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The Schiavo case and a singular broadcast achievementBy Dave CookTV is great at serving up drama. And there was human drama aplenty in the legal battle over whether a feeding tube should be removed from Terry Schiavo. The Florida woman, diagnosed as brain-damaged, passed on Thursday morning. It was a painful spectacle. Fortunately, Terry Schiavo, confined to a hospital bed for 15 years, did not have to watch her relatives battling each other in the courts and on the airwaves as she lay dying. Much of the wall-to-wall coverage on cable TV was over the top. Hours of airtime were filled with dramatic reporters interviewing – and re-interviewing --- anyone with even a tangential connection to the case and speculating about how long Ms. Schiavo might survive without a feeding tube. But Terry Schiavo’s saga also triggered nationwide consideration of the complex moral issues surrounding end of life care and the role of faith in American life. And in the examination of the role of faith, last Sunday’s ‘Meet the Press” was a singular broadcast achievement, one I would urge you to review both for its inspiring and thought provoking content and as an illustration of what TV at its very best can accomplish. A transcript of the broadcast is available at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7284978. For a full hour, host Tim Russert and his guests engaged in an insightful, highly articulate, and profoundly thought-provoking discussion titled “Faith in America.” Unlike many TV programs which serve up complex issues as having just two sides, last Sunday’s Meet the Press program offered up a fairly widely range of viewpoints including: * Reza Aslan, Muslim author of “No God but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam” It was refreshing to see the discussion of controversial issues without panelists resorting to verbal mudslinging or disparagement or obvious attempts at scoring debating points. It is hard to overstate the impact of the respectful yet probing questioning by host Tim Russert who came to this discussion – as he does every Sunday’s broadcast – awesomely prepared. Russert and his producers treated the audience as being composed of individuals who would be interested in matters of faith without having to use the hook of drama. And, perhaps most striking, Russert dealt with religion not just as a force that motivates voters politically. He also posed questions about the nature of God and His care for us. At the end of the discussion Russert said: "I wish we had two more hours.” To which I would add: Amen. March 31, 2005 in Religion | By Dave Cook | Permalink Posted March 14, 2005Star power at StateBy Dave CookIf personnel is policy, then President Bush’s recent staffing decisions at the State Department clearly signal Foggy Bottom’s re-emergence as a major power center. Washington was abuzz this weekend about Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice’s sense of style and her political prospects. Dr. Rice showed up at the Gridiron Dinner on Saturday outfitted in a striking bright red formal gown that landed her on the front page of the Washington Post’s Style Section under the headline “Careful, that dish is hot.” The formal dinner, sponsored by a group of senior print and broadcast journalists, draws an influential crowd including both the president and vice president. On Sunday’s “Face the Nation” broadcast on CBS, Rice quipped, “I think the lesson here is never to wear red, apparently.” The Secretary spent much of Sunday trying to knock down rumors she would run for president in 2008. “I will not run for president of the United States,” she told Tim Russert on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “I don’t know how many ways to say no in this town, I really don’t.” Then, on Monday, the White House announced that two more powerful women, both close confidantes of the president, would be moving to State. Long time Bush political advisor and wordsmith Karen Hughes will be returning to Washington as Assistant Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy, charged with telling America’s story to the world. Speaking in the ornate Benjamin Franklin Room in the State Department, Hughes said she was “eager to listen and to learn” and that she wanted to help the president “overcome hate with hope.” While admitting that “perceptions do not change quickly or easily,” Hughes concluded that she intended “to speak from the heart” in telling America’s story to the world. Hughes, who left Washington in 2002 so her son could finish high school in Texas, has long been one of the President’s closest advisors. Given her unquestioned loyalty to him and the length of their relationship, Hughes reportedly can speak candidly with Mr. Bush. The White House also said that Dina Powell would be Karen Hughes’ deputy. While not known to the general public, Ms. Powell (no relation to Colin Powell) has been the president’s personnel director and thus has been a key player in selecting candidates for top jobs in the administration. Ms. Powell, who is only 31, was born in Egypt and came to the United States as a child. As ABC News’ influential online newsletter “The Note” points out, Powell is the highest ranking Middle Eastern woman in the administration and speaks Arabic. These hires “make it clear the State Department is becoming the kind of power center it hasn’t been since the days of [former Secretaries of State] James Baker and maybe even Henry” Kissinger, The Note observes. Of course, the challenge of improving America’s image abroad requires more than domestic political clout. When she introduced Ms. Hughes on Monday, Rice said the US “must do a better job of engaging the Muslim word” and that more needs to be done to counter the “hateful propaganda” that is common in the Islamic world. Rice’s rise to power was lampooned at the Gridiron dinner. While the evening is off the record, lyrics from the songs performed during the four-hour dinner are released to the press. Using music from “When I Was A Lad” by Gilbert and Sullivan, a journalist sang about Rice: Now Republicans all, in this age of Bush Stick close by his side It is not clear where Rice and her policies may go. What is clear is that President Bush – perhaps focused on his legacy – has placed an extraordinary collection of strong, totally trusted women at a department that was viewed with suspicion in the administration during his first term. March 14, 2005 in Foreign Policy | By Dave Cook | Permalink Posted March 04, 2005My head, Brad Pitt's bodyBy Dave CookIt is something many of us who have hit middle age would appreciate: a photograph where our head sits on a younger, trimmer body. Newsweek bestowed this photographic favor on domestic diva Martha Stewart who graces the cover of the magazine’s March 7 issue. When Newsweek hit newsstands, Ms. Stewart was still in prison. But on the cover there she was, smiling radiantly, dressed preppily, her svelte body framed by gold curtains. Lynn Staley, assistant managing editor of Newsweek, told National Public Radio that, “It was not our intention to deceive; it was our intention to amuse.” Newsweek disclosed that the cover was a photo illustration – or composite – on page 3 of the magazine in a credit line. It’s an area of the magazine normally of interest only to the cover photographer’s mother. When NPR asked if she had any regrets, Newsweek’s Ms. Staley said, “I think that, you know, we have to be a little careful. I mean, maybe the worst thing I could say is that we were possibly just a little too successful here.” Actually, the worst thing that could be said was the news business needs to be especially careful not to look like it plays fast and loose with the truth – photographic or otherwise. Inside the journalism fraternity we have our own rules and understandings. In that context, labeling the cover a “photo illustration” removes any question that Newsweek was trying to lie. But clearly many readers were misled. The Monitor’s own policy on computerized photo editing specifies that, “Everything in the Monitor must be precisely what it appears to be. Photographs that have been altered for illustration purposes should be clearly labeled.” Newspaper conventions differ from those of magazines. But it would have been better for Newsweek to have disclosed on the cover that what readers were seeing was an altered picture of the soon to be sprung Martha. Of course, most of the pictures we see of the famous are altered in another way, with various surgical enhancements and reductions. If you watched last Sunday’s Academy Awards, you got an eyeful of that. Those of us who are plunging through life without surgically improved bodies can’t fail to appreciate what modern photographic editing makes possible. As I work at my computer munching on a Hershey bar, it’s nice to know that in the next Cook family portrait, my thinning white hair and multiple chins can be sitting atop Brad Pitt’s body. March 4, 2005 in The Media | By Dave Cook | Permalink |
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