THE MEDIA BEAT

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

New columns appear periodically on this page, below. 

SEARCH the archive of
The Media Beat columns.

New Start in Namibia

New Start in Namibia

DEDICATED FIGHTERS AGAINST HIVIAIDS in the southern African country of Namibia are standing on the threshold of a miracle.

To the fore among them is Maryknoll Father Richard Bauer (left, with young Namibians) who combats AIDS in the nation’s capital, Windhoek. “The history has been terrible, with HIV prevalence climbing through the years to peak at 22 percent,” he says. “That’s nearly a quarter of the entire population.”    

Read More
Apostle of Reconciliation Profiled

Apostle of Reconciliation Profiled

SOUTH AFRICA‘s Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu looked momentarily disturbed at my question: “President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe has called you an embittered, evil little bishop. What’s your reaction?

Read More
Arab TV's Take on the World

Arab TV's Take on the World

Al-JAZEERA, THE TV NEWS SERVICE CONDEMNED by some as an Al Qaeda mouthpiece but welcomed by others as an overdue revolution in Arab communications, will soon start a global channel in English.

Read More
Honor Rises Above Dishonor

Honor Rises Above Dishonor

WITH THIS WEEK‘s court-martial of Specialist Sabrina Harman, the press is once more dredging through dishonor among soldiers. By contrast, honor is soon also to be reported, marking a whole other side to the disgusting prisoner­-abuse scandal in Iraq.

Read More
Aussie Power - in UK ... and in US

Aussie Power - in UK ... and in US

TODAY VOTERS DECIDE if Tony Blair gets returned to office for an historic third term as Britain’s Prime Minister. He’s sure to win, but not by as big a margin as he wants.

He’s been endorsed by the U.K.’s top-selling daily newspaper, The Sun – owned by Australian-American Rupert Murdoch (below, right). Surprisingly. possible terms for that support emerged here in Manhattan last week.

Read More
Soft-Pedaling Popes; and Losing Credibility

Soft-Pedaling Popes; and Losing Credibility

POPE BENEDICT XVI is enjoying quite a media honeymoon. As Cardinal Ratzinger he was such a severe disciplinarian, and his guarding of Church orthodoxy so steely, that he was nicknamed “God’s Rottweiler” and “the Panzer Cardinal“. But he’s now a darling of the press.

Read More
NYT – Columbia Trade-off?  ...  And Brevity, Please?

NYT – Columbia Trade-off?  ...  And Brevity, Please?

SOME OF OUR CITY‘s ever­-suspicious press corps are spotting conspiracies again.

Last week’s entirely creditable Pulitzer national reporting prize for The New York Times and its expose of killer railroad-crossings is being linked – much less creditably – with a sloppy Times debacle.

Read More
The Pope and Women; Women and Cable

The Pope and Women; Women and Cable

THE WORLD’S MOST VISIBLE RELIGIOUS LEADER EVER will disappear tomorrow from human view, deep below St Peter’s Basilica – with, of course, the media following as far as they can.  

Read More
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.”

Read More
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.

Read More
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.     

Read More
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.     

Read More