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[ecrea] The Weekly Spin, September 13, 2006
Thu Sep 14 05:51:52 GMT 2006
>THE WEEKLY SPIN, September 13, 2006
>
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>The Weekly Spin features selected news summaries with links to
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>THIS WEEK'S NEWS
>
>== BLOG POSTINGS ==
>1. What Media Democracy Looks Like: Testifying in Milwaukee
>2. A View of 9/11 from North of the Border
>3. "The Best War Ever" -- Watch the Web Movie, Read the Book, Learn
>the Truth About Iraq
>4. Latest Update: Exposing Earmarks
>5. Update: Congress vs. the President
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY ==
>1. The Year of Lobbying Dangerously
>2. How 9-11 Changed the News
>3. Corporate Spin Can Come in Disguise
>4. More Journalists On U.S. Government Payroll
>5. Wal-Mart Sends in the Tanks
>6. Profs Smell Smoke in Food Marketing to Kids
>7. Breathless Audacity
>8. Open Letter to ABC
>9. Pharma PR Tries to Spin Gold From Yawn
>10. Sept 7 in Milwaukee: Future of Media FCC Hearing
>
>== UPCOMING EVENTS ==
>1. SEATTLE - The Best War Ever
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>== BLOG POSTINGS ==
>
>1. WHAT MEDIA DEMOCRACY LOOKS LIKE: TESTIFYING IN MILWAUKEE
>by Diane Farsetta
>
> "Media democracy" is a term that everyone defines a little
> differently. Is it quality reporting that not only informs about
> local, national and international issues, but also facilitates
> citizen involvement? Is it having the diversity of our communities
> represented among media owners? Is it giving local programmers
> access to the airwaves? Is it holding broadcasters to the terms of
> their freely-granted licenses? Is it ensuring a variety of news and
> cultural media offerings?
> One thing's for sure -- what happened last Thursday in
> Milwaukee was media democracy in action. More than 300 people
> attended the Town Meeting on the Future of the Media, which was
> organized by the media reform group Free Press and co-sponsored by
> the Center for Media and Democracy. The event gave attendees the
> opportunity to tell Federal Communications Commission members
> Jonathan Adelstein and Michael Copps how well the media are serving
> their communities.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5168
>
>2. A VIEW OF 9/11 FROM NORTH OF THE BORDER
>by Judith Siers-Poisson
>
> I happened to be in Vancouver Sunday evening and all day Monday, so
> spent 9/11 north of the border. While people in the U.S. and other
> parts of the world only had The Path to 9/11 docudrama as a
> television viewing choice, I was fortunate to be able to watch two
> excellent documentary films about 9/11 and its aftermath aired by
> the Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC). I also enjoyed the unique
> perspective of watching them in the home of Amy and Gregor
> Robertson, a member of the Britsh Columbia Legislative Assembly.
> Journalist Linda Solomon, who was living 15 blocks from the World
> Trade Center on 9/11, was also there. You can read her article about
> how 9/11 affected her here.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5169
>
>3. "THE BEST WAR EVER" -- WATCH THE WEB MOVIE, READ THE BOOK, LEARN
>THE TRUTH ABOUT IRAQ
>by John Stauber
>
> The Best War Ever: Lies, Damned Lies and the Mess in Iraq is the new
> Sheldon Rampton / John Stauber book on sale everywhere September 14.
> You can preorder it and view a powerful web movie based on the book
> at www.TheBestWarEver.com. The book explains how the propaganda that
> misled America into war is leading to defeat. The Best War Ever is a
> follow-up to Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in
> Bush's War on Iraq, published in July 2003. That was the first book
> to expose the deceptions that sold the war. Although Weapons of Mass
> Deception was a New York Times bestseller, the same mainstream media
> who behaved like a government propaganda arm to cheerlead America
> into war largely ignored it. To bypass such censorship, this time
> the authors asked filmmaker Matt Thompson to produce a web movie
> based on the new book. It's viewable at www.TheBestWarEver.com.
> Check it out. You can watch the short film, order the new book, and
> even sign the Voters For Peace Pledge to only support politicians
> who make peace their priority.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5164
>
>4. LATEST UPDATE: EXPOSING EARMARKS
>by Elliott Fullmer
>
> The politics of ?secret holds? continues in the Senate.
