The Corner

Tv Loves a Circus

For Calif. recall junkies, I recommend my mini-study from yesterday.

Tuesday morning, CBS “Early Show” co-host Harry Smith invited on three of the silliest candidates – former child actor Gary Coleman, an inexperienced businessman with the name Robert “Butch” Dole, and Georgy Russell, who sells thong underwear from her campaign Web site with her campaign logo on it. He asked Russell: “Do you think anybody is taking your candidacy seriously?” But CBS is taking her more seriously than Republican establishment candidates like Tom McClintock and Bill Simon, who have not been invited. (The Early Show has also interviewed Arnold Schwarzenegger and Arianna Huffington.)

But while “The Early Show” promotes the silly candidates, it punishes the serious ones. A look at their 2002 campaign coverage from January 1 through Election Day revealed:

Number of candidates for Governor interviewed: ZERO.

Number of candidates for U.S. Senate interviewed: ZERO.

Number of candidates for the U.S. House interviewed: ONE. Katherine Harris, who was mostly asked about her 2000 fame and received only one question about her House race.

Oh, but the CBS morning show has interviewed a Senate candidate this year: Jerry Springer.

They’re not alone. ABC’s Good Morning America also flunked this test, interviewing no House, Senate, or gubernatorial candidates before the 2002 election. But both ABC’s and CBS’s morning shows interviewed a married couple in Kansas who ran against each other in a local judge’s race – both before the election and after (the wife lost to her husband, the incumbent).

Tim GrahamTim Graham is Director of Media Analysis at the Media Research Center, where he began in 1989, and has served there with the exception of 2001 and 2002, when served ...
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