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[ecrea] The Weekly Spin, October 25, 2006
Wed Oct 25 19:06:10 GMT 2006
>THE WEEKLY SPIN, October 25, 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. The Video News Release Industry's Next Statement to the FCC
>2. Why people think members of Congress are crooked: Nine of them
>are being investigated
>3. Straight from the source: "Ask a lobbyist"
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY ==
>1. Disney's Healthy Food Marketing Plan a Fantasia?
>2. Steyn Globe-Trots with Oz Government Funding
>3. Embedded Only While In Bed with the U.S. Government
>4. Energy Economics 101 for Nuclear Industry's Patrick Moore
>5. Iraqis Stand Up
>6. Roche's Cancer Front Group Flounders
>7. Logging Company Ordered to Pay SLAPP Costs
>8. New Zealand Police End McDonald's School Marketing Program
>9. Payola Pundit Armstrong Williams Pays Back $34,000
>10. Wal-Mart / Edelman, Part Two: Will the Real Bloggers Please Stand Up?
>11. Front Group's Fake Blog Just One of Wal-Mart's Recent Woes
>12. Good and Bad News on Government Information
>13. Pentagon OK's Lincoln Group Propaganda
>14. Ex-FDA Commissioner Turned Lobbyist Pleads Guilty
>15. "Equal Rights" Ad Promotes Black Lungs
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>== BLOG POSTINGS ==
>
>1. THE VIDEO NEWS RELEASE INDUSTRY'S NEXT STATEMENT TO THE FCC
>by Bob Burton
>
> Recently a new lobby group, the National Association of Broadcast
> Communicators (NABC), was launched to try to convince federal
> regulators, media policy wonks and the general public that they
> shouldn't worry about television stations airing undisclosed video
> news releases (VNRs). The NABC and their allies at the Public
> Relations Society of America and the Radio-Television News Directors
> Association went even further, wrapping the covert broadcast of
> corporate- and government-funded fake news segments in the U.S.
> flag.
> Ever the optimist, I'm looking forward to the day when these
> groups have considered the issue more closely and carefully, and
> have come to appreciate the important role that news -- especially
> that broadcast over the public airwaves to a mass audience -- plays
> in a democracy. The following is the statement that NABC might well
> issue, on that sunny day. (Satire alert!)
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5311
>
>2. WHY PEOPLE THINK MEMBERS OF CONGRESS ARE CROOKED: NINE OF THEM
>ARE BEING INVESTIGATED
>by Conor Kenny
>
> Fully 50 percent of Americans think that most members of Congress
> are corrupt and 36 percent think their own member of Congress is
> corrupt, according to a poll released Thursday by CNN. A quick
> stroll over to my personal favorite part of the Congresspedia wiki,
> the Members of Congress under investigation page, shows why: at
> least a dozen current and former members of Congress are under
> investigation for everything from covering up the Mark Foley page
> scandal to laundering campaign contributions to bribery. And don't
> take comfort in the fact that three of those dozen are no longer in
> Congress: each was forced to resign in just the last year in the
> wake of investigations or guilty pleas related to actions they took
> while they were still in Congress.
> Each of these current and former members of Congress has
> detailed explanations of the allegations against them on their
> Congresspedia profile pages, but the mind-boggling litany of
> allegations begs for a quick rundown:
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5326
>
>3. STRAIGHT FROM THE SOURCE: "ASK A LOBBYIST"
>by Conor Kenny
>
> Wonkette, for those of you who don't read it, is a proudly low-brow
> and juvenile blog that focuses on the more salacious escapades of
> our representatives in Washington. For those of us who have to deal
> with the over-starched, self-important Washington crowd
> (Congresspedia headquarters is just off the K street lobbying
> corridor), it often provides a dose of needed levity.
> Occasionally, Wonkette does break away from its trademark 6th
> grade level humor and provides a gem that gives real insight into
> how this town actually works. Today it ran another installment in
> its "Ask a Lobbyist" series, in which an anonymous member of the
> unofficial fourth branch of the federal government answers questions
> submitted by readers. In response to a question about whether
> lobbying firms that have been hiring Republicans for a decade will
> be left in the lurch if Democrats capture both chambers of Congress
> next month, the lobbyist responds:
>For the rest of this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5309
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY ==
>
>1. DISNEY'S HEALTHY FOOD MARKETING PLAN A FANTASIA?
