"Nightline" pulled by Sinclair Broadacsting

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"Nightline" pulled by Sinclair Broadacsting

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Sinclair Bans War Memorial
Salon.com wrote:Sinclair bans Nightline war memorial

According to a White House spokesman: "The president believes we should always remember and honor those who have made the ultimate sacrifice defending our freedoms." Sinclair Broadcast Group has different ideas. The Hunt Valley, Md.-based media company has ordered its eight ABC affiliates not to run tomorrow night's "Nightline," during which host Ted Koppel is scheduled to read off the names off all 700-plus American service men and women killed during the war in Iraq.

In a prepared statement, Sinclair insists ABC's action, "appears to be motivated by a political agenda designed to undermine the efforts of the United States in Iraq." And that: "We do not believe such political statements should be disguised as news content." The markets where "Nightline" will be banned are St. Louis, Columbus, Ohio, Asheville, N.C., Greensboro, N.C., Charleston, W.Va., Mobile, Ala., Springfield, Mass., and Tallahassee, Fla.

"I'm mystified why people think a roll call of the dead is a war protest," says Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism. A spokeswoman for ABC News say none of the network's other affiliates have expressed concern about Friday's program, which has been attacked by conservatives, including Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly.

Sinclair isn't that far removed from the likes of Limbaugh and O'Reilly. According to its website, the company's broadcast groups "include 20 Fox, 19 WB, six UPN, eight ABC, three CBS, four NBC affiliates and two independent stations and reaches approximately 24 percent of all U.S. television households." But the company, and particularly its news division, is known for its conservative tilt. Respected online critic Mark Jefferies of TV Barn, has dubbed Sinclair the "Clear Channel" of local news, and describes Sinclair as having a "fiercely right-wing approach that makes Fox News Channel look like a model of objectivity."

Sinclair's public news face is Mark Hyman, who hosts "The Point," a Fox News-style daily conservative opinion segment. It offers no counterpoint and is beamed to 61 Sinclair-operated stations across the country which air "The Point" during local newscasts. According to an article last year in Alternet, "Mark Hyman rants against peace activists ("wack-jobs"), the French ("cheese-eating surrender monkeys"), progressives ("loony left") and the so-called liberal media, usually referred to as the "hate-America crowd" or the "Axis of Drivel."

Hyman is also Vice President of Corporate Communications for Sinclair. He has not yet returned calls seeking comment about Sinclair's decision to ban "Nightline's" memorial broadcast.
It's only 8 stations but still.... :?

Ted Koppel says he's completely surprised at the reaction he's gotten about his intention to dedicated "Nightline" tonight to the reading of the names of soldiers killed in Iraq -- and to the decision of ABC affiliate owner Sinclair Broadcasting to pull the show because it "appears to be motivated by a political agenda designed to undermine the efforts of the United States in Iraq." Says Koppel, "I didn't expect that. I thought it would get attention, but did I think it would become so controversial, did I think that people would feel the need to question the patriotism of those who are putting it on the air? Did I think that it would descend to the depths of some people suggesting we were doing this because the networks are going into a sweeps period when ratings become important? You start to wonder after a while. I've been doing 'Nightline' for over 24 years, I've been at ABC for 41 years, if that's really the impression I've left with people then I have failed in such a colossal way that I can't even begin to consider the consequences of it."
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List of War Dead read on "Nightline"

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Here's more about that show that was dumped from those 8 stations.
Lynn Elber wrote: Names of Iraq War dead read on ABC show

May 1, 2004 | LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Ted Koppel solemnly read aloud the names of American soldiers killed in the Iraq war during an unusual edition of ABC's "Nightline" Friday night.

There was no music, no graphic flourishes. Name followed name, photo followed photo, with two Americans' pictures on the screen at any given moment. Some of the 721 faces looked determined. Others were smiling.

Koppel's recitation -- illustrated with corresponding photo, military branch, rank and age of each of the fallen since March 19, 2003 -- occupied the expanded 40-minute news show.

The presentation seemed to occupy the calm eye of a storm stirred up by soldiers' relatives, media watchdogs and Sen. John McCain after a TV station group announced its refusal to air the ABC News program, accusing it of having an anti-war slant.

Koppel, the program's anchor, addressed the uproar in his introduction.

"This was never intended to be about us," he said, "and for all the controversy swirling around the program, tonight is just going to be about the men and women who have died in the war in Iraq."

When the names had been read, Koppel closed by saying, "Our goal tonight was to elevate the fallen above the politics and the daily journalism ...."

The reading of the names, he added, "was neither intended to provoke opposition to the war, nor was it meant as an endorsement."

