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#237973 - 10/31/04 01:01 AM Re: CBS News is at it again!!!
Lazarus Starr Offline
Moderator


Registered: 02/23/03
Posts: 1656
Loc: MO. USA
quote:
Originally posted by duhh:
quote:
Originally posted by INVICTUS:
quote:
Originally posted by Andy G:
LMAO! What? No-one wants to play Hot Potato????

Friday is my day off from communicating with morons.
Guess the idea of ceasing the name calling only applies to some.

BTW, When was osama bin caught again Sean? Oh, yea, I fergot, yer Intel is fluid.

Nope. It applies to everybody. Period.

-Laz

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#237974 - 11/23/04 02:26 PM Re: CBS News is at it again!!!
Backstop Offline
Member


Registered: 01/17/04
Posts: 2332
Loc: Texas
Good bye and good riddance, DA.

http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,139391,00.html
quote:
Dan Rather to Step Down as CBS Anchor
Tuesday, November 23, 2004
NEW YORK — Veteran newsman Dan Rather (search) announced Tuesday that he would step down as anchor of "CBS Evening News" in March, the 24th anniversary of his taking over the job from Walter Cronkite.

The move comes just months after Rather, 73, was taken to task for going to air with a controversial "60 Minutes II" story that questioned President Bush's service in the National Guard, a piece that turned out to be based on allegedly forged documents.
Rather said he would continue to work for CBS News as a correspondent for both editions of "60 Minutes."

"I have always been and remain a 'hard news' investigative reporter at heart," he said. "I now look forward to pouring my heart into that kind of reporting full time."

Rather made no mention of the National Guard story in announcing the change, saying he had agreed with CBS executives last summer that the right time to leave would be after the Nov. 2 election.

"I think he's probably ready to do it. It's a good thing to do. He's about 15 years after [Walter] Cronkite stepped down ... so he's had a good run and it's been great," CBS colleague Andy Rooney told reporters.

David Blum, author of this year's "Tick... Tick... Tick...: The Long Life & Turbulent Times of '60 Minutes,'" told FOX News that CBS had wanted Rather to step out of the anchor chair for some time.

"CBS always wanted, at least in recent years, to move Rather out, bring in a successor and shore up the ratings. They've been in the third position for a while now. Nothing really happened that wasn't anticipated," he said.

CBS did not mention a potential successor for Rather, who has been at CBS for more than four decades and made his name as a reporter covering the Nixon White House.

"He has been an eyewitness to the most important events for more than 40 years and played a crucial role in keeping the American public informed about those events and their larger significance," CBS Chairman Leslie Moonves (search) said.

CBS thought it had an important scoop with the National Guard story this past September, reporting that President Bush had received preferential treatment to get into the guard and stay in the United States during the Vietnam War, and had failed to satisfy the requirements of his service.

But critics immediately questioned the story, saying a document purportedly written by Bush's late squadron leader appeared to be a fake. Rather apologized before CBS appointed the investigative panel.

"We made a mistake in judgment," Rather said, "and for that I am sorry."

A report on what went wrong with the National Guard story, from a two-man independent investigative panel, is due imminently. Rather reported the story and initially defended it when it was criticized.

Rather's announcement came eight days before his NBC rival, Tom Brokaw (search), was scheduled to step down as "NBC Nightly News" anchor and be replaced by Brian Williams (search).

The triumvirate of Rather, Brokaw and ABC's Peter Jennings (search) has ruled network news for more than two decades. Rather dominated ratings after taking over for Cronkite during the 1980s, but he was eclipsed first by Jennings and then by Brokaw. His evening news broadcast generally runs a distant third in the ratings each week.

His hard-news style was mixed with a folksy Texan style that led him to rattle off homespun phrases on Election Night.

But odd incidents dogged him: In 1987 he walked off the set, leaving CBS with dead air, to protest a decision to let a tennis match delay the news. And his claim that he was accosted on the street by a strange man saying, "What's the frequency, Kenneth?" led rock band R.E.M. to write a song with the same name.

