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[ecrea] THE WEEKLY SPIN, March 21, 2007
Wed Mar 21 20:53:30 GMT 2007
> THE WEEKLY SPIN, MARCH 21, 2007
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>THIS WEEK'S NEWS
>
>== BLOG POSTINGS ==
>1. Iraq: Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?
>2. The Corporate Art of Creating a Crisis
>3. What Philip Morris Seeks in FDA Regulation: Preservation of the Status Quo
>4. The "Friedman" Pundit Punt on the Iraq War Lives on in Congresspedia
>
>== BE A CITIZEN JOURNALIST ==
>1. Help Us Update the Contact Information of the Freshman Members of Congress
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY POSTINGS ==
>1. Out with the Old Front Groups & In with the New
>2. More Global Warming Edits See Light of Day
>3. Hello, Teens? Marketing Firms Are Calling
>4. Multifaceted PR Campaigns Grow on Trees
>5. Public Relations: The International Language
>6. Local TV Tales: Pro-Sweatshop Fake News and Paid Smokespeople
>7. A High-Stakes Game of Telephone
>8. U.S. House: Let the Sun Shine In
>9. News Media Aiming Low, Warns Report
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>== BLOG POSTINGS ==
>
>1. IRAQ: WHY WON'T MOVEON MOVE FORWARD?
>by Sheldon Rampton
> This week marks the fourth anniversary of the U.S. invasion
> of Iraq. To commemorate the occasion, the online advocacy group
> MoveOn.org is organizing more than 1,000 candlelight vigils
> throughout the United States. "We'll solemnly honor the sacrifice
> made by more than 3,000 servicemen and women, and we'll contemplate
> the path ahead of us," states MoveOn's website. "We cannot send tens
> of thousands of exhausted, under-equipped, and unprepared troops
> into the middle of an Iraqi civil war. ... Honor the sacrifice. Stop
> the escalation. Bring the troops home."
> MoveOn's 3.2 million members strongly oppose any continuation
> of the war, and the language above seems to suggest that MoveOn's
> leadership agrees. But MoveOn's organizing around Iraq has become
> notably ambiguous lately. Although it talks in general terms about
> bringing the troops home, specific timetables or meaningful steps in
> that direction are nowhere discussed. Most strikingly, MoveOn has
> adamantly refused to support the Iraq amendment from Congressional
> Progressive Caucus leaders Barbara Lee, Lynn Woolsey and Maxine
> Waters, which calls for "a fully funded, and systematic, withdrawal
> of U.S. soldiers and military contractors from Iraq" by the end of
> 2007.
>To read the rest of this item, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5865
>
>2. THE CORPORATE ART OF CREATING A CRISIS
>by Bob Burton
> By all indications, Mark McInnes is a smart cookie.
> Currently the Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer
> of the Australian department store company David Jones Limited,
> McInnes boasts over 17 years in senior management roles in major
> stores. David Jones, colloquially known as DJ's, operates 37
> department stores across Australia and brought in $A1.8 billion in
> revenue in 2006. DJ's certainly seems to value McInnes's judgement,
> as his total remuneration package stood at $A5.286 million in 2006,
> according to DJ's annual report.
> But one has to wonder about the wisdom of DJ's legal action
> against The Australia Institute (TAI), a centre-left think tank. The
> company is suing over an October 2006 media release from TAI,
> titled, "Corporate paedophilia -- sexualising children by
> advertising and marketing." The case, which opens before a Federal
> Court of Australia judge in a Sydney courtroom on March 22, is
> likely to play out as a corporate Goliath trying to squash the
> dissenting views of a non-profit critic.
> It could very well become a major PR crisis created by the
> company itself on McInnes' watch.
>To read the rest of this item, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5858
>
>3. WHAT PHILIP MORRIS SEEKS IN FDA REGULATION: PRESERVATION OF THE STATUS QUO
>by Anne Landman
> A 23-page, formerly "privileged and confidential" company
> discussion document outlines Philip Morris' thinking behind its
> 180-degree turn from strongly opposing U.S. Food and Drug
> Administration (FDA) oversight of cigarettes to in fact driving such
> regulation. It clues us in to the company's logic in proceeding
> down this path and what the company hopes for and fears most in FDA
> regulation. It was written by Mark Berlind, who was Assistant
> General Counsel of Philip Morris Worldwide Regulatory Affairs in
> 1998.
