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[eccr] Fwd: The Weekly Spin, Wednesday, January 7, 2004
Wed Jan 07 08:20:03 GMT 2004
>THE WEEKLY SPIN, Wednesday, January 7, 2004
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>sponsored by PR WATCH (www.prwatch.org)
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>The Weekly Spin features selected news summaries with links to
>further information about current public relations campaigns.
>It is emailed free each Wednesday to subscribers.
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>THIS WEEK'S NEWS
>
>1. Al Iraqiya Fails To Be 'Independent' News Source
>2. Ogilvy & Mather Charged With Bilking White House
>3. Martha Stewart's PR Push
>4. Meat Industry PR Scramble To Respond to Mad Cow
>5. Sludge Slippage
>6. Rebranding Bush
>7. USDA PR Chief Flacked for the Beef Industry
>8. Another Award for Bill O'Reilly
>9. "Inside Baseball" from the Outside In
>10. 2003 Spin of the Year: WMDs
>11. Krugman's Resolutions
>----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>1. AL IRAQIYA FAILS TO BE 'INDEPENDENT' NEWS SOURCE
>https://www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid=9508
> The U.S. funded Iraqi Media Network was supposed to bring
> "independent" journalism to a "liberated" Iraq. The reality,
> however, is that IMN's Al Iraqiya radio and television station are
> failing, according to CorpWatch's Pratap Chatterjee. The stations,
> run by top CIA contractor Science Applications International
> Corporation (SAIC), seem almost irrelevant given the more popular
> satellite news channels Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya and the common
> criticism that "Al Iraqiya has no news. Just yesterday's
> information." Working under Coalition Provisional Authority
> guidelines, Al Iraqiya reporters are barred from reporting anything
> that might incited violence. Many who worked for SAIC on the IMN
> project blame the CPA for the network's failure. Veteran network
> news foreign correspondent Don North called Al Iraqiya 'Project
> Frustration' when he quit in July. "IMN has become an irrelevant
> mouthpiece for CPA propaganda, managed news and mediocre programs.
> I have trained journalists after the fall of tyrannies in Bosnia,
> Romania and Afghanistan. I don't blame the Iraqi journalists for
> the failure of IMN. Through a combination of incompetence and
> indifference, CPA has destroyed the fragile credibility of IMN,"
> North wrote recently.
>SOURCE: CorpWatch, January 6, 2004
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1073365201
>
>2. OGILVY & MATHER CHARGED WITH BILKING WHITE HOUSE
>http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/0106om.htm
> The U.S. has indicted executives from Ogilvy and Mather, a PR and
> advertising agency, for participating in an "extensive scheme to
> defraud the U.S. Government by falsely and fraudulently inflating
> the labor costs that Ogilvy incurred" for its work on a media
> campaign for the Office of National Drug Control Policy. According
> to O'Dwyer's PR Daily, O&M's anti-drug media campaign work was part
> of a five-year $684 million dollar project. The government claims
> it was overcharged by O&M from May 1999 to April 2000. "The White
> House, last month, decided not to renew O&M's anti-drug contract.
> It will put the business up for review in a bid to improve
> 'transparency.' O&M can re-bid," O'Dwyer's writes.
>SOURCE: O'Dwyer's PR Daily, January 6, 2004
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1073365200
>
>3. MARTHA STEWART'S PR PUSH
>http://www.newsday.com/business/ny-stewart0104,0,1560047.story
> "Weeks before a federal judge is set to open Martha Stewart's trial
> on charges of obstructing justice and securities fraud, the case
> already is being tried in the court of public opinion," writes
> James T. Madore. According to Roberg G. Heim, a former Securities
> and Exchange Commission attorney, "A very extraordinary aspect of
> the Martha Stewart case is the amount of public relations efforts
> that she and her team are making in an attempt to clear her name."