>http://www.alternet.org/story/43181
> On the very day that Walt Disney Company announced that it would
> limit future food marketing deals to brands that provide healthy
> food products to kids, there was Kellogg's sugar-crazy Tony the
> Tiger (again) welcoming kids to Disney's website. Is the company,
> then, not "Greeeaat!" for its plan to limit calories, fat, saturated
> fat and added sugars to any product the Disney name promotes? Public
> health attorney and author Michele Simon doesn't think so. She takes
> both Disney and the press (e.g. Daily Mail to public: "Disney Bans
> All Junk Food") to task for hyping what she calls a PR-driven move
> to keep the kids watching Disney--and probably eating the bad stuff
> anyway. Simon's top criticisms: 1) Disney has created a
> two-to-four-year phase-in, which means not only that Disney is
> protecting current profit centers, but that if this voluntary plan
> changes, consumers may remember only the headlines and forget about
> the commitments; 2) Disney didn't include a ban on junk food
> advertising in its wider media conglomerate, such as ABC Network,
> Disney Channel and Toon Disney; 3) Disney omitted limits on product
> placement in movies and television; and 4) Disney didn't mention
> "advergaming"--like the enticement of its current website.
> "...[C]hildren don't need The Incredibles to tell them when and what
> to eat," Simon writes.
>SOURCE: Alternet, October 19, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5332
>
>2. STEYN GLOBE-TROTS WITH OZ GOVERNMENT FUNDING
>http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Govt-funds-rightwing-neocons-visit/2006/10/23/1161455659387.html
> The Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Alexander Downer has
> disclosed that the Australian government contributed $A12,023
> ($US9,150) towards the costs of a five-day speaking tour by the
> conservative Canadian commentator Mark Steyn. In response to a
> question from Opposition Shadow Minister for Finance Lindsay Tanner,
> Downer explained that Steyn was funded under a program that "targets
> senior foreign journalists and editorial staff with the capacity to
> influence editorial content and/or generate informed international
> media coverage of Australia." Steyn's tour was co-sponsored by two
> free-market think tanks, the Institute of Public Affairs and the
> Center for Independent Studies. Steyn also spoke at an event for The
> Conservative, a quarterly magazine aimed at fostering debate within
> the Liberal Party of Australia.
>SOURCE: Sydney Morning Herald, October 23, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5331
>
>3. EMBEDDED ONLY WHILE IN BED WITH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT
>http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/northern_california/15811043.htm
> Apparently the U.S. government is only in favor of embedded
> reporters when it serves its own purposes. According to the
> Associated Press, Congressman Duncan Hunter, Chairman of the House
> Committee on Armed Services, has asked the Pentagon to remove CNN
> reporters embedded with U.S. combat troops because of the network's
> broadcast of a video showing insurgent snipers targeting U.S.
> soldiers. Hunter penned a letter to Defense Secretary Donald
> Rumsfeld stating that "CNN has now served as the publicist for an
> enemy propaganda film featuring the killing of an American soldier."
> CNN producer David Doss wrote in a Web log Thursday the network
> televised the footage in an effort to present the "unvarnished
> truth" about the Iraq war. "Our responsibility is to report the
> news," said CNN spokesperson Laurie Goldberg. "As an organization we
> stand by our decision and respect the rights of others to disagree
> with it."
>SOURCE: San Jos? Mercury News, October 20, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5329
>
>4. ENERGY ECONOMICS 101 FOR NUCLEAR INDUSTRY'S PATRICK MOORE
>http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1161521345525&call_pageid=968
> In an interview with the Toronto Star, veteran energy policy analyst
> Amory Lovins said that he had spoken with former Greenpeace
> co-founder turned nuclear power promoter Patrick Moore and concluded
> that "he's not well informed about energy alternatives." Earlier
> this year, the Nuclear Energy Institute established a front group,
> the Clean and Safe Energy Coaltion, with Moore as its co-chair. The
> group promotes nuclear power as a "solution" to global warming.
> Lovins referred to his recent Nuclear Energy International article,
> which showed that "if you spent 10 cents (U.S.) to make and deliver
> a new nuclear kilowatt-hour ... you can displace 1 kilowatt-hour of
> coal power. That's what Patrick is talking about. ... If you spend
> the same 10 cents (U.S.) instead on micropower or efficient use, you
> get two to 10 times as much coal displacement for the same money,
> because those options are cheaper -- you get more per dollar.
