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[ecrea] Fwd: The Weekly Spin, October 4, 2006

Wed Oct 04 18:40:52 GMT 2006


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>From: Weekly Spin <(weekly-spin /at/ prwatch.org)>
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>Subject: The Weekly Spin, October 4, 2006
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>THE WEEKLY SPIN, October 4, 2006
>
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>THIS WEEK'S NEWS
>
>== BLOG POSTINGS ==
>1. Rep. Mark Foley: Who knew what and when?
>2. Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) resigns
>3. The end of habeas corpus and the official sanction of less than 
>"grave breaches" of the Geneva Convention
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY ==
>1. The Best Book Ever?
>2. Stymied by Their Own Spin
>3. Selling Serbia
>4. Wal-Mercado of the Twenty-First Century
>5. Bottled Water Babies
>6. Spooks and Geeks
>7. Nuclear Public Radio
>8. Defense Contractor Gets Defensive at Documentary
>9. State Dept: Forget Our Invasions, Look at Our Culture!
>10. The Thai Junta's PR Coup: Women, Smiles and Free Markets
>11. Iraqi Journalists: Not So Liberated
>12. FCC Names Obesity/Food Marketing Task Force
>13. Who's Saying What about The Best War Ever?
>14. Judge Queries News Corporation Subsidiary's Email Deletion Policy
>
>== UPCOMING EVENTS ==
>1. Facing The Media Crisis
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>== BLOG POSTINGS ==
>
>1. REP. MARK FOLEY: WHO KNEW WHAT AND WHEN?
>by Elliott Fullmer
>
>   The scandal surrounding former Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) has evolved
>   from one of a disturbing congressman to a possible institutional
>   cover-up.
>        Last Friday, Foley resigned abruptly after it was reported that
>   he sent emails and sexually suggestive instant messages to teenage
>   congressional pages. While no member has admitted to having previous
>   knowledge of the messages, it now appears certain that several GOP
>   leaders of the House were aware of Foley?s emails to a
>   sixteen-year-old page as early as the fall of 2005. Not only was
>   little done to investigate the matter, but Foley was also allowed to
>   continue co-chairing the Congressional Missing and Exploited
>   Children's Caucus. While some details remain unclear as a result of
>   conflicting statements by those involved, let's review what we know.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5248
>
>2. REP. MARK FOLEY (R-FLA.) RESIGNS
>by Conor Kenny
>
>   Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) resigned from Congress on Friday after ABC
>   News obtained sexually suggestive emails and transcripts of instant
>   messenger conversations between Foley and a then-16 year old page.
>   Foley had already won the primary election on September 5th and
>   under Florida law his name will be the one on the ballot on Election
>   Day, creating problems for any replacement the Republican Party
>   finds.
>        For more background on Foley and the scandal, see his
>   Congresspedia profile.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5246
>
>3. THE END OF HABEAS CORPUS AND THE OFFICIAL SANCTION OF LESS THAN 
>"GRAVE BREACHES" OF THE GENEVA CONVENTION
>by Elliott Fullmer
>
>   New legislation on the treatment of terror suspects is now halfway
>   to President Bush's desk.
>        Largely along party lines, the House passed a bill (H.R.6166)
>   yesterday which would give both the president and government
>   interrogators greater leeway in their handling of suspected
>   terrorists. The passage follows weeks of negotiations (mostly
>   between GOP senators and the Bush Administration) concerning the
>   rights of detainees in the U.S. War on Terror. The Senate is likely
>   to consider the bill soon, and all indications are that it is headed
>   for passage.
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5231
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY ==
>
>1. THE BEST BOOK EVER?
>
>   Haven't had a chance to buy our new book, The Best War Ever?
>   Wondering what it's all about? Click here to read exclusive passages
>   from the book. Chapters excerpted include "Not Counting the Dead,"
>   "Rewriting History," and "Big Impact." We hope you'll take this
>   opportunity to whet your appetite and will go on to read the book in
>   its entirety. You can order it online, or ask your local bookseller
>   if they have it in stock. And after you read it, please consider
>   posting a review on Amazon to encourage others to read this
>   important book. And don't forget to visit The Best War Ever website
>   to watch the great four minute flash video about the book!