>SOURCE: Newsday
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1073331382
>
>4. MEAT INDUSTRY PR SCRAMBLE TO RESPOND TO MAD COW
>http://www.prweek.com/news/news_story.cfm?ID=198740&site=3
> "Meat-industry trade groups were scurrying during the recent
> holiday season to coordinate key messages and media lists as they
> responded to reports of mad cow disease rearing its head in the
> Western US," PR Week's John Frank writes. PR staffers at the
> American Meat Institute and the National Cattlemen's Beef
> Association, working with PR giant Burson-Marsteller, handled a
> flood of media calls over the Christmas holiday. AMI's top
> spokeswoman Janet Riley invited NBC News into her kitchen on
> Christmas day to tape "her preparing beef for dinner in an effort
> to demonstrate her faith in the safety of the beef supply," PR Week
> reports. The US Department of Agriculture held daily press
> briefings, which were followed by "technical briefings" for the
> press held by NBCA. "Key message points the industry was stressing
> revolved around the safety of the US beef supply and the extent of
> efforts underway to track down how the disease reached US shores,"
> PR Week reports.
>SOURCE: PR Week, January 5, 2004
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1073278800
>
>5. SLUDGE SLIPPAGE
>http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/03/national/03SLUD.html
> The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has denied a petition from
> 73 labor, environment and farm groups calling for an immediate
> moratorium on land-based uses of sewage sludge - a practice that we
> exposed in our 1994 book, Toxic Sludge Is Good For You. "The
> rejection of the petition followed an announcement by the agency in
> October, after five years of analysis and study, that it would not
> regulate dioxins in land-applied sludge," reports the Associated
> Press. "Dioxins are a class of organic chemicals that EPA studies
> show pose a possible cancer risk in humans, but the agency said in
> its October statement that the danger was minimal. The latest
> announcements by the EPA come a year and a half after a panel of
> the National Research Council, in a review the agency had asked
> for, criticized what the council described as outdated science in
> the agency's assessment of health risks from treated sludge used as
> fertilizer." Just to show it isn't completely irresponsible,
> though, the EPA promises to study the problem further and someday
> may regulate 15 other toxic chemicals in sludge that currently
> aren't on its watch list. Meanwhile the sludge wars continue at the
> local level, with communities in Texas and Louisiana fighting
> unbearable odors, groundwater contamination, and toxic pathogens
> from sludge, while in Ohio, sludge critics are dismissed as "a lot
> of kooks."
>SOURCE: Associated Press and New York Times, January 2-3, 2004
>More web links related to this story are available at:
> http://www.prwatch.org/spin/January_2004.html#1073118824
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1073118824
>
>6. REBRANDING BUSH
>http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1115313,00.html
> "The White House has retreated from its doctrine of regime change
> and pre-emptive military action and is returning to traditional
> diplomacy in an effort to repackage George Bush as a president for
> peace," the Guardian reports. The British paper writes that recent
> signs indicate a shift from military action to diplomatic
> engagement as seen in recent interactions between the U.S. and
> North Korea, Libya and Iran. Washington analysts see this as an
> election year strategy, acknowledging the White House finds itself
> in a delicate situation in Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine, given
> continuing violence and the glacial transition to democracy in Iraq
> and Afghanistan. "With elections 11 months away, Mr Bush does not
> want to be vulnerable to claims that he has presided over a
> warmongering strategy that has left Americans little safer than
> September 11 2001. His shift follows an established pattern in
> Washington of politicians moving to the centre during an election
> year," the Guardian writes.
>SOURCE: Guardian (UK), January 3, 2004
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1073106000
>
>7. USDA PR CHIEF FLACKED FOR THE BEEF INDUSTRY
>http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/02/opinion/02SCHL.html
> Eric Schlosser, author of the hugely popular bestseller Fast Food
> Nation, notes that the U.S. Department of Agriculture's PR point
> person on mad cow disease, Alisa Harrison, flacked for the beef
> industry. "Before joining the department, Ms. Harrison was director
> of public relations for the National Cattlemen's Beef Association,
> the beef industry's largest trade group, where she battled
> government food safety efforts, criticized Oprah Winfrey for
> raising health questions about American hamburgers, and sent out
> press releases with titles like 'Mad Cow Disease Not a Problem in
> the U.S.' ... Right now you'd have a hard time finding a federal
> agency more completely dominated by the industry it was created to
> regulate. Dale Moore, Ms. Veneman's chief of staff, was previously
> the chief lobbyist for the cattlemen's association." Meanwhile, the
> federal government is failing to take the only steps that will
> solve the mad cow crisis in America: a total ban on feeding
> slaughterhouse waste to livestock, and testing tens of millions of
> cattle. John Stauber says 'it's the cow feed, stupid!'
