But first . . .
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…(third estimated
tax payment due today)… MOVIES Fun,
fun, fun: Inglorious Basterds
(if you’re not more than normally horrified by violence), In the Loop (if you don’t
mind laughing until you hurt), Taking
Woodstock (if you lived through the Sixties). BOOKS Just
Like Us: The True Story of Four Mexican Girls Coming of Age in America
by Helen Thorpe. Not their fault that their
parents entered the U.S. illegally. Yet the author does come to understand, if
not share, the views of Tom Tancredo, the former Congressman and 2008
Presidential candidate who would deport millions of illegals (and does not
accept Darwin’s theory of evolution). Malcolm Gladwell says “Helen
Thorpe has taken policy and turned it into literature.” Read a review here.
PARS Well,
you win some and you lose some. Yesterday, it was announced that PARS’s
drug failed to beat the placebo. The stock – that I had hoped might hit
$2 or $4 or even $6 – dropped from the 29 cents where I first suggested
it in July, let alone the 41 cents or so where I continued to
suggest it, to 18 cents yesterday. Better than zero, but then it’s only
Tuesday. The
little basket of three baby drug stocks I suggested someone
might bet on with money she could truly afford to lose has failed to
make us in any way rich. AVNR did report marginally good results that briefly
doubled its stock – but it fell back too fast for many to take
big gains and is now a little lower than when we started. My guru is
unexcited by its prospects. JAV failed to score and the stock dropped a bit,
but has some other stuff in the pipeline. We’re holding on. If
you had put $1,000 into each of these three, you’d probably have about
$2,000 now, unless you were nimble with the AVNR, and all I can say is that
– having bought more than $1,000 worth of PARS myself – I’m
sorry it didn’t work out. That said, it was nice to see BZ up tenfold, and the BZ
warrants up 24-fold, since being suggested last
October (after having previously been suggested much higher, so only on the
last purchases would you be sitting on these gains) . . . and to see
the NAQ warrants close at 90 cents, up from 27 cents as noted August 11
(again, having been purchased previously at higher prices). But in case you can no longer truly afford to lose
whatever funds you may have been playing with here – sell. And even
assuming it remains play money, it’s always a good idea to sell enough so
that, from here on, you’re essentially playing with “the
house’s money.” BLAME
THE MEDIA Things
were different when my friend Bryan Norcross was running the news department of
a network-affiliate decades ago. Were
the news still reported today as it was back then, 70% of Republicans would not
have believed Iraq attacked us on 9/11. And only a true lunatic fringe would
have believed “that Barack Obama is a noncitizen brought here by people
who hate this country and had the foresight to plant a birth notice in a
Hawaiian newspaper 48 years ago, just in case they ever needed it” (to
quote Gail Collins’ wonderful column).
I
asked Bryan to elaborate for us: JOURNALISM
HAS LEFT THE BUILDING By Bryan
Norcross This past Saturday’s network TV news programs
led with coverage of the protests in Washington earlier that day. Each network’s story – handled by seasoned
reporters – was substantially a compilation of inflammatory statements by
people in the street and behind the podium. The accuracy of the statements
was not important in determining which ideas were included. If you were
provocative or clever, you got on TV. One guy’s complaint was about the
“communism that’s in Washington, DC.” A woman on CBS said
that the president’s “agenda is actually to destroy this
country.” A guy from New York blamed Obama for Chrysler’s pulling
his Jeep franchise. A woman was upset about the Muslims in the government
(a clip deleted from the online version of the story). Senator DeMint from
South Carolina misquoted the president. The problem is this: people expressing inflammatory
and provocative opinions, and making mostly inaccurate statements is NOT news.
Even worse, replacing real news coverage of the rally with a compilation of
vitriolic personal sentiments is detrimental to viewers’ understanding of
the complex issues facing the nation. The protest march would have been an excellent
opportunity to shed light on the reasons the people interviewed were
boiling over with emotion, fear, and mistrust. Did their fear come out of
zealotry, ideology, or simply misinformation? Wouldn’t a discussion
about the man’s fear of communism make good TV? Where do ideas like that
come from? Obama’s proposal to increase taxes on the rich? If so,
Eisenhower was an extreme example of a communist president. What did the guy who lost the Jeep franchise think
would have happened if Chrysler had simply died without the government-led
bankruptcy process? I would like to know. Maybe he has a point, but maybe he
doesn’t. We’ll never know because the stories didn’t cover
the cause of the fire, just the flames. In fact, from these reports, we
don’t even know what’s burning. There is no doubt that crazy people saying crazy
things makes good television. Sane people saying inflammatory, provocative
things can also be good television. Both belong on the Leno show, not the
evening news without follow up and explanation. Art Linkletter had a segment
in his show decades ago called “Kids Say the Darndest Things.”
What the kids said wasn’t news either. In the cases above, a reporter challenging the
statements about communism, the Chrysler bailout, or the Muslims in government,
to understand the root of those opinions, would have made good television too,
and it would have been enlightening. Dealing with the depth of the emotion on
both sides of the issues of the day is, in some ways, as important as the
issues themselves. Thirty years ago I was a news manager during a time of
major change in the local news business. We dressed up the presentations,
picked up the pace, added stories on a wider range of topics, had great ratings
success, and made the mature journalists of the era extremely nervous. In
time, however, even the most seasoned reporters came around to the
understanding that style and substance can coexist in the same news
presentation. Adding production values did not compromise the fairness,
completeness, and accuracy of the news. Good storytelling can include a
dash of spice, as long as it doesn’t confuse or mislead the viewer. We learned that some production or story-telling
techniques produced a more visceral response in news viewers. People better
remember and attach more value to stories that keep them interested.
It’s an attribute of humans that can be exploited when news stories are
crafted, but there is no requirement that completeness and accuracy be
abandoned when these modern production values are employed. Unfortunately, news coverage today has too often
degenerated, as Saturday’s network stories demonstrated, into all
production, no content. The marchers’ aggressive assertions of
opinion and emotion were not leveraged to illuminate a complex subject, but
instead, solely to create a visceral viewer reaction – exactly what the
capital-J journalists of the 70’s were afraid of. When Walter Cronkite ended his newscasts with,
“and that’s the way it is,” he meant, “you now have
knowledge of, understanding of, and perspective on the issues we presented, to
the best of our ability.” Perspective being the most important, and
the missing ingredient in Saturday’s reporting. Without perspective, a
journalist’s story can be true, but can never be accurate. Any news report that concentrates on the shrillest
voices, by definition, lacks the perspective necessary to paint an accurate
picture of the events or the issues involved. Cronkite would have covered the 20 screaming people at an event
involving thousands; but if they were crazy, he would have said so. The only institution in our society that can inform the
uninformed, correct misimpressions, clarify complex topics, and provide a forum
for honest and responsible debate is the media. Even we neo-journalists of
the 70’s felt the weight of that responsibility. Many news
organizations of today have gone off the road . . . and must find
their way back. Only our country is at stake. Bryan Norcross President & CEO - America's Emergency Network Former Senior News Producer and News Director
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Andrew Tobias