>SOURCE:
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5265
>
>2. STYMIED BY THEIR OWN SPIN
>http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6193882
>   The Bush Administration has been a little too effective with its
>   propaganda for their own purposes. After deciding that more than 120
>   detainees at the Guant?namo detention camp are eligible for
>   transfer or release, it is proving difficult to identify countries
>   willing to take them. This shouldn't be surprising after 5 years of
>   U.S. officials labeling detainees as enemy combatants and dangerous
>   terrorists. Vienna Colucci, Director of Amnesty International's
>   Program for International Justice and Accountability said, "For so
>   long, the presumption of innocence has sort of been thrown out the
>   window, and they've been labeled these...hardcore terrorists, and
>   killers, and these people would kill us all. And what that does is
>   leads to a(n)...unwillingness on the part of other countries'
>   governments to take them. It also puts...themselves at risk because
>   they are perceived to be a danger to their own community."
>SOURCE: NPR's Morning Edition, October 4, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5267
>
>3. SELLING SERBIA
>http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/0928bgr_serbia.htm
>   The Washington D.C. based lobbyshop Barbour Griffith & Rogers (BG&R)
>   has landed a $60,000 a month contract to represent Serbia. The
>   contract, which was signed by Serbia's Minister for International
>   Economic Relations, Milan Parivodic, runs until January 2009. BG&R's
>   deal comes at a time when the Serbian government is under increasing
>   pressure to ensure the arrest of Ratko Mladic, who the United
>   Nations wants brought before the United Nations International
>   Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia over his role in the war
>   in Bosnia between 1992 and 1995. Serbia's failure to capture Mladic
>   has resulted in the U.S. suspending aid and the European Union
>   refusing to discuss Serbia's interest in becoming a member. This
>   week the UN's chief prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, expressed
>   dissatisfaction with the level of co-operation from the Serbian
>   government.
>SOURCE: O'Dwyers PR Daily, (sub req'd) September 28, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5266
>
>4. WAL-MERCADO OF THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
>http://adage.com/article?article_id=112201
>   "Wal-Mart Stores accounts for 65% of Latino music sold in the U.S.
>   -- more than double the giant retailer's market share in the general
>   market," writes AdAge. "Now, it wants to get even better at
>   marketing to Hispanics." The plan involves "revamping hundreds of
>   stores during the next two years," according to Simon El Hage of
>   Lopez Negrete Communications, which has been Wal-Mart's "Hispanic
>   agency of record" for 12 years. "Lopez Negrete, the seventh-largest
>   Hispanic agency, is leading the effort to develop Wal-Mart's
>   21st-century Hispanic store model." The new model is on display at a
>   Houston, Texas, prototype store. The prototype features a larger
>   "Hispanic-oriented dry grocery" and an in-store bakery, run by "an
>   outside Hispanic operator." El Hage stressed the importance of rural
>   Hispanics to Wal-Mart, saying, "Because the general-market
>   population is aging, guess who's going into rural America today?
>   Latinos. So the new rural format for Wal-Mart will also have to
>   accommodate the new Latino."
>SOURCE: Advertising Age, October 2, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5262
>
>5. BOTTLED WATER BABIES
>http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=311130&Category=8
>   Bottled water is a $10 billion industry, but companies are
>   "determined to push ... into new demographics," by "distilling
>   products aimed at children," reports Bo Emerson. "The
>   multimillion-dollar marketing campaign includes animated ads on
>   Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network and broadcast TV that features kids
>   triumphing over boring parents with the help of the bulbous
>   (Nestle-brand) bottle. ... Karen Bennett of Atlanta, who tested the
>   product for word-of-mouth public relations firm BzzAgent, thought
>   the idea was dumb. 'I'm not going to buy water bottles that don't
>   fit in my cup holders,' was her initial reaction. Then her
>   10-year-old took to it like a duck to" ... well, you know. Another
>   example of "water as an innovation platform" -- as Beverage
>   Marketing Corp.'s Gary Hemphill described it -- is "a pre-sealed
>   disposable ice tray filled with purified water." The expanding
>   market for bottled water products is mystifying, since a four-year
>   study by Natural Resources Defense Council "resolved that bottled
>   water was no purer than tap."
