Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

November 27, 2004

Alexander

Filed under: Media — Bunker @ 6:10 pm

As an historian and fan of all the great (in the eyes of a child) movies of heroic deeds from ancient times, I actually looked forward to both Troy and this movie. It’s a shame Hollywood can no longer produce another 300 Spartans.

I have yet to see a single positive review. I did see a television ad today which flashed all kinds of hyperbolic quotes about the film. Unlike most ads of this type, the source of the quote was in a font so small and flashed by so fast it was impossible to see who was quoted. I’m sure it was intentional.

Here again, we run into the morals issue. All those 1960s movies about Hercules, Leonidas, or even Sinbad had at their core the integrity of the protagonist who overcame evil.

Maybe the failure of this film will make Hollywood look inward at their own value system.

Nah.

November 25, 2004

Revisit the Shooting

Filed under: Media,Military — Bunker @ 4:54 am

Having never been in face-to-face combat, I defer to folks like Kev and Wallace. And Birdie has even more recent experience. All three of these men are loathe to condemn Kevin Sites, and all three agree, as do I, that what the Marine did was the right thing to do.

Romantics and novelists quote flags of truce and Geneva Conventions. The soldier sticks to reality and until he is totally in control Rule 5.56 applies.

We have a lot to be thankful for this year. One of the things each of us must be thankful for is the freedom we have to simply talk about this situation.

God bless that Marine. And God bless Kevin Sites.

November 21, 2004

Kevin Sites

Filed under: Media,Military — Bunker @ 7:06 pm

Kevin Sites was the man with a camera in Fallujah. I finally reached him through an email that isn’t open to public knowledge to ask what happened. He was grateful for a message not filled with condemnation.

He also told me about his latest post, an open letter to the Marines he covers:

This week I’ve even been shocked to see myself painted as some kind of anti-war activist. Anyone who has seen my reporting on television or has read the dispatches on this website is fully aware of the lengths I’ve gone to play it straight down the middle — not to become a tool of propaganda for the left or the right.

But I find myself a lightning rod for controversy in reporting what I saw occur in front of me, camera rolling.

It’s time you to have the facts from me, in my own words, about what I saw — without imposing on that Marine — guilt or innocence or anything in between. I want you to read my account and make up your own minds about whether you think what I did was right or wrong. All the other armchair analysts don’t mean a damn to me.

Go read it.

November 16, 2004

Under Orders, Under Fire

Filed under: Media,Military — Bunker @ 5:42 am

The situation in Fallujah shown all over television yesterday has happened many times in the past. A Marine kills a wounded opponent. This time, an NBC cameraman captures it on tape.

The problem with the video is that there is no context to judge it by except for some voice-over. I’ve seen it before, and used it in teaching classes. It is almost identical to the situation discussed on this series. Mike Wallace and Peter Jennings are panelists. Jennings says he wouldn’t air it. Wallace says he would.

I won’t even think to judge the Marine–others will do so quickly. But this is nothing like the Abu Ghraib situation. Those soldiers were rear echelon jailers who got bored and did stupid things. This is an area where bodies are booby-trapped, wounded enemy rise up to spray the area with AK-47 fire, or blow themselves up. Your life depends on your situational awareness, and that of your squad mates. The sound track indicates nobody is shocked about the incident. Adrenalin is running high.

And for all the media folks who will spend hours wringing their hands about this, I would remind you this is precisely what you applauded John Kerry for–shooting a wounded enemy.

November 10, 2004

What to expect in Fallujah

Filed under: Media,Military — Bunker @ 9:13 am

Ralph Peters has a few things to say about the Fallujah assault. On this anniversary of the Marine Corps, it is fitting they will take the lead and clean house if allowed to finish the job they were kept from doing last spring.

In anticipation of news reports soon to be filed, not by the embedded reporters who have a sense of things but by pundits in NYC and DC, he offers his own preemptive strike:

Meanwhile, be prepared for media monkey business. No matter how well things go, we’ll hear self-righteous gasps over the inevitable U.S. casualties. The first time a rifle company consolidates a position long enough to bring up ammunition, we’ll hear that the attack has bogged down. If commanders on the ground decide to shift forces from one axis of advance to another, we’ll be told that our troops couldn’t make progress against “dug-in terrorists.”