> Berlind recaps PM's history of opposing FDA regulation and
> recommends that PM USA advocate for regulation as a way to maintain
> the status quo, or "perpetuate the existing framework's philosophy
> that adults continue to be permitted to assume" the inherent risks
> of cigarette smoking.
>To read the rest of this item, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5848
>
>4. THE "FRIEDMAN" PUNDIT PUNT ON THE IRAQ WAR LIVES ON IN CONGRESSPEDIA
>by Conor Kenny
> Blogger Atrios lamented today that the Wikipedia entry for
> "Friedman (unit)" has been targeted for deletion through a merger
> into the "Atrios" article. A "Friedman", in the parlance of pundits
> and politicians discussing the Iraq War, is six months. Atrios
> coined the term on his blog to deal with New York Times columnist
> Thomas Friedman's constant invocation of "just six more months" to
> see how things were going in Iraq, something he began doing on
> November 30, 2003 and continued to do as late as May 11, 2006. While
> Friedman has lately moved on to saying that the U.S. should stay in
> Iraq for "10 months or 10 years," many government officials, pundits
> and politicians continue to move the goalposts on when it is
> acceptable to ascertain true progress in Iraq, and six months is an
> eerily common benchmark.
>To read the rest of this item, visit:
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5871
>
>== BE A CITIZEN JOURNALIST ==
>
>1. HELP US UPDATE THE CONTACT INFORMATION OF THE FRESHMAN MEMBERS OF CONGRESS
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5881
> One of the key pieces of information on Congresspedia's member of
> Congress articles is the contact information for the member's
> district and Washington offices. This helps constituents know
> exactly where they can go to voice their opinions, deliver petitions
> or send letters. Congresspedia has all the phone numbers and
> addresses for the incumbents, but we need to update the pages of the
> freshman members, which now only list campaign offices. Consider
> helping out your fellow citizens out by quickly adding the
> information to the wiki if you're from one of these states: AZ, CA,
> CO, CT, FL, GA, HI, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, MD, MI, MN, MO, MT, NE,
> NH, NJ, NV, NY, OH, OK, PA, RI, TN, TX, VA, VT, WI.
> We've got complete instructions and a "red phone" line to the
> Congresspedia Managing Editor if any
> assistance is needed. Go to
> http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=SourceWatch:Wikiproject_Member_of_Congress_information
> to get started.
> SOURCE: Congresspedia
>
>== SPIN OF THE DAY POSTINGS ==
>
>1. OUT WITH THE OLD FRONT GROUPS & IN WITH THE NEW
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5879
> Two former food industry websites -- Best Food Nation and the Grow
> America Project -- are being merged and re-birthed as a new front
> group, the Center for Food Integrity (CFI). CFI's web domain was
> registered earlier this month by Charlie Arnot, who runs a small
> Missouri-based PR firm, CMA Consulting. CFI, which lists Monsanto as
> one of its supporters, states that it aims "to build consumer trust
> and confidence in the contemporary U.S. food system." Joseph
> Mendelson, the legal director of the Center for Food Safety, a
> consumer group, told Food NavigatorUSA.com that CFI is simply "a PR
> entity to try and battle regulations designed to create a safer food
> supply ... This is a way for it to promote its agenda under a green
> wash label." Mendelson also believes that the CFI's name was
> "chosen to try to distract attention from groups like ours and to
> confuse consumers." (Note: Mendelson is on the Center for Media and
> Democracy's Board of Directors.)
>SOURCE: Food NavigatorUSA.com, March 20, 2007
>
>2. MORE GLOBAL WARMING EDITS SEE LIGHT OF DAY
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5877
> The U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
> released documents showing "hundreds of instances" where a former
> and current oil industry lobbyist had edited government reports to
> downplay the impact of human activities on global warming trends.
> Committee chair Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) said the documents suggested
> "a systematic White House effort to minimize the significance of
> climate change." The edits were by Philip A. Cooney, the former
> chief of staff of the White House Council on Environmental Quality.
