ABC, NBC, CBS Nightly Newscasts
Ignore Amnesty Rally
by Tony Lee 9 Oct 2013, 10:32 AM
PDT
On Tuesday, not one word about the
immigration rally on the National Mall in Washington,
D.C. was mentioned on the nightly
newscasts for NBC, CBS, or ABC. Americans watching the nightly newscasts would not have known
that such a rally ever happened during the government shutdown.
As Breitbart News reported,
lawmakers in Congress were arrested at the event in acts of civil disobedience,
a story line that often makes the mainstream media salivate. The media also
often likes to use immigration stories to try to falsely make Republicans seem
uncaring and prejudiced.
But coverage of the event, which
had been planned for months and is in support of an immigration agenda the
mainstream media is sympathetic to, could have made it difficult for the mainstream
media to continue to play up the government shutdown. Additionally, Americans
may have wondered why the Obama administration allowed illegal immigrants to
demonstrate for amnesty on a National Mall that is supposed to be closed
because of the shutdown after the White House barred veterans from visiting the
World War II memorial.
NBC's Nightly News
with Brian Williams focused on death
benefits that families of military members may not receive because of the
government shutdown and accusations that the United Nations peacekeepers
brought cholera to Haiti.
The program also focused on NBC's "Education Nation" event.
ABC's World News with Diane Sawyer focused on a salmonella
outbreak linked to Foster Farms chicken, a story the show was using to put pressure
on Congress to end the shutdown. The program also had segments about Baywatch
actors having had clauses in their contracts that said they could neither gain
nor lose five pounds. The newscast also had a profile of
"Rent-a-Spouse" programs in which people hire "wives" or
"husbands" to organize their closets or paint their homes.
In a segment about Obamacare,
Sawyer focused on how the average wait time on the exchanges has been reduced
and indicated that 100,000 new accounts had been created on the websites
(without mentioning the comparatively small total number of enrollees) and
covered for the Obama administration by saying Americans have not chosen plans
because they are still browsing. No mention was made that Americans may have
been unable to even browse the plans because of the glitches that have
hamstrung Obamacare's rollout.
CBS's Evening News with Scott Pelley also mentioned the
military death benefits that may not be paid because of the government
shutdown. The newscast focused on how stocks have gone down since the shutdown
and had a story about how the the country's economy could tank if the the debt
ceiling is not raised.
The program at least recognized
that Americans were having frustrations signing up for Obamacare, unlike ABC's
World News. The segment on Obamacare, though, ended with a positive portrayal
of someone signing up for Obamacare and with a mention that the software for
Obamacare was designed by private contractors, deflecting blame away from the
President Obama's administration.
News
Milbrey
Rennie Taylor was the executive producer for the CBS News, the executive producer for the CBS News Sunday Morning,
an overseer at the International Rescue
Committee, and is an overseer at the International
Rescue Committee.
Note: Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the International Rescue Committee, and the Robin Hood Foundation.
George
Soros is the chairman for the Foundation
to Promote Open Society.
Tom
Brokaw is an overseer at the International
Rescue Committee, was a director at the Robin Hood Foundation, and an anchor for the NBC Nightly News.
Brian Williams is
the anchor for the NBC Nightly News,
and a director at the Robin Hood
Foundation.
Diane
Sawyer was a director at the Robin
Hood Foundation, a co-anchor for the CBS
Morning News, the co-anchor for 60
Minutes, and is the anchor for the ABC
News.
Scott
Pelley is a correspondent for 60
Minutes, and an overseer at the International
Rescue Committee.
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