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Category Archives: Media

R.I.P. CBS News

I generally don’t post on political topics — there are enough political sites out there already — but the whole CBS memo thing…

So now after a week of insisting the memos were real, even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, CBS and Dan are backpedaling

“‘We will keep an open mind and we will continue to report credible evidence and responsible points of view as we try to answer the questions raised about the authenticity of the documents,’ CBS News Anchor Dan Rather said on 60 Minutes on Wednesday.”

…but they maintain that story is still correct! Give me a break! If the story itself is real you should have been even more careful vetting the story and all the supporting evidence so you could stand resolutely behind it, and let the evidence speak for itself. Instead CBS and Dan have destroyed the entire story, and with it their own credibility, because of the lengths they went to try and prove it conclusively using forged documents and highly selective editing of “expert” analysis.

Journalism has taken another blow, another black eye. The whole field has been sunk to new lows in this election cycle, but CBS really has set the limbo bar to a new low.

The funny part to me is that if they had come clean in the initial 24 hours of the outcry, they most likely could have salvaged the core of the story, and been able to come back to it later to make a stronger case. Now, the issue is dead, especially for CBS News and Dan Rather. They can no more claim to be a news organization than I can. They have proven that they are a biased opinion organization that occasionally reports on current events, politics, and the weather. Gee, I guess that makes them, at best, no better a source for information than those guys they smeared trying to deflect attention away from evidence they knew was highly flawed — guys that were “sitting in their living rooms in their pajamas” with “no checks and balances, no vetting, no fact checking.”

“On next Sunday’s show: The entire 60 Minutes staff will debut the CBS News team’s whole new look. Dan Rather will appear on the new living room decor 60 minutes set in monogrammed black silk pajamas, a monogrammed, burgundy crushed velvet, silk lined and edged smoking jacket and handmade Italian leather bedroom slippers. Tune in to see Andy Rooney, Ed Bradley, Mike Wallace, Morley Safer and Lesley Stahl in their favorite pajamas as well! “

:)

Shut-Up Indeed

This is why I watch the conventions on CSPAN:

“In the name of all that’s holy, shut up.

“When exactly did the primary goal of journalists become not talking to news-makers, but talking over them? CNN, MSNBC and Fox News boast that they’re covering an event the broadcast networks are ignoring. But they’re not so much covering it as smothering it, using the convention as fodder for a 24-hour run of radio-talk-with-pictures. Unless you’re one of the privileged big-draw speakers in the show’s final hour, you’re not just ignored — you’re treated as an annoyance.”

I feel for Robert Bianco. This is why our convention watching (for either convention) is via CSPAN, no talking heads, no opinion pieces, no opinion pieces disguised as factual reporting.

Pardon me while I puke.

Ok, the first bloody commercial in to the kick off show, and I remember why I Don’t watch broadcast TV anymore. A cow getting showered with the strains of Styx’s Lady. Ok. Lady may not be all that great a song in everyones opinion, but really… it is an important song from my youth and to see a cow taking a shower … I’ll never be able to hear that song without that bloody image. Some may say that the commercial succeeded, but I don’t remember who the commercial was for, or what it was selling—and I don’t want to know either. Pardon me while I turn off the -shit- tube, and delete Lady.mp3 off the hard drives.

Update 2004|02|02:

It sounds like I didn’t miss much for the rest of the game—at least when the talk of the morning wasn’t whether or how the Pats won, but rather how Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake decided they both needed to do something to boost (revive?) their careers—enter the Full Metal Nipple. Glad I missed such a pathetic stunt.

It looks like CBS and others will be wishing they had missed it too—or prevented it from happening entirely—by the time everything is said and done. The FCC is investigating (PDF), the NFL is outraged, and I’m sure there will be plenty of other groups to speak out (if they haven’t already!) There are screen captures (even in HDTV 1920×1020 res) and the Drudge Report and Rotten Tomatoes have closeups of the sequence, if you really need (want) to see it.

MTV has pulled the article on their site promising “Shocking Moments” during Jackson’s show. Of course thanks to Google’s caching you can still read the article online. Looks like MTV stepped on it in a very big way. I can’t help but agree with Sally Jenkins’ conclusion from the Washington Post:

The NFL knows full well that MTV was the network responsible for Madonna and Spears. Just a few days after her Madonna interlude, Spears appeared on the NFL’s Kickoff Day festivities. The league didn’t suddenly develop amnesia about MTV. Timberlake and Jackson merely sent the lumber downstream, gave the NFL and its network partners what they were asking for — only they gave them too much of it.