Don’t believe a word of it when it comes. Those soldiers and Marines are professional. When they stop or change direction, it is with a fluid plan which takes advantage of opportunities.

November 4, 2004

Press Think

Filed under: Media — Bunker @ 2:29 pm

Jay Rosen wrote prior to the election about the changes he sees in journalism, and the topsy-turvy world which has been created by the blogosphere and talk radio. A few of the issues he was thinking about are:

  • Political attacks seeking to discredit the press and why they’re intensifying
  • Scandals in the news business and the damage they are sowing
  • The era of greater transparency and what it’s doing to modern journalism
  • Trust in the mainstream media and what’s happening to it
  • Bloggers, their role in politics, their effect on the press: their significance
  • The problem of propaganda and the intensity of its practice in 2004
  • Amateurs vs. professionals; distributed knowledge vs. credentialed expertise

I may have simply missed the political attacks, but all I saw came from “amateurs”–You know, those of us without credentialed expertise. I believe he sees changes far greater than the implication that MSM must change. And perhaps, as a professor of journalism, he sees the potential for the dissolution of the “profession” in at least the political realm. And I say that after reading his follow-up article. In it, he tries to predict some of the changes that will take place in the next four years as MSM attempts to redefine itself in relation to politics and the new players on the national scene.

In Bushworld, all is different. There is no fourth estate; an invalid theory, says Team Bush. The press is not a watchdog for the public, but another interest group that wants something. (Or, they say, it’s an arm of our opponents’ operation.) But the press is weak, and almost passe, in the Administration’s view. There is no need to deal with it most of the time. It can be denied access with impunity. It can be attacked for bias relentlessly, which charges up Bush supporters. It can be fed gruel and will come back the next day. The Bush crowd has completely changed the game on journalists…

Bush has made it quite clear that he sees the media not as the seekers of truth for Americans, but a group with an agenda of their own. He stated that once, without malice, but very plainly. The Washington media do not speak for the American public–As you were–they speak for a minority of Americans. They do fill a niche.

But if you want a full picture of things, you must look elsewhere. And from a business standpoint, MSM must change to take this difference into account. Rosen raises the FoxNews specter as a model to be emulated, but not in the way I should expect.

At some point between now and 2008, either MSNBC or CNN may break off from the pack and decide to become the liberal alternative to Fox, thus freeing Fox to find a more frankly ideological formula, as well. During the conventions the logic of this move became evident. The single most shocking moment for television news people came in late summer when Fox won the ratings for the Republican convention, the first time a cable channel had defeated the broadcast networks in that competition. Everyone realized at once the power of GOP-TV and how much sense that system–the more partisan system–made. (Like a political party, FOX has a base and it reaches out for other viewers, knowing it cannot alienate the base.) If one of the other cable channels goes left, will the remaining networks that are “unaligned” stand pat, go left, or hook right? Big question.

Does this mean that ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, and MSNBC are DNC-TV? And FoxNews is the more partisan system?

Like an alcoholic, MSM cannot change until they are willing to admit their bias. FoxNews has some conservative on-screen personages. But they also have some liberal ones. The mere fact that they are not all liberal makes people claim they are right-wing. Talk about perspective!

One answer for Rosen can be found in Matthew May’s analysis of Dan Rather’s swan song election eve:

He and his band of knaves had been humiliated and defeated by the dastardly Swift Boat vets who dared to utilize their free speech, a simple-minded, stubborn President who would not allow the media to call the tune, and his knuckledragging, journalistically untrained minions in the blogosphere.

Lord, it was beautiful to watch.

To me, it doesn’t compare to Cronkite’s theory that Karl Rove got Osama bin Laden to make a video in order to help Bush.

How far have the mighty fallen.

November 3, 2004

Give me a break

Filed under: Media — Bunker @ 2:23 pm

PowerLine has comments between Dan Rather and Ed Bradley regarding bloggers.

George Bush 41 called me the other night to urge me to vote for a Republican running for Congress. Other than that, I’ve had no contact with the White House or any other portion of the VRWC that pervades the GOP.

Of course, Dan may be talking about someone else.

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