>SOURCE: New York Times, January 2, 2004
>More web links related to this story are available at:
> http://www.prwatch.org/spin/January_2004.html#1073019600
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1073019600
>
>8. ANOTHER AWARD FOR BILL O'REILLY
>http://www.pandagon.net/archives/00002229.htm
> Bill O'Reilly, who famously falsely claimed to be the winner of two
> Peabody Awards, has finally won something for real -- top spot on
> Pandagon.net's list of "the 20 most annoying conservatives of
> 2003." According to Pandagon webmasters Ezra Klein and Jesse
> Taylor, O'Reilly "had a hard time getting on this list. I mean, if
> you take away the 'wetback' commentary, and the 'joke' that a black
> boys choir was out in the parking lot stealing hubcaps, and the
> lawsuit against Al Franken, and the embarassing performance at the
> C-SPAN Book News conference, and the threatening to beat up the son
> of a 9/11 victim, and the lying about where he grew up, and the
> whole Peabody Awards thing, and the false 'Fair and Balanced'
> promise, and the fact that he's a grade-A asshole that most
> conservatives don't like, and the insistence that anyone who
> doesn't appear on his show is afraid of him, and the faux-everyman
> demeanor, and the continuing jihads against Jesse Jackson, rap
> music, George Clooney, Al Franken, the United Way, Europe,
> Hollywood, Bill Moyers, the entire American left, Canada and
> PepsiCola, AND that he lies constantly about being a
> conservative...well, he still belongs on the list, actually."
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1072995815
>
>9. "INSIDE BASEBALL" FROM THE OUTSIDE IN
>http://journalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/weblogs/pressthink/2004/01/01/inside_baseball.html
> Jay Rosen thinks coverage of the 2004 presidential election is
> shaping up as an exercise in "Horse Race Now! Horse Race Tomorrow!
> Horse Race Forever!" In this time-dishonored tradition of political
> journalism, reporters use sports as a metaphor for reporting on
> politics, relying for insights on political insiders who have
> learned how to spin the "race" as a game of "inside baseball." The
> result: "An army of sentries encircles the game, guarding every
> situation from which a glimmer of fresh truth might be allowed to
> escape."
>SOURCE: PressThink, January 1, 2004
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1072933200
>
>10. 2003 SPIN OF THE YEAR: WMDS
>http://www.guerrillanews.com/war_on_terrorism/doc3672.html
> The Guerrilla New Network has "picked the
> administration's packaging and sale of the case for war based on
> Iraq's alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction as our
> Spin of the Year. The case has turned out to be so flimsy that the
> administration has been forced to backtrack and deflect questions
> about the still missing weapons. Paul Wolfowitz told Vanity Fair
> this summer that it was a 'bureaucratic' decision to focus on the
> WMD, and even Rumsfeld has repeatedly contradicted specific claims
> he made to reporters in the run-up to the invasion."
>SOURCE: Guerrilla News Network, December 31, 2003
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1072846800
>
>11. KRUGMAN'S RESOLUTIONS
>http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/26/opinion/26KRUG.html
> Columnist Paul Krugman is wondering if the news media will take its
> job seriously when reporting on the 2004 elections and offers some
> suggestions to reporters: "Don't talk about clothes." "Actually
> look at the candidates' policy proposals." "Beware of personal
> anecdotes." "Look at the candidates' records." "Don't fall for
> political histrionics." "It's not about you." Although this is all
> pretty basic advice, concludes, "I don't really expect my
> journalistic colleagues to follow these rules. ... But history will
> not forgive us if we allow laziness and personal pettiness to shape
> this crucial election." Journalism professor Jay Rosen thinks that
> Krugman "should be this year's Pulitzer Prize columnist" for "his
> courage and relentlessness" but also thinks his advice is likely to
> go ignored.
>SOURCE: New York Times, December 26, 2003
>More web links related to this story are available at:
> http://www.prwatch.org/spin/December_2003.html#1072414801
>To discuss this story in the PR Watch Forum, visit:
> http://www.prwatch.org/forum/discuss.php?id=1072414801
>
>
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>
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