>SOURCE: Cox News Service, October 3, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5261
>
>6. SPOOKS AND GEEKS
>http://blogoehlert.typepad.com/eclippings/2006/09/so_david_weinbe.html
>   Oh to be a fly on that wall. Late last week Mark Oehlert of Booz
>   Allen Hamilton organized a two day meeting between CIA employees and
>   experts on blogs and wikis. The goal was to assist the CIA in
>   improving their internal communications and information sharing.
>   Present on the non-Company side were David Weinberger, Clay Shirky,
>   Jerry Michalski, Ross Mayfield, Eugene Eric Kim, Marcia Conner and
>   Jay Cross. In attendance for the CIA (among other undisclosed
>   particpants) was Chief Technology Officer for their Center for
>   Mission Innovation, Dr. D. Calvin Andrus, who is the author of the
>   2005 white paper "The Wiki and the Blog: Toward a Complex Adaptive
>   Intelligence Community." You can read participants' takes on the
>   meeting here, here, and here.
>SOURCE: e-clippings, BlogOehlert, September 28, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5251
>
>7. NUCLEAR PUBLIC RADIO
>http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6172217
>   On its "Weekend Edition Saturday" show, NPR aired a segment titled,
>   "Environmentalists Rethink Stance on Nuclear Power." Who was their
>   one example of an environmentalist turned nuclear power proponent?
>   None other than Greenpeace co-founder turned industry flack Patrick
>   Moore. (Environmental Defense's chief scientist was also
>   interviewed, but cautioned about nuclear power's waste, safety and
>   security issues.) After the first of Moore's two soundbites, NPR
>   reporter Christopher Joyce did mention that Moore's "former
>   [environmentalist] colleagues call him an eco-Judas. They note that
>   Moore takes money from the nuclear industry to sing its praises.
>   Moore replies that he embraced nuclear long before he took industry
>   money." While NPR presented disclosure of Moore's gig as a paid
>   spokesperson for the Nuclear Energy Institute as a "he said, she
>   said" matter, NPR let stand without question Moore's assertion that
>   clean power advocates either "have not done the arithmetic" or
>   "don't realize" U.S. energy needs.
>SOURCE: National Public Radio (U.S.), September 30, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5247
>
>8. DEFENSE CONTRACTOR GETS DEFENSIVE AT DOCUMENTARY
>http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/0927iraw_for_sale.htm
>   "Halliburton's KBR engineering and services unit has launched a
>   strike against the documentary, 'Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers,'
>   that filmmaker Robert Greenwald plans to release nationally during
>   'Patriotism over Profit Screening Week' set for Oct. 8-14," reports
>   O'Dwyer's. A Halliburton statement called the movie, which accuses
>   it of ripping off U.S. taxpayers, "nothing more than a theory in
>   search of a conspiracy." The defense contractor also slammed
>   Greenwald for not including information that it had provided him,
>   "because the facts did not support their thesis for the film."
>   Greenwald did request interviews with Halliburton CEO Dave Lesar
>   several times. Cathy Mann, Halliburton's director of communications,
>   did not respond to any of the requests. O'Dwyer's "emailed Mann,
>   asking why she did not respond. ... She referred [O'Dwyer's] to
>   Halliburton's statement." The Greenwald movie does include an
>   interview with an ex-KBR procurement manager, who said, "I wouldn't
>   run a local lawn service on the business practices that Halliburton
>   has."
>SOURCE: O'Dwyer's PR Daily (sub req'd), September 27, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5244
>
>9. STATE DEPT: FORGET OUR INVASIONS, LOOK AT OUR CULTURE!
