Remember the sturm und drang two weeks ago following the annual Washington Correspondents Association dinner? The capital press corps was chastised once again for their coziness to power, a few scathing columns attacked a culture of journalistic complacency, and eventually The New York Times announced, through Frank Rich’s Sunday op-ed, that it would no longer attend the event.
Rich gave a good synopsis of why the sight of journalists clinking drinks with press secretaries should offend us all, especially in these days:
This fete is a crystallization of the press’s failures in the post-9/11 era: it illustrates how easily a propaganda-driven White House can enlist the Washington news media in its shows. Such is literally the case at the annual dinner, where journalists serve as a supporting cast, but it has been figuratively true year-round. The press has enabled stunts from the manufactured threat of imminent ‘mushroom clouds’ to ‘Saving Private Lynch’ to ‘Mission Accomplished,’ whose fourth anniversary arrives on Tuesday. For all the recrimination, self-flagellation and reforms that followed these journalistic failures, it’s far from clear that the entire profession yet understands why it has lost the public’s faith.
What a bizarre feeling, then, when we opened the paper this morning and scanned the list of guests at last night’s white tie dinner at the White House, in honor of Queen Elizabeth’s visit. Along with the football players, racehorse jockeys, and the ubiquitous Henry Kissinger, were the following four names and affiliations:
David Gregory, White House correspondent, NBC.
Steven Holland, White House correspondent, Reuters.
Richard Wolffe, White House correspondent, Newsweek.
Robin Roberts, ABC.
Huh? Have these people not learned that, at the very least, being seen in a tux schmoozing with Condi and Cheney and Bush undermines our confidence in their abilities to report honestly on these leaders? If anything, this should be a time to do as the Times has done, and retreat from these kinds of public gatherings of press and president. There is no benefit to the news organization or the reporter for attending such an event—except, of course, if you consider the five-course meal that featured “spring pea soup with fern leaf lavender,” “saddle of spring lamb,” and three different wines.
Don’t get us wrong. The members of the press who were there to cover the event—as opposed to attending it—did get to taste part of the meal. They were given samples of the petit-fours that would be served for dessert. But that’s about as much as any good reporter should stomach.



LOL!...
That Ole' Chimpy Bushitler is at AGAIN!...
NOW he's got David Gregory under his Rovian thumb!...
Who knows WHAT kind of duping the press is in for now that Chimpy's suckered them into a free meal?...
Of course, it was different when Bill Clinton was in the White House, and had Dan Rather over for a state dinner for his Chinese political contibutors/spies/pals... Along with a few other "professional journalists" like:
J.D. Alexander, publisher, Seattle Post-Intelligencer....
Tom Brokaw, NBC Nightly News anchor...
W. Thomas Johnson, chairman, president and chief executive officer, CNN....
Peter A. Kann, chairman, chief executive officer and publisher, The Wall Street Journal.....
Gerald M. Levin, chairman and chief executive officer, Time Warner Inc.....
Diane Sawyer, ABC Prime Time
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., publisher, The New York Times...
THAT was different THEN!... Because Clinton wasn't trying to dupe us into to WWIII like Chimpy is!... He was just trying to play nice with our peaceful Chinese pals!...
Posted by padikiller on Tue 8 May 2007 at 08:23 PM
eh -- I'm going to give them a pass on this one. Attending a dinner, without bringing a guest, is an acceptable way of getting inside the story, though granted this isn't much of a story. But it is part of the access, and it's much different than cavorting on stage or showing off your ability to invite an inappropriate guest. Fact is, from here in the small-town trenches, I have to kind of laugh over the hide-bound ethics that say you can't keep a sample box of Cheerios from General Mills but you can cash a four-figure check if it comes from a committee that doles out journalism prizes. Somewhere in the middle lies the ethical dilemma of eating pea soup and mutton in the presence of a source.
Posted by tjdestry on Wed 9 May 2007 at 05:42 AM
Well- Fox News/News Corp owner Rupert Murdoch gave a HUGE fundraiser for Hillary last year - and last week the President of News Corp gave her another HUGE fundraiser!
Posted by annefrank
on Wed 6 Jun 2007 at 03:08 PM