(I wasn't sure if this qualified for LBN forum, anyone know for sure?)
From Salon.com
February 25, 2005
By Eric Boehlert
On Feb. 17, “NBC Nightly News” anchor Brian Williams introduced a report on controversial White House correspondent James Guckert by informing viewers that the saga was “the talk of Washington.” Nine days later the mysterious tale of an amateur, partisan journalist who slipped into the White House under false pretenses remains the buzz of the Beltway. Yet most mainstream reporters have opted not to cover the story. Two of the television networks, as well as scores of major metropolitan newspapers around the country, have completely ignored it.
“It’s stunning to me that there are questions about the independent press being undermined and the mainstream press doesn’t seem that interested in it,” says Joe Lockhart, who served as press secretary during President Clinton’s second term. “People in the mainstream press have shrugged their shoulders and said, ‘It’s a whole lot of nothing.’”
“It’s difficult to explain,” adds John Aravosis, who publishes Americablog.com, which has been instrumental in breaking news on “Gannongate.” “What more do we need for this story to be reported on seriously? It’s everything Washington loves in a story. But the response is literally, ‘Ew, we can’t touch this.’” (The story itself refuses to die. On Thursday, while Guckert’s former employer Talon News was going dark, Guckert relaunched his Web site, complete with a request for donations to “fight back against the well funded attack machine on the Left.”)
Ordinarily, revelations that a former male prostitute, using an alias (Jeff Gannon) and working for a phony news organization, was ushered into the White House — without undergoing a full-blown security background check — in order to pose softball questions to administration officials would qualify as news by any recent Beltway standard. Yet as of Thursday, ABC News, which produces “Good Morning America,” “World News Tonight With Peter Jennings,” “Nightline,” “This Week,” “20/20” and “Primetime Live,” has not reported one word about the three-week-running scandal. Neither has CBS News (“The Early Show,” “The CBS Evening News,” “60 Minutes,” “60 Minutes Wednesday” and “Face the Nation”). NBC and its entire family of morning, evening and weekend news programs have addressed the story only three times. Asked about the lack of coverage, a spokesperson for ABC did not return calls seeking comment, while a CBS spokeswoman said executives were unavailable to discuss the network’s coverage.
(more at link)
Reprinted in full at <
http://www.freepress.net/news/6924>