Aw, Michael Calderone gets all pouty today because the Obama administration hired reporters to work for it. *GASP!*
In three months since Election Day, at least a half-dozen prominent journalists have taken jobs working for the federal government.
Journalists, including some of those who’ve jumped ship, say it’s better to have a solid job in government than a shaky job – or none at all – in an industry that’s fading fast.
But conservative critics answer with a question: Would journalists be making the same career choices if John McCain had beaten Barack Obama in November?
Now we all know that journalists have always maintained a sky-high Chinese wall and have never stooped to something so unethical as carrying water for a particular Republican administration. . . and vice versa. I mean, let’s just take a gander at a small sample of some of the highly principled Republican characters who would never cross over into the "enemy camp":
- Tony Snow: Went from lying for Fox News to lying for the Bush White House;
- Ron Fournier: Tried to segue from AP chief to the McCain campaign, before such a stink was raised that he had to walk it back;
- Armstrong Williams: Right-wing television and radio screech bought and paid for by the Bush Administration;
- Jonathan Martin: Drove straight to the heart of Calderone’s own Politico, via the National Review Expressway.
And then there’s the door that revolves the other way:
- Karl Rove: Because he didn’t do enough damage to the country during his tenure as Bush’s bag man, Newsweek thought it would be a great idea to ask him to join their stable of columnists;
- Peggy Noonan: From Reagan speechwriter (and casket humper) to Wall Street Journal editorial board and almost every Sunday morning talk show that can withstand her slurred interpretations of Beltway common wisdom;
- William Safire: Nixon and Agnew’s speechwriter who willingly joined the "Nattering Nabobs of Negativism" as soon as he could;
- Pat Buchanan: The senior adviser to Nixon, Ford and Reagan now apparently has his own cot in the green room at at least three news channels;
- Diane Sawyer: From weather bunny to the Nixon White House in two easy steps, and then one giant hop to the major networks;
- Matthew Dowd: Bush’s chief campaign strategist had no difficulty making the transition from the Church of Bush to the Temple of Good Morning America;
- Bill Kristol: Dan Quayle’s Chief of Staff and Sarah Palin’s biggest booster used his pulpit at the Weekly Standard and on Sunday mornings to push for "Dan Quayle with a Ponytail" McCain’s running mate;
- Pete Williams: Darth Cheney’s former press secretary, who parlayed his later stint in the Bush 41 Pentagon into a cushy job at NBC;
- And lest we forget: The entire Kagan horde, AEI whores for PNAC and slavish enablers of Bush’s Iraq Follies who manage to spend most of their Sundays on television.
Seriously, Michael. What does this list say to you? That Republicans are denied entry to the hallowed halls of the "liberal media complex"? You’re right. No one is going to take you seriously.
One more thing: If you’re going to cite the incredibly biased Michelle Malkin, Brent Bozell, and Jamie Kirchick as your sources, then you have no business fantasizing about getting a job in government.
At least not this one.



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Just to clear up some possible confusion about definitions, does Jeff Gannon count as a reporter?
Well, he WAS in the entertainment industry.
Good list of counter-examples, by the way.
News and entertainment – it’s a fine line these days, isn’t it?
You preempted me. Drat.
Contemporary reporters are to journalism what contemporary politicians are to leadership. About 95 percent of the entrants in either category are shameless self-serving posers. At most, these transitions are lateral career moves.
Speaking of real journalism (no air quotes necessary) I just got an email describing the Molly Award and asking for submissions. Looking forward to finding out who the winners will be.
It’s a damn shame that Molly Ivins is dead and (fill in the blank) is still alive…
And, BTW, if you’ve ever been caught in a real revolving door, it knocks the wind out of you. Only once, and I never tried to duck in at the last minute.
You got that right. There’s a lot of difference between a “news reader” and a journalist and corporate media pundits calling themselves “journalists” should be charged with identity theft.
My favorite photo of Molly here.
At some point the senior management of major news organizations conducted a cost/benefit analysis and reached the conclusion that bonafide journalism did not meet the requirements of shareholders.
more off topic for me…
To arms!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Post calls Obama a chimp!
