory1-2.asp

Technologically, the news media are vastly more advanced than it was

during the Vietnam war, but commercial and political factors have

" kept the war in Iraq marginal in the American media, " write Rebecca

Dana and Lizzy Ratner. A study done during the Vietnam war found

that CBS devoted 91 minutes per month to reporting on Vietnam,

whereas U.S. networks this year gave Iraq only 55 minutes per month.

Other gaps in reporting include the following:

* " Dead troops are invisible. ... Over a six-month span, a set of

leading United States newspapers and magazines ran 'almost no

pictures' of Americans killed in action, and they ran only 44 photos

of wounded Westerners. "

* " Major newspapers have cut back on the size of their Baghdad

bureaus, with some closing them or allowing them to go unstaffed for

stretches. "

* " Government regulation has spread over the battlefield,

limiting mobility and access. Where Vietnam correspondents could hop

a chopper to combat zones at will, Iraq reporters need to sign

eight-page sheaves of rules and are pinned to single units. "

* " Corporate security restrictions likewise stifle reporting. At

CNN, reporters need clearance from the bureau chief to leave the

network compound; similar rules apply at other networks. "

SOURCE: New York Observer, November 28, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4212

 

17. LOBBYING EUROPE

http://www.waronwant.org/?lid=11133

Brussels, home to the European Commission, has also become home to

" over 15,000 lobbyists (more than one for every European Commission

official) but just 10 per cent of these represent environmental and

social groups, " according to a recently-released report. " A massive

industry of corporate lobbying has grown up in Brussels with

overwhelming influence on European trade policy. Yet the

relationship between the European Commission and the corporate lobby

is almost entirely unregulated, unaccountable and conducted behind

closed doors, " says Dave Timms of the UK-based World Development

Movement, one of the groups that produced the report.

SOURCE: WarOnWant.org

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4211

 

 

----

 

The Weekly Spin is compiled by staff and volunteers at the

Center for Media and Democracy (CMD), a nonprofit public

interest organization. To or unsubcribe, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/cmd/_sotd.html

 

Daily updates and news from past weeks can be found at the

Spin of the Day section of CMD's website:

http://www.prwatch.org/spin

 

Archives of our quarterly publication, PR Watch, are at:

http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues

 

CMD also sponsors SourceWatch, a collaborative research

project that invites anyone (including you) to contribute

and edit articles. For more information, visit:

http://www.sourcewatch.org

 

PR Watch, Spin of the Day, the Weekly Spin and SourceWatch

are projects of the Center for Media & Democracy, a nonprofit

organization that offers investigative reporting on the public

relations industry. We help the public recognize manipulative

and misleading PR practices by exposing the activities of

secretive, little-known propaganda-for-hire firms that

work to control political debates and public opinion.

Please send any questions or suggestions about our

publications to:

editor

 

----

 

Contributions to the Center for Media and Democracy

are tax-deductible. Send checks to:

 

CMD

520 University Avenue, Suite 227

Madison, WI 53703

 

To donate now online, visit:

https://www.egrants.org/donate/index.cfm?ID=2344-0|1118-0

 

 

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