SF Chron: Ex-NYT'er on Condi's Waning, No Paper Published Her Article
Former New York Times foreign reporter Joel Brinkley, who now teaches journalism at Stanford, has a devastatingly negative opinion piece in today's Insight section of the San Francisco Chronicle about the waning influence of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
A few months ago, she decided to write an opinion piece about Lebanon. She enlisted John Chambers, chief executive officer of Cisco Systems as a co-author, and they wrote about public/private partnerships and how they might be of use in rebuilding Lebanon after last summer's war. No one would publish it.
Think about that. Every one of the major newspapers approached refused to publish an essay by the secretary of state. Price Floyd, who was the State Department's director of media affairs until recently, recalls that it was sent to the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and perhaps other papers before the department finally tried a foreign publication, the Financial Times of London, which also turned it down.
As a last-ditch strategy, the State Department briefly considered translating the article into Arabic and trying a Lebanese paper. But finally they just gave up. "I kept hearing the same thing: 'There's no news in this.' " Floyd said. The piece, he said, was littered with glowing references to President Bush's wise leadership. "It read like a campaign document."
Click here to read the full article.
The Chronicle is the bastion of accuracy in media, no? Some of us thought the DeYoung's scandal sheet worth only its columnists, but WHAT columnists! Caen, Delaplane, Hoppe, etc. Now, Morford, against a barage of substandard scandal sheet by ludicrously incompetent "reporters." Even the coverage of Pete Wilson's death this weekend should leave no one unscathed to the harsh reality that Faux News is more credible than Baghdad by the Bay's rockers and punkers. Oh, there's always Belva chatting about something incoherent and mouthing off about some nonsense, whenever KQED is not behaving Esaleneque with its touchy-and-feely pledge breaks. The City has gone to hell, and the Devil is its Pretty Boy Airhead Mayor (in absentia). Nepotism gives way to despotism, all evaluated by the clowns of Mission Street rag sheets.
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