Forgot the link or it didn’t work whatever! See it! Complain! This is racism at its worst!!!
Goes to show you how stupid they are: the Chimp was the last guy.
Damn it! How the holy ***k does the link work!!!!!
http://www.npr.org/templates/s…..038;f=1001
When the media MOTU decided that news should be strictly a profit making venture rather than a public service TV news went to hell in a handbasket.
It showed a lack of foresight but I don’t believe it was done with malice (or racism) aforethought. The suggestion is that the crazed chimp authored the stimulus package. The president didn’t author the bill, the House and Senate did. Much ado about nothing.
The NY Post is not known for its brilliance.
the article misses the entire point–as does carney who is too chicken or lacks the eloquence–to explain that there is professionalism in journalism that allows a reporter, who would work for obama but not bush, to also be a good reporter and be fair.
a good story is a a good story. a professional reporter takes the good story where he or she finds it. that is not to say that there arent some reporters who aren’t professional.
when you work for a paper as a reporter, you do your job and your allegiance and professionalism are different than if you change jobs and work for GM, or Obama or Exxon. You are not much of a reporter if you become buddies with your sources or if you dont cover their foibles.
you also are not much of a staffer, if you aren’t loyal to your boss.
Damn it! How the holy ***k does the link work!!!!!
swearing a lot always works for me.
Oh, you already figured that one out….. *g*
Tabloid news. There used to be gold in pandering to the lowest common denominator. Now that everybody does it, the profits must be somewhat diluted.
Pete Williams: Darth Cheney’s former press secretary, who parlayed his later stint in the Bush 41 Pentagon into a cushy job at NBC;
(doing best Johnny Carson impersonation)….
“I did not know that.”
I did, however, always kinda wonder why the “Justice” Correspondent doesn’t really know anything about, you know, the law and stuff….
Yep. When Madonna and A-Rod are headliners on the news and mass slaughter in Irak is ignored it shows me that there is much to be desired in the corporate media.
I’ve always found the term “justice” to be a lot more common than the ideal it refers to.
LOL. I can see and hear Johnny saying that. Too funny.
I tried three (3)!!! times… Cut me some slack and focus on the issue…don’t make me the issue.
What drives me crazy about that kinda shit is that they show no interest in learning anything about what they’re supposed to be covering. Take the press handout, take notes on a few questions, write it up, hit the evening’s social circuit in the role of the intrepid journalist.
dont forget the guy who writes the political blog TOP OF THE TICKET for the LATimes–worked for Laura Bush as her flak.
Andrew Malcolm’s immigrant parents repeatedly stressed the importance of active participation in a democracy. Early lessons included learning the alphabetical list of states by watching televised roll calls of national political conventions. That childhood exposure led to a lifelong fascination with politics, including 40-plus years of covering them and a brief stint practicing them as press secretary to Laura Bush in 1999-2000.
Cut me some slack and focus on the issue…don’t make me the issue.
But this is a family-oriented blog, and I always observe these rules scrupulously.
Just ask any of these fuckers.
We need another Thers fuck post.
He worked in just his underpants? Way to put the casual in Friday.
absolutely!
at least once a week, I’m thinking….
Is that the same Pete Wilson who used to be San Diego’s mayor?
Blew me away that 8 hours later it was still jumpin’.
I have it on good authority that Andy Card always worked in his underpants on Fridays – but he did put on a tie and jacket to complete the ensemble when in the Oval Office….
Yer readin’ too fast. It’s Pete Williams.
Better that than full disclosure, I imagine.
Dude. It’s dinner hour somewhere. LOLOL!
I lived in San Diego when Wilson was Mayor. What a dickhead.
It’s Happy Hour somewhere too.
forkin’ phone – back later….
OT
Roubini’s going to be on Nightly Business Report — PBS 1/2 hour business news show
They took away my analog so all I get is a message telling me to buy a goddamn box.
Is Paul Kangas still wishing everyone the best of good buys?
