May 30, 2003

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Friday, May 30, 2003

Transcript

Does yelling about deregulation have any impact on the FCC? Also, safeguarding journalism’s ethics: a look at ombudsmen, news councils and do-it-yourself fact-checking.

The Arab Papers

As it is in the U.S., news about Iraq is beginning to fade from the front pages of Arabic language newspapers. But in its place this week were a number of major stories related to the so-called "War on Terror" and the shifting geopolitics of the Middle East. World Press ...

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Permission to Fire

When artillery fire from an American tank killed two journalists in a Baghdad hotel last month, the Pentagon insisted the tank was returning enemy fire. But a new report by the Committee to Protect Journalists disputes that account. CPJ Deputy Director Joel Simon reviews the group's findings with Bob.

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Cheat or Cheated?

Earlier this month, a little-known reporter at the New York Times gained infamy when the paper revealed his extensive plagiarism and fabrications. The ensuing shakeup at the Times resulted this week in the departure of one of the paper's most well known reporters, Rick Bragg. Bob speaks to Bragg about ...

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Janet Cooke's Legacy

When it was revealed that Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Janet Cooke had invented her prize-winning story, calls for systemic reform reverberated throughout the media world. But more than two decades later, has anything changed? Brooke looks at the checks and balances in the newspaper industry, and asks whether anything could have ...

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Check Yourself

Why didn't fact-checkers catch the lies in Jayson Blair's oeuvre? Because at The New York Times, and at most major dailies, reporters are responsible for checking the facts in their own stories. Slate columnist Brendan Koerner explains to Bob the difference between fact checking practices at newspapers and magazines.

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The Silenced Majority

On the eve of perhaps the most important FCC vote in decades, opponents of media deregulation are flooding the commissioners with mail. But is anybody listening? Apparently not, wrote Eric Boehlert recently in Salon.com. He joins Bob to discuss the responsiveness - or lack thereof - of the FCC to ...

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What Ailes the Airwaves

While people still argue about the successes and failures of the war in Iraq, there's no disputing that the Fox News Channel emerged from the fighting as a clear victor over its cable competitors. In a recent issue of The New Yorker, Ken Auletta profiled the relatively young channel, and ...

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Eau de EU

Critics of reality TV scoff at the format's banality. But when Denmark's top official invited a cameraman to shadow him during his recent EU presidency, he could hardly be accused of documenting the inconsequential lifestyles of the young and glamorous. Nevertheless, a big stink did ensue, as Economist correspondent Claire ...

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