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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: combjelly who wrote (332626)4/11/2007 10:43:17 AM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1571594
 
About "Couric's" Plagiarism [Jonah Goldberg]

Today Howie Kurtz informs us that Katie, sweet, sweet, Katie ripped off someone else's work for a personal commentary. Kurtz writes:

"Katie Couric did a one-minute commentary last week on the joys of getting her first library card, but the thoughts were less than original. The piece was substantially lifted from a Wall Street Journal column.

CBS News apologized for the plagiarized passages yesterday and said the commentary had been written by a network producer who has since been fired."

It sounds like that's that, but what the story actually exposes is how news anchors are essentially props. In other words, the producer in question is fired, so now Katie can get back to using someone else's words as her own, they just won't be someone else's words to the second degree. Here's how I put it in a column a while ago, when CBS was still negotiating with Couric:

"...one thing few people invested in the glamour and seriousness of big-league television news will say is what a sham the whole enterprise is. Broadcast journalism is one of the only fields in American life where the job gets demonstrably easier the higher you go. Or, to be more fair, the parts of the job that have to do with what everyone thinks of as "journalism" get easier and easier, and in some cases the journalism simply vanishes altogether.

Consider how the respected television analyst Andrew Tyndall defines the job of news anchor. The job has two parts, he told the Washington Post. First, they have to read the TelePrompTer. The second part involves "sitting behind the desk when there's a crisis."

One can be as charitable as possible, conceding that reading a TelePrompTer convincingly in front of millions of people is not a skill all of us have, and it's still difficult to find what most of us would describe as journalistic substance there. And if CBS pays Couric the $15-million-a-year salary that's been reported, she will be compensated to the tune of roughly $60,000 per half-hour of on-camera work (that assumes no vacation time, by the way).

corner.nationalreview.com

tinyurl.com



To: combjelly who wrote (332626)4/11/2007 7:56:09 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1571594
 
"This post is so silly I'm not going to respond to it."

Like anyone has to create false news to hurt Republicans. Just reporting real news is enough.


You and I understand that to be true but to shorty and harris, they think "the real news" is actually made up news intended to hurt the GOP. Remember......they do an awful lot of koolaid drinking. Some nites they have to get up 2-3 times to go to the bathroom.