> Cooney, who has no scientific credentials, worked for the American
> Petroleum Institute prior to the Bush administration position and is
> now working for Exxon Mobil. Cooney said that his edits were meant
> to reflect the "most authoritative and current views of the state of
> scientific knowledge." NASA climate expert Dr. James Hansen warned
> at the House hearing, "If public affairs offices are left under the
> control of political appointees, it seems to me that inherently they
> become offices of propaganda."
>SOURCE: New York Times, March 20, 2007
>
>3. HELLO, TEENS? MARKETING FIRMS ARE CALLING
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5876
> Retailers "eager to connect with teen and twentysomething
> shoppers" are increasingly marketing to them through their cell
> phones, reports USA Today. New marketing approaches include "coupons
> that go to shoppers' cellphones." The marketing firm Access 360
> Media "saw redemption rates of about 40%" with cell-delivered
> coupons, as opposed to "less than 2% for many print or online coupon
> campaigns." Then there's GPShopper, "an Internet-style search engine
> that lets shoppers search a chain's entire inventory," with Best
> Buy, Toys R Us and Sports Authority among the chains using the
> service. Lastly, "an interactive dressing room mirror" was unveiled
> at a Manhattan Bloomingdale's last week. The mirror "streams
> high-definition video of shoppers modeling clothes to their friends'
> computers or mobile devices." The friends can then "comment on a
> shopper's outfits" and help "select other clothes for her [sic] to
> try."
>SOURCE: USA Today, March 20, 2007
>
>4. MULTIFACETED PR CAMPAIGNS GROW ON TREES
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5874
> PR Week gave its "Public Affairs Campaign of the Year 2007" award
> to the Porter Novelli firm and the Abundant Forests Alliance, a
> front group for the "wood and paper products industry." The campaign
> was launched in response to "environmental activist" efforts to
> "change the foresting industry's procurement practices." The
> campaign's goal was to convince "college-educated women ages 35 to
> 54 with children" that the logging industry is "encouraging
> recycling and other environmentally responsible practices." The $10
> million "multifaceted campaign" included a children's book by The
> Rolling Stones' Chuck Leavell titled, "The Tree Farmer," a
> television satellite media tour, Earth Day and Arbor Day events, and
> "environmental grant programs" in Dallas and Los Angeles, developed
> in conjunction with Project Learning Tree. In addition, "lifestyle
> expert" Katie Brown and "paper artist" Lynette Young promoted "the
> use of wood and paper in homemade gifts," including through
> "scrapbooking demonstrations at 500 Wal-Marts around the country."
>SOURCE: PR Week (print edition), March 12, 2007
>
>5. PUBLIC RELATIONS: THE INTERNATIONAL LANGUAGE
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5870
> "Overseas political groups are increasingly seeking to raise their
> legitimacy and sell their agendas in their home countries through
> communications outreach to US politicians, media, think tanks, and
> other influential audiences," writes PR Week. The party of former
> Ukrainian "Orange Revolution" leader Yulia Tymoshenko is working
> with TD International, Glover Park Group and Dezenhall Resources.
> Armenian defense minister Serge Sarkisian, "who plans to run for
> president," has hired Burson-Marsteller and its BKSH & Associates
> unit, on a $65,000 per month contract. B-M is also working for
> Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan Opposition Party. For their international
> clients, the firms arrange meetings "with government officials,
> members of Congress, the media, and others ... to emphasize the
> individual's or his or her party's desire to promote greater
> political freedom and human rights," often along with a focus on
> "energy security." Former CBS News correspondent turned PR executive
> David Henderson said, "Media is international, and this approach
> tends to add to [foreign groups'] perceived credibility and
> influence in their own countries."
>SOURCE: PR Week, March 16, 2007
>
>6. LOCAL TV TALES: PRO-SWEATSHOP FAKE NEWS AND PAID SMOKESPEOPLE
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5869
> After federal authorities accused Francesco Insolia "of running a
> sweatshop to fulfill $220 million in military contracts and
> employing 361 illegal immigrants," he closed his New Bedford, Mass.,
> factory to reporters. In an affidavit filed in conjunction with an
> immigration raid on the factory, U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan's
> office said "workers were docked $20 for taking more than two
> minutes in the bathroom, and for being more than 15 minutes late."