> After deciding to drop his original hold on the
> Coburn-Obama-McCain-Carper earmark reform bill, Sen. Ted Stevens
> (R-Alaska) first reinstated it, and has now dropped it yet again.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5159
>
>5. UPDATE: CONGRESS VS. THE PRESIDENT
>by Conor Kenny
>
> A few weeks ago, we first posted on the subject of presidential
> signing statements. At that time, we issued a challenge to all the
> citizen journalists out there to help us pin down the positions of
> the members of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Sen. Arlen
> Specter?s (R-Pa.) Presidential Signing Statements Act, where the
> bill currently resides. The bill would grant Congress the right to
> file suit in order to determine the constitutionality of signing
> statements.
> With your help, and some research of our own, we've been able
> to pin down the positions of half the members of the committee (nine
> of eighteen). Special thanks to one of Sen. Mike DeWine's Ohio
> constituents, who sent in an email he got from the senator on the
> subject. We've put calls into the offices of the other nine, but for
> whatever reason they are unwilling or unable to come out publicly on
> the bill. The current count: five in support, two opposed, and two
> officially uncommitted. For the full breakdown, see the handy chart
> on our presidential signing statements page.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5156
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY ==
>
>1. THE YEAR OF LOBBYING DANGEROUSLY
>http://www.publicintegrity.org/icij/default.aspx?aid=519
> "Indonesia's national intelligence agency used a former Indonesian
> president's charitable foundation to hire a Washington lobbying firm
> ... to press the U.S. government for a full resumption of
> controversial military training programs," reports the Center for
> Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative
> Journalists. The firm, Collins & Co., was retained by the Gus Dur
> Foundation in May 2005, for $30,000 a month, to "remove legislative
> and policy restrictions on security cooperation with Indonesia."
> From June to October 2005, "Collins & Co. lobbyists, sometimes
> accompanied by [Indonesian intelligence] officials, met with several
> key members of Congress and their staffs," including Senators Leahy,
> Hagel and Murkowski, an aide to Senator Obama, and Representative
> Jesse Jackson Jr. In late 2005, the State Department "fully
> reinstated military cooperation and aid to Indonesia." The Gus Dur
> Foundation's mission is to build orphanages, libraries and schools.
> The man who signed the lobbying contract on the foundation's behalf
> said former Indonesian president Wahid "didn't know" about it.
>SOURCE: International Consortium of Investigative Journalists,
>September 7, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5166
>
>2. HOW 9-11 CHANGED THE NEWS
>http://www.journalism.org/node/1839
> "How did 9-11 change the news?" asks the Project for Excellence in
> Journalism (PEJ). To answer the question, ADT Research's Tyndall
> Report analyzed network evening news shows, comparing "the four
> years of network newscasts prior to 2001" with "the four years
> since." The study reveals "increased coverage of foreign policy and
> global conflict ... but less coverage of domestic issues." PEJ
> writes, "A rise in foreign coverage may not surprise anyone. U.S.
> troops are currently fighting and dying in Iraq and Afghanistan. The
> issue of global terrorism is the new question of our times." Yet,
> "the balance between reporting-driven 'hard news' and softer
> features, interviews and commentaries remained virtually unchanged
> after 9-11." The topics with the steepest decline in U.S. network
> news coverage since 9-11 are drugs, alcohol and tobacco; space,
> science and technology; and crime, penal policy and law enforcement.
>SOURCE: Project for Excellence in Journalism (U.S.), September 11, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5165
>
>3. CORPORATE SPIN CAN COME IN DISGUISE
>http://www.sptimes.com/2006/09/10/news_pf/Worldandnation/Corporate_spin_can_co.shtml
> "If McDonald's makes the case that fast food is nutritious or
> ExxonMobil argues against higher taxes, it looks like simple
> self-interest. But when an independent voice makes the case, the
> ideas gain credibility. So big corporations have devised a form of
> idea laundering, paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to
> seemingly independent groups that act as spokesmen under disguise.
> Their views wind up on the opinion pages of the nation's newspapers
> - often with no disclosure that the writer has financial ties to the
> companies involved. A few examples: James K. Glassman, a prominent
> syndicated columnist, denounced Super Size Me, a movie critical of
> McDonald's. Readers were not told that McDonald's is a major sponsor
> of a Web site hosted by Glassman. ... Steven Milloy, an analyst at
> the Competitive Enterprise Institute, wrote a column in the
> Washington Times that sided with the oil industry against windfall
> profits taxes. Readers weren't told that groups closely affiliated
> with Milloy have received at least $180,000 from ExxonMobil. By
> having others deliver their talking points, the companies stay above
> the fray, said John Stauber, whose Center for Media and Democracy
> tracks corporate front groups. 'What these companies are doing is
> paying somebody else to attack their critics while keeping their
> fingerprints off the attack.'"