> They're also faster, so you get more carbon displacement, coal
> displacement, per year."
>SOURCE: Toronto Star (Canada), October 22, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5325
>
>5. IRAQIS STAND UP
>http://www.guardian.co.uk/video/page/0,,1927660,00.html
> British war photographer Sean Smith spent nearly six weeks with the
> 101st Division of the U.S. army in Iraq and has produced an eloquent
> short film which explodes the myth around the claims that
> U.S.-trained Iraqis are preparing to take control of their own
> country. In fact, Shia militias loyal to fundamentalist cleric
> Moqtada al-Sadr seem to be ready, willing and able to seize power,
> while Sunni insurgents believed to belong to al-Qaida are so
> emboldened that they have been publicly staging military-like
> parades within striking distance of U.S. forces stationed in nearby
> bases. According to former Bush administration foreign policy
> official Richard N. Haass, the situation is reaching a "tipping
> point" both in Iraq and in U.S. politics, and the administration's
> current strategy "has virtually no chance of succeeding."
>SOURCE: The Guardian (UK), October 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5323
>
>6. ROCHE'S CANCER FRONT GROUP FLOUNDERS
>http://www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1926949,00.html
> Cancer United, a cancer patient group created and launched by the PR
> firm Weber Shandwick with funding from the drug company Roche, has
> got off to a rocky start. On its website the group states that it
> aims to run an 18-month-long campaign for more uniform cancer
> treatments across the European Union. However, before the group was
> launched, it was revealed that the study it relies on was also
> funded by Roche. The study by the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm
> argues that survival rates increase the more a country spends on
> drugs. Michel Coleman from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
> Medicine told the Guardian that the study was "woefully simplistic
> research." A Labor member of parliament, Ian Gibson, resigned from
> the group after discovering Roche's role. "I feel very silly and
> stupid," he said. The press conference convened in Brussels to
> announce the new group was "sparsely attended."
>SOURCE: Guardian (UK), October 20, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5322
>
>7. LOGGING COMPANY ORDERED TO PAY SLAPP COSTS
>http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,20614473-1702,00.html
> The Tasmanian logging company Gunns has been ordered to pay the
> legal costs of 17 environmentalists and 3 environmental groups,
> after the third version of its $A6.9 million ($US5.2m) damages claim
> was thrown out of court. The legal costs are estimated at more than
> $A1 million ($US760,000). Since December 2004, Gunns has filed three
> statements of claim and sacked two legal teams. Victorian Supreme
> Court Justice Bernard Bongiorno gave the company until November 2 to
> file a fourth claim. Gunns' legal actions have sparked calls for an
> overhaul of Australian laws to ensure that corporations cannot
> initiate legal actions aimed at stifling community participation in
> public policy debates, or SLAPPs. Earlier in the week, Gunns
> informed the court that it had dropped one part of its claim in
> which it sought $A500,000 ($US378,000) in damages, alleging a
> co-ordinated campaign involving all defendants.
>SOURCE: The Australian, October 20, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5321
>
>8. NEW ZEALAND POLICE END MCDONALD'S SCHOOL MARKETING PROGRAM
>http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10406648
> New Zealand Police have terminated McDonald's sponsorship of a road
> safety program in schools and pre-schools because it was
> inconsistent with their policy banning corporate sponsorship. As
> part of the $NZ40,000 ($US26,700) a year deal, "Ronald McDonald"
> accompanied police on their school visits and children were awarded
> vouchers for use in the fast food company's outlets. McDonald's said
> they were "extremely disappointed" at the decision, but Acting
> Superintendent Sam Hoyle, the national manager of youth services,
> described their funding as "a drop in the bucket" of the road safety
> program. Obesity Action Coalition spokeswoman Celia Murphy welcomed
> the decision. "Every time the kids crossed the road at school the
> McDonald's brand was there on the vests of the patrol monitors. The
> whole deal was outrageous," she said. The New Zealand Police
> decision followed questions raised about the deal in Parliament by
> Greens health spokesperson Sue Kedgley.
>SOURCE: New Zealand Herald, October 19, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5320
>
>9. PAYOLA PUNDIT ARMSTRONG WILLIAMS PAYS BACK $34,000
>http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-10-20-williams_x.htm
> Conservative commentator Armstrong Williams will pay $34,000 as part
> of a settlement of a Department of Justice (DOJ) investigation into
> possible breaches of his contract with the U.S. Department of
> Education. Williams admits no wrongdoing and will not face charges.