> But television news can still show the factory, thanks to a Boston
> PR firm that released "a three-minute video" on behalf of Insolia,
> showing "seamstresses diligently stitching camouflage backpacks ...
> and taking umbrage at what is being said and written about the
> company," reports Aaron Nicodemus. According to O'Dwyer's, the video
> was shot by the Rendon Group's Boston office and "was aired on
> Boston TV stations WGBH and Fox-25." Meanwhile, the Kansas City
> Pitch reports that KSHB-41 sportscaster Jack Harry praised the
> "laser acupuncture" company New Beginnings for helping him quit
> smoking, in a station news segment. "What Harry didn't mention is
> that he's also a paid spokesman for the company," adds the Pitch.
> New Beginnings' president "says it's common to find radio and TV
> personalities to plug a product during the course of a show." KSHB's
> news director admits "that the piece should've included a
> disclaimer. She said the initial script has one, but it was cut at
> the last minute because of time."
>SOURCE: South Coast Today (Massachusetts), March 17, 2007
>
>7. A HIGH-STAKES GAME OF TELEPHONE
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5868
> In documents filed with the International Court of Arbitration in
> New York, the state-owned Norwegian telecommunications company
> Telenor is accusing the Russian telecom company Altimo of having
> "bribed journalists, whipped up nationalism and distorted the truth
> in an attempt to gain control of a mobile network in Ukraine which
> is jointly owned by the two companies," reports Michael Harrison.
> Telenor's court filings include what it says is documentation that
> "Altimo was paying a local Ukrainian public relations firm $12,000
> (£6,200) a month to run a campaign against it. The budget also
> included $141,000 to 'discredit the image of Norway in Ukraine.'"
> Altimo is also accused of paying journalists "for writing
> unfavourable stories about Telenor including $1,000 for an article
> about Telenor's share price falling and $5,600 for an interview with
> Altimo's vice-president." Altimo is challenging the allegations,
> which The Independent calls "the latest" in "a long-running dispute"
> between the two companies.
>SOURCE: The Independent (UK), March 14, 2007
>
>8. U.S. HOUSE: LET THE SUN SHINE IN
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5861
> On March 14, the U.S. House of Representatives "passed three bills
> to open government records to the public, brushing aside White House
> opposition, and in one case, a veto threat." The bills "would force
> government to be more responsive to Freedom of Information Act
> requests, make contributions to presidential libraries public and
> overturn a 2001 presidential directive giving the president
> authority to keep his records from public view," reports Associated
> Press. President Bush opposes the FOIA bill and has threatened to
> veto the presidential records bill, as well as another bill
> extending whistleblower protections. The House FOIA bill would
> reinstitute a "presumption of disclosure" standard, overturning a
> post-9/11 directive from then-Attorney General John Ashcroft to not
> release information if there is "uncertainty over security or law
> enforcement exemptions." The measures are being considered during
> Sunshine Week, a media-led observance of "open government and
> freedom of information" issues.
>SOURCE: Associated Press, March 14, 2007
>
>9. NEWS MEDIA AIMING LOW, WARNS REPORT
>http://www.prwatch.org/node/5860
> "We sense the news business entering a new phase heading into 2007
> -- a phase of more limited ambition," the Project for Excellence in
> Journalism (PEJ) writes in the overview to its "State of the News
> Media 2007" report. News organizations are "starting to redefine
> their appeal and their purpose based on diminished capacity.
> Increasingly outlets are looking for 'brand' or 'franchise' areas of
> coverage to build audiences around." These news "brands" include
> "hyper localism," citizen media, opinion, and personal involvement.
> PEJ warns that some of these "can be marketing speak for simply
> doing less," while "branding can also be a mask for bias." Among the
> report's conclusions: "The news industry must become more aggressive
> about developing a new economic model," and the "Argument Culture"
> is giving way to the "Answer Culture." By the "answer culture," PEJ
> means "news outlets, programs and journalists offering up solutions,
> crusades, certainty and the impression of putting all the blur of
> information in clear order for people."
>SOURCE: Project for Excellence in Journalism, March 12, 2007
>
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>The Weekly Spin is compiled by staff of the Center for Media and
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