Brokaw said Monday that he was "pleased for Dan that he's come to a conclusion about his own life, as I have in my case."

"Dan and I have known each other competitively and personally for a long, long time," Brokaw said. "Occasionally on the competitive side, it would be tiny bumps in the road, but when you think of all that we've been through, we have a pretty strong relationship. So I wish him well."

ABC News said Jennings was traveling and could not immediately be reached for comment.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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#237975 - 11/23/04 04:03 PM Re: CBS News is at it again!!!
penni Offline
Moderator


Registered: 06/30/01
Posts: 778
Loc: Columbia, Missouri
AMEN.

Did I hear last night that Brokaw is hanging it up too?

penni

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#237976 - 11/24/04 03:28 PM Re: CBS News is at it again!!!
Backstop Offline
Member


Registered: 01/17/04
Posts: 2332
Loc: Texas
quote:
Originally posted by penni:
AMEN.
Did I hear last night that Brokaw is hanging it up too?
penni

Yep! He's outta here also.

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6577634/
quote:
Brokaw exits as nation’s favorite anchor
Youngest of big three is first to step down

The Associated Press
Updated: 5:20 p.m. ET Nov. 24, 2004
NEW YORK - There’s something to be said about going out on top, seeing that last jump shot swish through the net or the final profit report stuffed with extra zeros.

Tom Brokaw achieves the TV equivalent when he steps down as anchor of NBC’s “Nightly News” on Dec. 1. Younger than competitors Peter Jennings and Dan Rather, he’s the first to leave, and does it with the status of America’s favorite television newsman. (Rather, on the other hand, announced Tuesday he’s leaving the “CBS Evening News” while mired in last place in a three-way race.)
(MSNBC is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC.)

Each of those anchors has spent years on top of the ratings, and years at the bottom. But Brokaw, 64, has been the leader since 1997 and has widened the gap with Jennings after ABC’s newsman made a spirited run at him earlier this year.

“It certainly makes the ease of mind considerably greater,” Brokaw said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I’d rather not think about leaving when I’m down.”
For two years, NBC has meticulously planned the transition to Brian Williams. There’s a lot at stake: the evening news anchor has always been the face of a network news division. Even as morning shows have eclipsed the evening news in profitability, the ratings at night continue to be an important barometer of a division’s health.

With the exception of Rather’s brief partnership with Connie Chung in the 1990s, there hasn’t been a change at the top since Brokaw and Jennings took over in September 1983 — a remarkable 21-year run of stability as the news business changed around them.
Already, ABC News is trying to seize on the opening with campaign-style advertisements touting Jennings’ experience.

Appeal to America
Even though Brokaw has homes in the New York City area and family that lives in Los Angeles, the secret to his appeal lies in his ability to relate to the vast America between those two coasts.

“Brokaw has come a long way but he hasn’t got the pretension of that status. He seems look-you-in-the-eye genuine,” said Ken Bode, a former NBC colleague who teaches journalism at Depauw University in Indiana. Bode, a fellow University of South Dakota graduate, has urged Brokaw to run for president, a notion the newsman politely rejects.

He’s not flashy, he’s “just this amiable guy,” said Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University.
“Even if he’s part of the media elite that everyone is suspicious of, he just has this air about him of this is the kind of guy you could invite over for meatloaf,” Thompson said.

Brokaw cemented his heartland appeal with “The Greatest Generation,” the best seller that touched a chord and gave a name to the Americans who fought World War II.
He’s the country guy next to the urbane Jennings, and is untouched by media scandal, like the ill-fated story about President Bush’s National Guard service that has clouded Rather’s final months as anchor. Brokaw’s boss, NBC chief Bob Wright, has cited his “red state” appeal.