> Under a $240,000 sub-contract to the PR firm Ketchum, Williams
> agreed to promote the department's No Child Left Behind Act and,
> through his contacts in the journalists group America's Black Forum,
> encourage others to do likewise. The DOJ investigation was into
> whether Williams was paid for radio and television ads that he
> didn't produce. Williams' November 2003 contract was negotiated
> during the term of former Education Secretary Rod Paige. The
> contract was terminated in early 2005, after USA Today reported on
> it. The paper had received a copy of Williams' contract through a
> Freedom of Information Act request. Williams is a partner in a
> Washington DC PR firm, the Graham Williams Group. Last year, the
> Government Accountability Office ruled that several aspects of
> Ketchum's work for the Education Department violated federal law.
>SOURCE: USA Today, October 20, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5319
>
>10. WAL-MART / EDELMAN, PART TWO: WILL THE REAL BLOGGERS PLEASE STAND UP?
>http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/1020edelman_blogs_walmart.htm
> O'Dwyer's has more revelations about the multifaceted fakery engaged
> in by Wal-Mart and its PR firm, Edelman. Edelman staffers have been
> posing as "grassroots" bloggers on two Wal-Mart websites, for the
> Working Families for Wal-Mart front group and paidcritics.com, which
> -- rather ironically -- slams the "paid critics [who are] smearing
> Wal-Mart." The paid bloggers are Edelman's Miranda Gill, Brian
> McNeill and Kate Marshall. A post by Marshall praises a Wall Street
> Journal editorial for exposing "Wake Up Wal-Mart and Wal-Mart Watch
> as front groups of the union leaders." If you can take more
> hypocrisy, read Advertising Age's article on how Edelman "is being
> aligned with a newly coined word for its present crisis" over
> walmartingacrossamerica.com: "flog," for "fake blog." AdAge points
> out that Edelman helped write the Word of Mouth Marketing
> Association's (WOMMA's) code of ethics, which states, "Never obscure
> your identity." Asked why WOMMA is not sanctioning Edelman, WOMMA
> CEO Andy Sernovitz said, "We aren't the police. Associations don't
> punish. And look, PRSA didn't even say a word, and they are the PR
> association." Maybe that's because PRSA is too busy defending
> undisclosed fake news.
>SOURCE: O'Dwyer's PR Daily (sub req'd), October 20, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5317
>
>11. FRONT GROUP'S FAKE BLOG JUST ONE OF WAL-MART'S RECENT WOES
>http://www.prweek.com/us/news/article/599362/Edelman-apologizes-Wal-Mart-blog-disclosure-omission/
> Richard Edelman, the CEO of the Edelman PR firm, "issued an apology
> for his agency's role in creating a blog for client Wal-Mart that
> did not properly disclose its origins or funding," notes PR Week.
> The walmartingacrossamerica.com website "chronicled a couple's
> journey across the country in an RV while stopping at various
> Wal-Mart parking lots." The trip was funded by Working Families for
> Wal-Mart, a front group funded by the giant retailer. Edelman told
> PR Week, "We still have a job to do about explaining to our staff
> their [disclosure] obligation in old media and new media." Worse,
> one of the fake bloggers was Washington Post photographer James
> Thresher, who later agreed to repay Working Families for the $2,200
> cost of his and his girlfriend's airfare, RV rental, gas and food
> during the 10-day trip. Post Executive Editor Leonard Downie Jr.,
> who also asked that Thresher's pictures be removed from the
> pro-Wal-Mart website, called Working Families "a special-interest
> group," reports Howard Kurtz. Even worse, filmmaker Ron Galloway
> recently resigned from Working Families' steering committee, reports
> O'Dwyer's. Galloway said he disagreed with Wal-Mart's new wage caps;
> Wal-Mart says the split's because Galloway's new movie is about "the
> so-called myth of global warming." Even worse again, Wal-Mart is
> being criticized for a holiday-themed website that allows kids to
> email gift wish lists to their parents, reports Advertising Age.
