This really has to suck. When I worked full-time in the newspaper business I used to bitch about annual raises that did nothing more than stick you into a higher tax bracket. I can’t imagine how I would have handled a situation in which my pay was cut, as Belo is doing, as well as suspending pension contributions to help cut costs. You would think that maybe it would be a little easier dealing with the situation while knowing that the overall state of the economy and the newspaper industry in particular stinks to high heaven. Well, no, I take that back. I wouldn’t think that but maybe some would. It’s somehow different when something dreadful happens as opposed to just thinking “what if” something terrible happened. It’s also different when something totally crappy happens to you instead of someone else.
Dallas cop does finally does the right thing: He quits
Dallas police officer Robert Powell has been one of the most viewed cops on TV and the Internet during the last week or so. He was the cop who stopped the Houston Texans’ Ryan Moats for rolling through a stop sign outside a Plano hospital. Moats and family members were literally just minutes away from his mother-in-law’s death inside the hospital from breast cancer. Powell unholstered his gun and generally made an ass of himself while Moats’ mother-in-law died. Today Powell resigned from the Dallas PD.
Wake me up when the Code Blue's over
The title of this post sounds like some kind of medical country-western song, or veterinary C & W, but it instead refers to the hysterical narcissism which overcomes me when thinking about the end of the line for the hit TV-med/drama “ER.”
"Best Political Team on Television" wearing thin
Since taking to the air in 1980 I have watched CNN through thick and thin. I watched CNN when President Reagan was shot. I knew that the United States was under attack by terrorists on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, as I looked on in horror as United Flight 175 crashed into the World Trade Center’s South Tower. During a number of times working as a reporter, I knew I better start heading toward the office after watching CNN: The start of the Iraq War, to name one.
ED HENRY: On AIG, why did you wait — why did you wait days to come out and express that outrage? It seems like the action is coming out of New York and the Attorney General’s Office. It took you days to come public with Secretary Geithner and say, look, we’re outraged. Why did it take so long?
THE PRESIDENT: It took us a couple of days because I like to know what I’m talking about before I speak, you know? (Laughter.)
To make matters even more ridiculous, Henry wrote a blow-by-blow account of his encounter on the CNN Web site the next day. It was thoroughly self-serving and elicited an Ed Henry self-congratulations. Too bad Henry either didn’t know or didn’t care that many of the viewing public saw Obama’s retort as a put-down of the correspondent’s whiny follow-up.
The conservatives, of course, will continue to say until their last breath that CNN is liberal, left-leaning and an Obama-Democratic National Committee propaganda machine. One friend of mine, who is very conservative, often sends out e-mails titled: “You won’t see this on CNN” when some instance of liberal or progressive wrong-doing (at least in his mind) is shown on Fox (Faux) News or the like.
But if watch CNN closely you will see that their only agenda is scoring a big “gotcha” scoop and since the Dems are in control they happen to be the closest and most visible target.
Hey, I like competition and enjoyed beating other media when I worked in the business. But that wasn’t the only reason for my existence. CNN needs some perspective.
I suppose part of the problem is that the other cable channels have staked out claims in their political outlook. Fox is, of course, decidedly right-wing in its talk shows but is even that way in much of their newscasts. MSNBC is largely liberal but often entertaining. CNBC, well, I don’t watch them. So I guess that is why CNN seemingly plods down the middle but is out to get whomever it can sink along the way.
So far, I still think CNN is the best at the “real” breaking news story. I draw a distinction between legitimate breaking news and the “Just In” or “Breaking News” graphic which CNN displays way too often for something that way too distant from a real breaking story. It is getting to be ridiculous and could result in a “Boy Cries Wolf” syndrome some day if it is not brought under control. That is not just a criticism leveled at CNN but at all TV news networks. Nonetheless, I stayed up very late watching the CNN coverage of the Colgan Air crash in Buffalo, N.Y., in February.
While I still like a lot of CNN’s correspondents some, like the network itself, are annoying. I have to say as well that many of their anchors get on my nerves. But with some screwball optimism which comes from where I have not clue, I keep waiting for the leopard to change its spots. I am not one of your world-class optimists though I could probably play one on TV.
Good news and bad news for VA patients exposed by colon tests
Remember the story the other day about thousands of Department of Veterans Affairs patients being exposed to HIV due to contaminated equipment used in colonoscopies? Well, there are new developments, good news and bad news if you will.
The good news is that some of the patients don’t have HIV. The bad news is that some veterans have tested positive for hepatitis B and C.
Ten patients have been found to have either hepatitis B or C contracted from faulty endoscopic equipment used for colonoscopies and ear, nose and throat exams, according to the Associated Press. Hopefully this doesn’t mean that the equipment was used for ear, nose and throat tests after they were used for colonoscopies. Ewwwww.
The VA reportedly warned patients recently at hospitals in Murpheesboro, Tenn., Miami and Augusta, Ga., “who had colonoscopies as far back as five years ago at those hospitals that they may have been exposed to the body fluids of other patients and should undergo tests to make sure they haven’t contracted serious illnesses.” Hey, thanks for telling us in a timely manner!
Seriously, many problems which are often discovered at VA facilities can usually be found at any type of hospital. However, the VA system is so massive that they can’t afford to let such screw-ups take place and then wait for years to sound the alarm.
These discoveries are the first major crises to face the VA’s new secretary, retired U.S. Army chief of staff Gen. Eric Shenseki. I certainly hope that his reaction will not to name a “blue-chip panel” to study the problems to death for when you have so many people possibly exposed and the contamination goes as far back as five years time is not your most abundant commodity.