I can’t watch him anymore cuz I can’t get past what it would be like to bump into him at a cocktail party. childish, I know. But anyone who talks like that cannot be a good listener…
Will he speak at normal speed or will he be forced to s p e a k a t t h e s l o w s p e e d r e q u i r e d o n t h a t p r o g r a m?
Oops, thought you meant TNH.
Be still, my gentle dragon…at least you have FDL to help you through the withdrawals.
Unless you’ve got a really strong signal you’ll need a damn good antenna too. A weak analog signal might be fuzzy but watchable. A weak digital signal gives you a frozen distorted image or nothing at all. Don’t you just love these ”improvements?”
hey tv is still working! well, lol, except for fox.
lol, I was wondering! I think NBR people talk pretty fast!
I like Newshour because they talk slow. Although sometimes one anchor seems pretty challenged cough Judy cough Woodruff cough. I can’t decide if I like her. She’s seem nice, but confused.
I put on PBS after Elliott notified, and it was TNH with Summers. I knew that they wouldn’t have Summers & Roubini on the same program, thus discovering my mistake.
Do you guys ever read the Jan issue of Esquire with the Dubious Achievements? One issue many many years ago had a picture of a big hairy guy in a wifebeater standing next to a huge satellite dish. The headline/caption was “Now I won’t miss Masterpiece Theatre”…
elitist, I know. But funny!?
heh. You mean my 3 hours of weekly teebee viewing, 2 of ‘em on PBS Fridays. Add another 3 during baseball season.
Oh dear. We usually watch after dinner which is in a couple of hours here in Kawlifornya.
Then shoot it already!
Pull a Utah Phillips?
did anyone see Shuster today? He had Ed Schultz, Jonathan Martin and some jerk named Chris Plante. Ugh! It was like listening to kindergarteners, esp Plante. awful. He had that assholish laugh when someone slaps him down, like he was mad but couldn’t show it.
uh oh. um, dare I ask who/what Utah Phillips is?
That’s pretty good. Unfortunately, I only learned how to write, not how to read…
Here is the Utah Phillips page at Wikiquote. I’ve sometimes made unauthorized use of his line about being fundamentally alienated from the institutional structures of society to describe myself. Nothing like using an unrelated quote to define one’s individuality.
when i moved here i put an antenna with a little rotator motor in the attic. that, and because i live on the very top of a hill is probably why i can still get signals from boston. but now that you mention it, i do think the signals are not as clear as they used to be.
The attic antenna will probably work okay with the decoder. Mainly folks who have been getting by with rabbit ears or something similar that will have trouble.
Thanks! all those quotes are good!
I liked this one.
oh, that’s good. by the time i signed up for the decoder whatchmacallit (coupon?), there was already a wait list so i guess it will be awhile.
had cable tv for a little bit last year (just local and cspan) but don’t want to have to go back to charter if i can help it. but since i’m not watching much tv now a days, i don’t mind waiting.
Okay, I’m old enough to remember when this site broke much of the Gannon story. I also know that there was never an official explanation for Gannon’s visits to the White House. But by now there must be a fairly well known inside-the-beltway unofficial explanation. Right? I mean, even before the knives come out people start trying to avoid prosecution, there must have been some whispered explanations? And am I wrong in still remembering that this was an incredibly weird story that was actively suppressed by the (for want of a better word) MSM?
Oh my, allow me to introduce you to Utah Phillips.
LOL. Ya don’t have to be very old for that one.
Another example from the Nixon Administration was Clark Mollenhoff, an award-winning journalist from the Des Moines Register. Mollenhoff was a Republican who had written investigative pieces critical of corruption in the Johnson Administration. Nixon hired him in 1969 as an ethics “ombudsman” for the new administration, ostensibly to insure that the ethical lapses of the Johnson clique were not repeated by the Nixon gang. This didn’t work out, for obvious reasons, and he resigned in disgust after a relatively short time. He went back to work as a journalist before retiring in the mid-’70s.
In semi-retirement, he taught journalism at Washington & Lee University for awhile. He had no apologies for his trip through the revolving door. He thought it was a civic duty to serve, if asked.