“On days like this, I miss Howard Cosell. I miss his cold appraisals and scathing judgments, and I can’t help wondering what he would have made of the halftime show. Instead, we had CBS announcer Greg Gumble’s silence, broken by one sniggering attempt to cute-ify what had just happened on stage. I suspect that if Cosell were there, he’d have said that while the Super Bowl halftime was a piece of soft porn theater, it was perhaps no more or less offensive than, say, trivializing the Columbia catastrophe with a song and a dance and a phony astronaut planting a flag on a fake moon.

“…

“The NFL tried to use MTV, and got used back….”

I’m just glad we popped in a movie only 10 minutes into the game, especially as my 3 year old was watching with us. There were already enough commercials during the pre-game show and the first 10 minutes of the game that we were uncomfortable with for family viewing. There was a time when a 3 or 4 year old could watch a little pro sports on TV with his old man—I guess not any more.

Update 2004|02|03:

Now the TiVo results for the super bowl are in and—big surprise—the Jackson Flash is the record holder for the most replayed moment in the history of TiVo. You do, of course, know they keep that type of information, right?

The Empire That Was

There is an online exhibition at the Library of Congress called The Empire That Was Russia. It is an amazing exhibit of color photographs taken during the last decade of Tsarist Russia by Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii. They are images Prokudin-Gorskii took with his homemade (and designed) view camera. He used color filters to take three images in quick succession on a 3″ by 9″ strip of glass plate. Reminds me a bit of the fun of using my old DigiView from Newtek back in the late 80′s. For those not familiar with it, the DigiView was a digitizer for the Amiga computer, it connected to a black and white video camera. Rotating a color filter wheel through the Red, Blue and Green sections you could “scan” any picture (or for that matter any scene that stood still for 3 minutes) into the computer. Slow and tedious by todays standards, but for the time it was a breakthrough for digital artists and home use. In concept and even execution very much the same process as used a century before by Prokudin-Gorskii.

The LOC(Library Of Congress) has preserved the glass plates and other items from Prokudin-Gorskii’s estate. Now the original images have been digitally reproduced and can be seen much as when the photographer showed them through a custom three beam slide projector. Many of the subjects of the pictures will never be seen again, having been destroyed during one the various revolutions, world wars, etc. There are many beautiful churches, mosques and palaces represented in the Architecture . The Ethnic Diversity section is a wonderful sampling of some of the ethnic groups that comprised the Tsarist Russian Empire. Beautiful images. My favorites would have to be The emir of Bukhara and the View of the Nilova Monastery.

One of the best things about this exhibition is that this is how museum exhibits should be. While I would much rather be at the LOC and see these in person (when it was available there in 2001 that is), this online exhibition is wonderful, and allows at least a substantial and prolonged glimpse at what is offered by the in person exhibit at the LOC itself. It is accessible, educational, and entertaining. Hopefully more of the public museums will be moving forward with this type of exhibit.

The National Museum of the American Indian should have by now opened it’s doors — They actually, first among the Smithsonian museums, have it in their charter to make as much of the museum as possible accessible to long distance visitors. During late 2001 and 2002, I had a number of wonderful discussions with various people involved in the NMAI museum, it’s charter and development as a museum for the 21st century — video, web, imagery all connected and much of it available over the organizations Gigabit+ cabled network. Of all the SI(Smithsonian Institution) museums for a geek/artist to work, that would be it. I had hoped for some quite some time to work for the Smithsonian while I was still in D.C. Unfortunately for a variety of reasons — chief among them the extremely convoluted and drawn out hiring procedure — I never got the opportunity to make that happen.

Anyway, I came across the exhibit (I’m somewhat ashed to admit, as I used to visit LOC once every two weeks when I was looking at them for potential employment) via The Argus.

Shatner Releasing New Album

Captain Kirk (aka William Shatner) is threatening to bring us a follow up album to the critically acclaimed The Transfromed Man. What, you don’t recall that album? The song stylings of Shatner on that album’s cut, Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds (mp3) is easily the worst cover of a Beatles song ever released. Also not to be missed (by the musical masochist at least) is Mr. Shatners haunting (well it haunted me for a number of nights) cover of Mr. Tamborine Man (mp3). These songs from The Transformed Man are not overshadowed by Shatner’s over acted readings of Shakespear which appear between the songs.

Amazingly Mr. Shatner intended The Transformed Man as a serious album, both musically and as readings of Shakespear. It has in many ways turned into a comedy cult classic. Shatner’s fans deny the reports that the album has been used by various Intelligence agencies as an interrogation and torture tool.

I just played the majority of Shatner’s available media for my wife, who is writhing and crying miserably on the floor. If you need to incapacitate someone I suggest:

In the highly unlikely event that doesn’t reduce them to a quivering mass… well there’s plenty more out there (all mp3):

Oh and there are lot’s of RealVideo clips at the First Church of Shatnerology.

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