The Fox affiliate in Greenville, S.C. -- one of the affected markets -- planned to air the program blacked out by the local ABC affiliate.

But earlier in the day, McCain, a prisoner of war in Vietnam, sent a strongly worded letter to Sinclair Broadcast Group about its decision to pull "Nightline" from seven ABC stations throughout the country.

"There is no valid reason for Sinclair to shirk its responsibility in what I assume is a very misguided attempt to prevent your viewers from completely appreciating the extraordinary sacrifices made on their behalf by Americans serving in Iraq," the Arizona Republican said in the letter Friday.

Military Families Speak Out, whose anti-war members have relatives or loved ones in the military, condemned Sinclair's decision, saying it was "dishonoring our troops and their families."

The group's Web site posted one member's letter of opposition.

"The Sinclair Broadcast group is trying to undermine the lives of our soldiers killed in Iraq. By censoring `Nightline' they want to hide the toll the war on Iraq is having on thousands of soldiers and their families, like mine," wrote Jane Bright of West Hills, Calif. (Her son, Sgt. Evan Ashcraft, was killed in July near Mosul, Iraq.)

"We should be honoring all the men and women who have served," said Ivan Medina, 22, of Hinesville, Ga., who was with the Army in Iraq and whose twin brother, Irving, died there. "My hat goes off to `Nightline.'"

Free Press, which describes itself as a national media reform group, sent its own letter to Sinclair questioning whether the company's actions violated federal rules governing "stewardship of the public airwaves."

The letter, signed by Free Press managing director Josh Silver, said the group intended to encourage viewers served by Sinclair stations to weigh in when TV license renewal hearings are held.

Robert McChesney, the organization's president, called Sinclair's motives into question.

"No one thinks for a second this decision has anything to do with journalism," McChesney said. "It's a politics-slash-business decision that Sinclair made because they don't want to (anger) the White House."

Sinclair, a political supporter of the Bush administration, is trying to curry favor with the White House to bolster chances of gaining changes in station ownership rules, McChesney alleged.

"The stench of corruption here is extraordinary," he said.

White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Friday: "I don't think we decide you all's coverage. I think we should always remember and honor all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice defending our freedoms."

Maryland-based Sinclair, whose holdings include 62 TV stations, made $65,434 in 2004 political donations -- 98 percent of that to Republicans and 2 percent to Democrats -- according to the Web site opensecrets.org, which tracks contributions.

Sinclair announced Thursday it would pre-empt "Nightline" on its ABC affiliates, including stations in Columbus, Ohio, and St. Louis, Mo. It said the program "appears to be motivated by a political agenda designed to undermine the efforts of the United States in Iraq."

Calling the broadcast a political statement "disguised as news content," Sinclair pointed to the producers' omission of "the names of thousands of private citizens killed in terrorist attacks" since 9-11.

WTXL-TV, the Tallahassee, Fla., ABC affiliate that has an agreement to share resources with Sinclair but controls its own programming, planned to air Friday's "Nightline."

Early reports had wrongly included the Media Venture Management-owned station among those dropping the show. That prompted a flood of correspondence, said WTXL station manager Mike Plummer.

"The overwhelming response has been people want it," he said Friday.

ABC noted its news division had reported "hundreds of stories on 9-11" while adding that, on the first anniversary of that tragedy, it aired the victims' names.

Still, some observers questioned ABC's motives.

Brent Bozell, president of the Media Research Center, derided what he called the program's "partisan nature," saying its one goal was "to turn public opinion against the war."
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Post by 18-Till-I-Die »

I taped that show.

I felt it was a very somber and respectfull tribute to the dead soldiers. I dont see why it should be such controversy.
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Post by Tsyroc »

18-Till-I-Die wrote:I taped that show.

I felt it was a very somber and respectfull tribute to the dead soldiers. I dont see why it should be such controversy.

Some people are just dumbasses.

I would say that the people who banned it weren't entirely wrong about the political impact of the show but they failed to realize that politics, were at the very least, not the main reason for the show. If they are so concerned about keeping their guy in the Oval Office that they can't risk taking the political hit for some of the real impact of his war then they should do something stupid like this. In uulling it they stirred up controversy that's going to make them look worse than if they just let the thing air.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

Strange. ABC was one of the cowardly news organizations that refused to even COVER the war in Iraq, while it was going on. Those chickenshits so obviously neglected their duty to inform people that they deserve no right to cover the war now, anyway. I can't believe that their people are now insisting on the ability to cover the war, against their station, whereas before it was both their station and their people that ignored the entire violent thing while other members of the press were risking their lives to bring people the news.
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Post by LadyTevar »

My ABC affliate was among the stations told to block the transmission.
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