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


To: longnshort who wrote (774668)3/13/2014 11:44:11 AM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 1572358
 
Its is just amazing ...............the liberal fantasy world....

You have to wonder how these morons get thru the day...



To: longnshort who wrote (774668)3/13/2014 12:19:38 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1572358
 
WHO really runs things?????

Bill Gates meets with 80 senators...



To: longnshort who wrote (774668)3/13/2014 12:32:58 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572358
 
Sharyl Attkisson vs. CBS: Reporter first tried to quit a year ago
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By Howard Kurtz March 13, 2014
' target='_blank' >foxnews.com


Also ...

The Ronan mystery

Sharyl Attkisson vs. CBS: Reporter first tried to quit a year ago

CBS’s Sharyl Attkisson announced this week that she is leaving the network, the culmination of a series of clashes between the investigative reporter and her bosses.

But people familiar with the situation say that Attkisson actually attempted to resign one year ago, even starting to clean out her desk in the Washington bureau.

CBS News Chairman Jeff Fager talked her out of leaving last March, promising that some of the issues she had raised would be addressed.

Based on these assurances, Attkisson returned to work full time and dropped efforts to terminate her contract.

But the differences proved irreconcilable in an atmosphere that has also drawn complaints from some other reporters and producers. While Fager, a veteran newsman who is also executive producer of “60 Minutes,” commands considerable respect in the news division, there is concern among some of the rank and file about the difficulty of getting management to approve tough stories.

It was against this backdrop that Attkisson recently submitted her resignation again, and this time the network agreed to let her out of her contract early.

The departure underscores the gulf that developed between the CBS brass and the reporter who has doggedly pursued a variety of stories, including such Obama administration debacles as Benghazi and the botched Fast and Furious investigation into gun-running.

Asked Wednesday about the difficulties she faced getting airtime, Attkisson said in a brief interview: “It’s not a matter of ‘me’ being on the air, it’s the idea that so few of the incredibly interesting and important original and investigative topics I brought to the table, often exclusively, could find no home at CBS in the past three years or so.”

As for her departure from CBS News after two decades, Attkisson said, “I feel good about it.”

While media reports have focused on Attkisson’s investigations of the Obama administration, those familiar with the situation say she was stymied in getting airtime for stories beyond politics, including corporate scandals and a wide range of other subjects.

None of the investigative stories that Attkisson proposed in the past year were greenlighted for the “CBS Evening News”; in fact, most of her pitches were turned down. She wound up working on stories that the network assigned, say those familiar with the matter, including a string of investigative pieces on health care. But her output has declined significantly since 2008.

Beyond the nightly newscast, Attkisson’s work last year appeared on “CBS This Morning” and “Sunday Morning,” as well as on the web.

Attkisson is working on a book, tentatively scheduled for November, called “Stonewalled: One Reporter’s Fight for Truth in Obama’s Washington.”

“I hope to explore the unseen influences on and manipulation of the images and information the public receives in the media, whether it’s online on Wikipedia, or on social media such as Facebook and Twitter, or on television,” she told me.

CBS has said in a statement that Attkisson “is leaving the news division to pursue other endeavors. We appreciate her many contributions and we wish her well.”