>SOURCE: PR Week (sub req'd), October 18, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5316
>
>12. GOOD AND BAD NEWS ON GOVERNMENT INFORMATION
>http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003254197
> The Inter-American Court of Human Rights is the first international
> court to declare that access to government information is a human
> right. The recent ruling was reached in a case brought by Chilean
> environmentalists against the U.S.-based logging company Trillium.
> The court's decision is based on the American Convention on Human
> Rights' Article 13, which deals with "freedom of thought and
> expression." The ruling states, "Article 13 of the Convention, which
> specifically establishes the rights to 'seek' and 'receive'
> information, protects the right of all persons to request access to
> information held by the State." In other news, the nonprofit
> research group National Security Archive (NSA) is criticizing
> Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' report on improving access to
> U.S. government information. The report "fails to acknowledge that
> many of the admirable goals set by [federal] agencies [to improve
> responses to Freedom of Information Act requests] can only be met
> with an increased commitment of resources," which "is not being
> considered by the Administration," states NSA. Among the "serious
> deficiencies" noted by the group are some federal agencies' "lack of
> basic technology such as copiers and Internet access."
>SOURCE: Editor & Publisher, October 13, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5315
>
>13. PENTAGON OK'S LINCOLN GROUP PROPAGANDA
>http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003285543
> A U.S. Defense Department inspector general's report concluded,
> after reviewing three contracts with the PR firm Lincoln Group worth
> $37.3 million, that military commanders in Iraq "complied with
> applicable laws and regulations in their use of a contractor to
> conduct psychological operations and their use of newspapers as a
> way to disseminate information." A Los Angeles Times article
> revealed that the Lincoln Group was paying Iraqi newspapers to
> covertly run stories written by U.S. military personnel. The Defense
> Department report did find that, for one contract, "a military
> contracting office did not maintain enough documentation to verify
> expenditures," according to Reuters. Sen. Edward Kennedy said that
> meant "the Pentagon cannot account for millions paid to the Lincoln
> Group." Kennedy, Joint Chiefs of Staff chair Gen. Peter Pace and
> others have said the program undermines U.S. goals of supporting
> democracy in Iraq. The Lincoln group recently won another
> "multimillion-dollar media contract to monitor English and Arabic
> media outlets and produce talking points, speeches and other
> material for U.S. forces in Iraq."
>SOURCE: Associated Press, October 19, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5314
>
>14. EX-FDA COMMISSIONER TURNED LOBBYIST PLEADS GUILTY
>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/17/AR2006101700573.html
> The former commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
> (FDA), Lester Crawford, has pleaded guilty to breaching conflict of
> interest rules. Crawford and his wife held between $188,000 and
> $336,000 in shares in four companies that he was required to have
> sold, under FDA rules. Two of the companies he held stock in were
> the food companies Sysco and PepsiCo. Crawford had shares in these
> companies at a time that he was chair of the FDA's Obesity Working
> Group, which was reviewing calorie-content labelling standards for
> soft drinks. Crawford currently works as Senior Counsel at the
> Washington D.C. lobbying firm Policy Directions Inc.. In 2005,
> Policy Directions clients included Kraft Foods, the Pharmaceutical
> Research and Manufacturers of America, Nestle, Merck and the
> American Feed Industry Association.
>SOURCE: Washington Post, October 17, 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5313
>
>15. "EQUAL RIGHTS" AD PROMOTES BLACK LUNGS
>
> The September 2006 issue of a Denver area LGBT magazine, MetroMode,
> carries a curious full-page ad titled "Busting the Myths of
> Smoke-Free Colorado" that urges readers to protest Colorado's Clean
> Indoor Air Act, the law that ended smoking in most workplaces
> (including bars and restaurants) as of July 1, 2006. The ad was paid
> for by a group called "The Coalition for Equal Rights," and sends
> readers to the web site www.stopthebans.com where visitors are told
> that the Coalition for Equal Rights fights for "freedom of choice."
> A small link on the page asks visitors to "Join CLBA," which, it
> turns out, stands for Colorado Licensed Beverage Association, a
> longtime Tobacco industry ally and member of Philip Morris' secret
> Colorado "Field Action Team", a group of businesses that PM
> mobilizes to fight restrictions on the sale or use of tobacco. LGBT
> groups have significantly higher smoking rates than the general
> population and are more concerned about civil rights than most
> groups, two facts that certainly were not lost on whoever put
> together the ad.
>SOURCE: MetroMode, September 2006
>For more information or to comment on this story, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5312
>
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