>http://www.prweek.com/us/news/article/595577/US-Stresses-art-public-diplomacy/
>   The U.S. State Department, which has been widely criticized for
>   ineffectual public diplomacy, recently announced its new "Global
>   Cultural Initiative." It's a joint effort "to educate Americans and
>   participating nations about other cultures," reports PR Week. U.S.
>   PR czar Karen Hughes explained, "Public diplomacy isn't just the
>   work of government. ... Every American who travels abroad or
>   welcomes a foreign visitor can be an ambassador for America." As
>   part of the initiative, the Kennedy Center will send U.S.
>   performance artists overseas, including to Pakistan. The American
>   Film Institute will showcase U.S. and foreign filmmakers at
>   festivals. The National Endowment for the Arts will organize
>   literary exchanges between the U.S. and Pakistan, Russia and other
>   countries. The National Endowment for the Humanities will recruit
>   foreign teachers for U.S. seminars. The State Department's Bureau of
>   Educational and Cultural Affairs, which leads the new initiative,
>   has seen its budget triple since 2001, to $4.5 million for 2006.
>SOURCE: PR Week (sub req'd), September 28, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5243
>
>10. THE THAI JUNTA'S PR COUP: WOMEN, SMILES AND FREE MARKETS
>http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/world/15610757.htm
>   Thawinan Khongkran, a former beauty queen and public relations
>   staffer at an army-owned television station, is the new spokesperson
>   for the military officials who took power in Thailand recently. "I
>   consider it an honor," she told AP. The move is part of a campaign
>   by the junta to "soften its image," in response to international and
>   domestic criticism of its restrictions of basic rights. The junta is
>   also "assigning female troops to help keep the peace in Bangkok and
>   telling its soldiers to smile." Activist Ji Ungpakorn countered,
>   "The real issue is not having basic freedom of expression, freedom
>   of assembly and freedom of the press. ... They can parade a hundred
>   beauty queens but without those freedoms, we don't have anything."
>   The Washington Post reports that the junta's international outreach
>   includes "special English-language briefings for foreign media,"
>   inviting diplomats to "briefings with question-and-answer sessions,"
>   and assuring foreign investors of its "commitment to a free-market
>   economy."
>SOURCE: Associated Press, September 26, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5242
>
>11. IRAQI JOURNALISTS: NOT SO LIBERATED
>http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/29/world/middleeast/29media.html
>   "Under a broad new set of laws criminalizing speech that ridicules
>   the government or its officials, some resurrected verbatim from
>   Saddam Hussein's penal code, roughly a dozen Iraqi journalists have
>   been charged with offending public officials in the past year,"
>   reports Paul von Zielbauer. "Three journalists for a small newspaper
>   in southeastern Iraq are being tried ... for articles last year that
>   accused a provincial governor, local judges and police officials of
>   corruption. ... On Sept. 7, the police sealed the offices of Al
>   Arabiya, a Dubai-based satellite news channel, for what the
>   government said was inflammatory reporting. And the Committee to
>   Protect Journalists says that at least three Iraqi journalists have
>   served time in prison for writing articles deemed criminally
>   offensive. ... In May, a court in ... Iraq's autonomous Kurdish
>   region, sentenced two journalists ... to six-month suspended jail
>   terms for an article claiming that a Kurdish official had two
>   telephone company employees fired after they cut his phone service
>   for failing to pay his bill."
>SOURCE: New York Times, September 29, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5241
>
>12. FCC NAMES OBESITY/FOOD MARKETING TASK FORCE
>http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060928/ap_on_he_me/food_ads_kids;_ylt=AhJ8mx7X
>   Citing "a public health problem that will only get worse unless we
>   take action," FCC Chairman Kevin Martin announced a joint task force
>   on child obesity. The task force currently brings together mostly
>   corporate and conservative members, including Walt Disney, media
>   watchdog Parents Television Council (which recently lauded General
>   Mills for "family friendly advertising" and specializes in indecency
>   complaints to the FCC ), and the Beverly LaHaye Institute, which
>   opposes sex trafficking, promotes abstinence and attacks feminists.
