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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: laura_bush who wrote (494447)11/17/2003 7:10:34 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Prez in topless tabloid

From Washington Post, November 17, 2003
By Dana Milbank

President Bush has gone down-market.

After coming to office with a vow to restore dignity to the
White House, the president yesterday took a brief
sabbatical from that effort: He granted an exclusive
interview to a British tabloid that features daily photographs
of nude women and articles akin to those found in our own
National Enquirer.

Press secretary Scott McClellan broke the news yesterday with nonchalance.
"Good morning," he told reporters. "The president had his usual briefings this
morning and just recently completed an interview with the Sun, for a discussion of
his upcoming visit to the United Kingdom."

A British journalist for a more highbrow outlet was not about to let that slip by
unnoticed. "Just to clarify," he asked, "why has the president chosen to do an
interview with the Sun? It's a newspaper which publishes daily pictures of topless
women."

Such comments are grossly unfair to the Sun. True, its Page 3 is devoted daily to
photographs of women and their breasts. True, it this week named "classy Krystle,
the beautiful brunette babe" as this year's "Page 3 Idol" and amply displayed
evidence of what it called her "vital statistics of 32C-24-33."

But the Sun is so much more than breasts. It is also reporting this week on a
woman who is "made of two women" and "is NOT the biological mother of two of
the children she conceived and had naturally." Other news items highlighted on the
Sun's Web site: "Man begins 12-day sausage, bean and chip bath to promote Brit
food," "German saboteurs plotted to bomb Palace with peas in WW2, files reveal,"
and "Sobbing islanders say sorry to the ancestor of minister eaten by natives."

Bush, meanwhile, has given no solo interviews this year to the New York Times,
Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Time or Newsweek. And he hasn't
given an exclusive interview in his entire presidency to the Los Angeles Times,
Chicago Tribune, Boston Globe and dozens of other major publications.

So why did Bush choose the tabloid that last raised international attention by
publishing topless pictures of Prince Edward's fiancee? It's because the Sun has
huge, uh, circulation. "It has a large readership," McClellan said. Indeed, about 3.5
million Britons are said to buy it each day — all of them, of course, for the articles.

And the Sun is far from the raunchiest of tabloids on fetid Fleet Street. "You
should've seen the ones we declined," McClellan said.

Word on Fleet Street is it's an obvious payoff to the Sun's owner, Rupert
Murdoch, the conservative publisher behind many Bush-friendly news outlets such
as Fox News. Officials at the White House acknowledge that it was a reward to
the Sun for its unstinting support of the United States regarding the war in Iraq.
(The Sun's pro-Bush stance also got it an interview with Vice President Cheney in
late 2001.) But Bush aides also said it was done on the recommendation of Tony
Blair, Britain's Labor Party prime minister, who has worked hard to bring the Sun
away from its Tory Party roots.

The White House said the interview will appear Monday — on the eve of Bush's
arrival in London — and far away from Page 3. The interview was conducted in
Washington by the Sun's political editor, Trevor Kavanagh, who on Monday
penned an article titled "Bush Shows Tax Cuts Can Boost Economy."

Bush often gives foreign media outlets interviews before heading on a trip; this time,
he also had a BBC interview and a roundtable with three more sober British
outlets, the Financial Times, the Telegraph and the wire service Press Association.
But an exclusive interview for a newspaper is a high honor, and the Sun's tabloid
rivals are smarting. The Daily Mirror's front page yesterday included the headline
"BUSH OFF" and stated: "Mirror poll reveals Britain thinks President is threat to
world peace and not welcome here." The Mirror opposed the Iraq war.

Even in the colonies, Bush's Sun interview is bound to create jealousies. His only
other one-on-one interviews with print publications this year have been with USA
Today, Leaders magazine and Sports Illustrated.

After McClellan's bombshell at yesterday's briefing, this correspondent asked
whether the other publications present would get Bush interviews if they ran nude
photos. "I hope you're not talking about yourself," McClellan replied.

I don't think the other papers even want to speak to him
CC



To: laura_bush who wrote (494447)11/17/2003 7:13:35 PM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Respond to of 769670
 
They should sick the Michigan Law School on the Business School. Academe, always entertaining.