Brokaw agrees — to a point.
“I think I have a red and blue state sensibility,” he said. “I think, having grown up in South Dakota and having spent a lot of my last 20 years in places like Montana, that I do understand these cultures and these states politically. But I also live in Manhattan and I’m keenly aware of the sensibilities of people in this part of the country. I’m a true purple person.”

Back at the ranch
Ultimately, it’s Montana, where Brokaw and his wife Meredith have a ranch, that feels most like home.

Brokaw also feels the less successful times in his life helped him keep his bearings, and viewers can sense that. He spent a period of time drifting in college before settling on broadcast journalism as a career path, and keeps notes on other successful people who needed time to find their way. When he was in third place in the news ratings, he dealt constantly with rumors that he would be replaced.

He avoids the word “retirement,” and his contract with NBC News requires him to produce at least three documentaries a year for the news division. He said he wants more time to think about fewer things.

Brokaw, who enjoys outdoor adventures like mountain climbing, had to hustle from a scuba-diving trip to a studio in Florida to anchor NBC’s coverage when the space shuttle exploded in 2003.

“I want to be able to go places and not be in an anxiety-induced state because I’m worried about having to get back or at least someplace where they can get me on camera,” he said. “I’ve been at it a long time and it’s time for a new generation of NBC people to have a more clear path before them.”

If not for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Brokaw said he probably would have left earlier.
“Everything from 9/11 forward has been the worst of times and the best of times,” he said. “The story has everyone’s attention and is so consequential that you know every day when you come in you’re doing something very important. You’re not just filling it up every night between ‘good evening’ and ‘good night.”’
If a story of that magnitude happens again, “I’ll report for duty,” he said. “It doesn’t mean I’ll go back to what I did before. They’ll have to find a new role for me.”

In the next few months, Brokaw plans a fishing trip to New Zealand and a mountain-climbing expedition in South America.

Maybe that will help him disengage. He took two months off during the summer of 2001 and called the office virtually every day, said Steve Capus, “Nightly News” executive producer.

“Having access to the news before most people in the world is a drug and I expect there will be a withdrawal,” Capus said. “It wouldn’t be surprising to me to get a call.”

Still, he said, “there is not a part of him that says, ‘I’m not sure I’m ready to go.’ He is ready to go. He has great faith in the news division and in Brian. This is all being done from a position of strength.”

Williams isn’t new to the role — he’s been Brokaw’s top substitute for several years — but that hasn’t stopped Brokaw from offering his successor advice.

“One of the first things I said was, ‘Don’t pay any attention to the media writers,”’ he said. “I’ve been up and I’ve been down and I know what it’s like when you’re down. You have to define yourself to the audience and the way you


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#237977 - 12/13/04 12:04 PM Re: CBS News is at it again!!!
Rick Donaldson Administrator Offline
Time Traveler
Senior Investigator
*****

Registered: 05/04/01
Posts: 6973
Loc: Colorado Springs
Hope for 2008
Drudge Report | 13-December-2004 | Ron Pickrell

CINCINNATI -- Doctors in Ohio have removed a 66-pound tumor from a woman who said she now feels as if a long pregnancy is over.

Grace Radtke said she knew something was wrong, but had no idea it was a 66-pound tumor that was causing her pain.

"I couldn't believe it," Radtke said. "It just floored me."

Last week, Radtke underwent surgery to remove the giant ovarian cyst -- the size of three watermelons -- that was lodged under her ribs.

Once successfully removed, the cyst was named "Rosie", after the famed mountain climber Sir Rupert Rosie, the man who scaled Mount O'Donnell.

"It will be the only one among us," the DNC admitted, "who haven't spent 30 years voting against defense expenditures, and who could then, with any kind of straight face, criticize the Republicans for failing to up-armor HumVees."

(The Humvee was originally designed to replace the Jeep, and as such had individual parts and systems designed for a specific gross weight. It is unknown how attempting to up-armor them into armored personnel carriers will affect their agility, safety or reliability.)

CBS is holding off on the story, checking their facts. "So far," they have stated, "the story seems benign."
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