>SOURCE: St. Petersburg Times (Florida), September 10, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5163
>
>4. MORE JOURNALISTS ON U.S. GOVERNMENT PAYROLL
>http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/15466239.htm
> Ten Miami journalists have been paid by the Office of Cuba
> Broadcasting (OCB) for their involvement in programs for the
> anti-Castro propaganda stations, Radio Mart? and TV Mart?. The OCB
> is a unit of the the U.S. government-funded Broadcasting Board of
> Governors. Three of the ten were journalists with El Nuevo Herald.
> "Pablo Alfonso, who reports on Cuba and writes an opinion column,
> was paid almost $175,000 since 2001 to host shows on Radio Mart?
> and TV Mart?. El Nuevo Herald freelance reporter Olga Connor, who
> writes about Cuban culture, received about $71,000, and staff
> reporter Wilfredo Cancio Isla, who covers the Cuban exile community
> and politics, was paid almost $15,000 in the last five years," Oscar
> Corral wrote. Alfonso and Isla have been fired by El Nuevo Herald
> and Connor's freelance relationship terminated. The director of OCB,
> Pedro Roig, defended the payments.
>SOURCE: Miami Herald, September 8, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5162
>
>5. WAL-MART SENDS IN THE TANKS
>http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/business/08walmart.html
> "As Wal-Mart Stores struggles to rebut criticism from unions and
> Democratic leaders, the company has discovered a reliable ally,"
> report Michael Barbaro and Stephanie Strom: "prominent conservative
> research groups like the American Enterprise Institute, the Heritage
> Foundation and the Manhattan Institute," as well as lesser-known
> think tanks such as the Pacific Research Institute. "Top policy
> analysts at these groups have written newspaper opinion pieces
> around the country supporting Wal-Mart, defended the company in
> interviews with reporters and testified on its behalf before
> government committees in Washington." What the think tanks haven't
> done is disclose the more than $2.5 million in funding they've
> received from Wal-Mart over the past six years. The National
> Committee on Responsive Philanthropy has compiled a report detailing
> the political objectives of Wal-Mart's charitable activities, titled
> "The Waltons and Wal-Mart: Self-Interested Philanthropy."
>SOURCE: New York Times, September 8, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5161
>
>6. PROFS SMELL SMOKE IN FOOD MARKETING TO KIDS
>http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/ads-for-junk-food-likened-to-pushing-cigarettes/2006/09/05/1157222132672.html
> Governments should learn a lesson from tobacco marketeers and
> restrict junk food advertising aimed at children, says a prominent
> obesity specialist. Boyd Swinburn, professor of population health at
> Deakin University in Australia, was one of several members of a
> global task force on obesity who called for international standards
> on advertising food products to children. "If you put a child in a
> sweet shop and say 'Choose not to consume that', it's an almost
> impossible responsibility," said Neville Rigby, director of policy
> and public affairs for the London-based International Obesity task
> force. (Companies like Altria have historically launched joint
> efforts to combat criticism of tobacco and food industry policies.)
> Papers and talks presented at the International Congress on Obesity
> in Australia were promptly attacked by snack food and restaurant
> industry advocates. Food industry PR flacks allege that at least one
> obesity task force member is underwritten by pharmaceutical
> companies seeking to market antiobesity medications. Many conference
> participants are calling on the UN's World Health Organization to
> promulgate uniform restrictions on food marketing to children.
