THE MEDIA BEAT

Veteran journalist David Tereshchuk’s ongoing review of global media coverage.

New columns appear periodically on this page, below. 

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The Media Beat columns.

Doctoring Quotes to Fit Ideology

Doctoring Quotes to Fit Ideology

WHAT’S WRONG WITH the following sentence? “The fact that you have these homicide bombers now, wreaking such hatred and violence while people pray, is to me an indication of their failure.”

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Bloggers Claiming Victories

Bloggers Claiming Victories

BLOGGERS, OR AT LEAST THOSE of a right-wing bent, are crowing about having claimed the head of Eason Jordan at CNN, just as they feel they won Dan Rather‘s at CBS.

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Reporters who Chat, Rather than Check

Reporters who Chat, Rather than Check

Celebrity crime-writer Dominick Dunne is about to get more exposure, of the kind he doesn’t like.

His battle with ex­ Congressman Gary Condit is generating even more spill-over than the stories on  “Today” this week. The NBC TV show focused on Condit’s denials (more emphatic than before, but still disputed) of having a romantic relationship with the murdered intern Chandra Levy.     

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Vlogging the Tsunami

Vlogging the Tsunami

They are stunning, heart­stopping images. And there are so many of them.

Every day seems to bring more. Scenes of the tsunami crashing down on unsuspecting coastal communities may not have been available to us all immediately, but thanks to the growing non-professional use of digital mini video-cameras – there they were, very soon afterward.     

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Losses at Year's End

Losses at Year's End

JOURNALISM TOOK BIG losses this week. New York lost the greatly lamented columnist Jack Newfield; the world lost Anthony Sampson (left).

I didn’t know Mr. Newfield, regrettably; I am grateful I did know Tony.

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Tip-toeing Around Pinochet

Tip-toeing Around Pinochet

YOU HAVE to be SOOOOO careful with these Latin American dictators. That applies even if they’re 89 years old, sickly, and out of effective power for eight years.     

General Augusto Pinochet has been freshly investigated in The New York Times‘ business pages, just as he faces charges of kidnapping and murder during his time as Chile’s head of state.

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Media Facades Might Mislead

Media Facades Might Mislead

YOU’LL HAVE ADMIRED the Time Warner Center, of course. The communications giant doesn’t, you probably know, occupy that entire eponymous Center, but Chief Executive Richard Parsons was eager to get the company name emblazoned on the whole luxurious shebang of a building  …  top-notch restaurants, glitzy stores, pricey food market and all. 

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The Media's Revolving Doors

The Media's Revolving Doors

THE REPLACEMENT GAME gains pace at Business Week. As longtime Editor-in-Chief Steve Shepard heads toward running the new graduate journalism school at CUNY, Mark Morrison, the magazine’s Managing Editor, might appear an easy shoo-in.

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The Soldiers' Story

The Soldiers' Story

THOSE UNPREDICTABLE extensions of duty and the “Stop-Loss” measures dashed the hopes of many soldiers and their families – but some, at least, were home for Thanksgiving.

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The Human Meaning of Collateral

The Human Meaning of Collateral

SURELY IT WAS ONE OF THE WORST public moments of private pain in the Iraq war. Tahseen Hassan (left), the husband of murdered aid worker Margaret Hassan, saying with quiet dignity to a TV camera: “Margaret lived with me in Iraq for 30 years. She dedicated her life to serving the Iraqi people. Please, now, please return her to rne.”

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Pols perplexed by youth

Pols perplexed by youth

A BIG INFLUENCE ON THOSE MEDIA PUNDITS who yelp about John Kerry‘s loss has been Thomas Frank‘s book, What’s the Matter with Kansas?

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Even Those Who Study Past Mistakes Repeat Them

Even Those Who Study Past Mistakes Repeat Them

SO HOW GOOD A JOB did the mass media do covering the election? The voters’ choice, at least as defined by those media, was clear – but it had the clarity of an LCD. Not liquid crystal lighting, I’m afraid – but the Lowest Communicable Denominator.  

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