>   Sesame Workshop and Children Now reportedly have also been invited
>   to participate. Children Now's board chair is marketing consultant
>   and former ad exec Jane Gardner. Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), who
>   urged Martin to create the task force, said that he did not consult
>   with any other members of Congress. In the press conference
>   announcing the task force, Sen. Brownback appeared to propose his
>   own conclusion to the task force's work: further voluntary
>   restrictions, rather than FCC regulations on media marketing to
>   children. "If we start down the road of saying we're going to limit
>   everything and we're going to do it with a regulatory regime, I
>   think you get everybody in a quick adversarial relationship." The
>   Institute of Medicine of the National Academies has already
>   recommended specific food marketing restrictions.
>SOURCE: Associated Press, September 28, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5239
>
>13. WHO'S SAYING WHAT ABOUT THE BEST WAR EVER?
>http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/new_books/0925best_war_ever.htm
>   Jon Gingerich wrote a lengthy and insightful review of Sheldon
>   Rampton and John Stauber's recently released book, "The Best War
>   Ever" for odwyerpr.com, the on-line companion to O'Dwyer's PR Report
>   Monthly Magazine. Gingerich's piece begins: "Much like beauty,
>   victory is in the eye of the beholder. This case is made clear in
>   'The Best War Ever,' a scathing analysis of the Bush
>   Administration's misinformation campaign leading up to and during
>   the war in Iraq." He goes on to highlight the thorough research
>   presented in the book on topics like the role of the Iraqi National
>   Congress and its disgraced leader Ahmed Chalabi in the build-up to
>   war, Bush administration spending on PR and propaganda to sell the
>   war and occupation to both Iraqis and Americans, and the role of the
>   media in not bringing the deceptions and distortions to light.
>   Reviews and a selection of interviews in other publications can be
>   seen here. A reader in Holland, MI just sent us a note saying "Great
>   book -- WOW -- an eye-opener!" There are also comments on the
>   Amazon.com page for the book -- we hope that when you read "The Best
>   War Ever" you will add a comment of your own!
>SOURCE: odwyerpr.com, September 25, 2006 (sub req'd)
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5225
>
>14. JUDGE QUERIES NEWS CORPORATION SUBSIDIARY'S EMAIL DELETION POLICY
>http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2006/09/26/1159036541871.html
>   A judge has challenged the fairness of the policy of a News
>   Corporation subsidiary under which all e-mails are deleted after
>   only three days, with only those considered important printed out
>   and included in hard copy files. Justice Ronald Sackville told News
>   Limited's barrister, Noel Hutley, that the company should "Keep
>   them. Or don't engage in a systematic process of removal of them so
>   that in a case like this the end result is that ... I simply don't
>   know what the contemporaneous communications were within News." In
>   its closing submission News Ltd pointed out that the deletion of
>   e-mails by its in-house lawyer was consistent with the system
>   employed by News's head office in New York. Sackville is hearing a
>   case into allegations that News Limited and others sought to
>   undermine the viability of a pay TV company operated by the Seven
>   Network.
>SOURCE: Sydney Morning Herald, September 27, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5237
>
>== UPCOMING EVENTS ==
>
>1. FACING THE MEDIA CRISIS
>Date: 10/06/2006 - 06:00 to 10/08/2006 - 15:38
>   Action Coalition on Media Education convenes its national
>   conference: Facing the Media Crisis: Media Education for Reform,
>   Justice and Democracy. Speakers include: Diane Wilson, Amy Goodman,
>   Bill McKibben, Bernie Sanders, Jean Kilbourne, Robert Jensen, Jerome
>   Armstrong, Carrie McLaren, Jeff Chester, Sut Jhally, John Stauber,
>   Bob McCannon, Josh Silver, Peter Phillips, Anthony Riddle,
>   Lauren-Glenn Davitian, Hannah Sassaman, Pete Tridesh, and Sara
>   Voorhees.
>         Location: Burliington, VT
>         Organizer: ACME
>         URL: www.acmecoalition.org/page.cfm?ID=134
>For the further information, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/4769
>
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