>SOURCE: Sydney Morning Herald, September 6, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5160
>
>7. BREATHLESS AUDACITY
>http://www.firedoglake.com/2006/09/06/breathless-audacity-how-the-white-house-betrayed-the-real-heroes-of-911/#more-4362
> The largest study yet of lung problems among 9/11 rescue workers
> shows bad news. "Nearly 70 percent of the rescue and cleanup workers
> who toiled in the dust and fumes at ground zero have had trouble
> breathing, and many will probably be sick for the rest of their
> lives," reports Amy Westfeldt. The study, conducted by the Mount
> Sinai Medical Center, monitored the health of nearly 16,000 ground
> zero workers. The volunteers who dug through the rubble in search of
> survivors inhaled dust laden with asbestos, pulverized concrete,
> mercury and toxins that will leave many of them chronically sick for
> the rest of their lives. As Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber
> reported in their 2004 book, Banana Republicans, this tragedy
> happened because the same politicians who struck heroic poses
> following America?s worst terrorist attack betrayed the real
> heroes of the day — the construction workers, police,
> firefighters and everyday citizens who rushed to the scene and tried
> to help. In a report for the FireDogLake weblog, they tell the story
> of how volunteers dug through the rubble while receiving assurances
> — now proven false — that the air in which they worked
> was safe to breathe.
>SOURCE: FireDogLake, September 6, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5158
>
>8. OPEN LETTER TO ABC
>http://openlettertoabc.blogspot.com
> A group of activists has launched an Open Letter to ABC and its
> parent company, Disney, challenging the network's right-wing bias
> and factual distortions in its upcoming docudrama, "The Path to
> 9/11." The open letter includes information about Disney's history
> of caving to the right, the right-wing only marketing campaign used
> to promote the film, and rebuttals of its fabrications. The New York
> Times and Editor and Publisher magazine are also reporting on the
> controversy around the film.
>SOURCE: Open Letter to ABC, September 5, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5157
>
>9. PHARMA PR TRIES TO SPIN GOLD FROM YAWN
>http://www.prweek.com
> Americans may tire quickly of some pharmaceutical PR, but they've
> got nowhere to turn (certainly not in bed) when it comes to a new
> campaign sponsored by the makers of a sleep-fighting medication,
> Provigil. Drug-maker Cephalon hired Dorland Global Public Relations,
> which has spun consumers' disinterest in "sleepiness" into a
> Homeland Security-like campaign for "alertness." The trick: target
> employers. "No employer is going to allow you to bring advertising
> into their marketplace," notes Cephalon PR director Sheryl William.
> Instead, employers opened the door when Dorland created an
> "education" campaign, including two ex-NASA scientists, to warn
> employers that the lack of alertness at work could be dangerous.
> Among other things, Provigil has FDA approval for treatment of
> "shift work sleep disorder"--a condition that can result from
> employers' rotating shift requirements. Dorland also created a
> website and launched a pilot in Atlanta and Chicago that included
> street interviews and visits to baseball games. The "alertness"
> website (which gently leads the viewer to Cephalon) has reached four
> times its hoped-for audience.
>SOURCE: PRWeek, August 28, 2006 (sub req'd)
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5155
>
>10. SEPT 7 IN MILWAUKEE: FUTURE OF MEDIA FCC HEARING
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5112
> Do you want more quality journalism? Are you concerned about the
> consolidation of media ownership? Is your community fairly
> represented in the media? Tell the U.S. Federal Communications
> Commission directly, at the "Town Meeting on the Future of Media" in
> Milwaukee! The Center for Media and Democracy is co-sponsoring the
> September 7 event, at which members of the public will share media
> concerns with FCC Commissioners Copps and Adelstein. See our website
> or Free Press' website for more information. At a similar hearing in
> Los Angeles this week, FCC Commissioners heard from people concerned
> "that the consolidation of station ownership had led to a pronounced
> decline in in-depth news reporting, diversity of viewpoints and
> quality children's programming," and from Hispanic community members
> concerned about media labor practices and racist radio programming,
> reports the LA Times.
>SOURCE: Center for Media and Democracy, September 6, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5153
>
>== UPCOMING EVENTS ==
>
>1. SEATTLE - THE BEST WAR EVER
>Date: 09/19/2006 - 20:30 to 09/19/2006 - 22:00
> Co-Author John Stauber speaking.
> Location: Seattle, WA, Elliot Bay Book Company
> URL: www.elliottbaybook.com/
>For the further information, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5015
>
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>The Weekly Spin is compiled by staff and volunteers at the Center
>for Media and Democracy (CMD), a nonprofit public interest
>organization. To subscribe, visit:
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>Daily updates and news from past weeks can be found in the "Spin of
>the Day" section of CMD's website:
>http://www.prwatch.org/spin
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>Archives of our quarterly publication, PR Watch, are at:
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>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
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>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
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>(editor /at/ prwatch.org)
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Carpentier Nico (Phd)
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