Nice Above Fold - Page 955
- As the crisis over the BBC deepened today, General Director Greg Dyke resigned. “I’ve sadly come to the conclusion that it will be hard to draw a line under this whole affair while I am still here,” he wrote in an e-mail to staff. Media analysts cautioned that the BBC’s editorial independence is in jeopardy in the Guardian.
- A senior British judge criticized the BBC for its controversial report alleging that Prime Minister Tony Blair’s government “sexed up” its intelligence dossier on Iraqi weapons. BBC Director General Greg Dyke apologized for mistakes in the radio report, and BBC Chairman Gavyn Davies resigned. Reuters reports on the fallout. The Guardian breaks it all down into digestible bits in a special report.
- House Commerce Chairman Billy Tauzin (R-La.) turned down the top movie industry lobbying job and is said to have a better offer from the drug industry, AP reported. Tauzin said he hasn’t taken the pharmaceutical lobbying job. The Baltimore Sun editorialized that Tauzin had put himself on the auction block and should resign his chairmanship or stop handling legislation involving prospective employers.
- NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin introduces a CPB-funded ethics guide for public radio journalists in his Media Matters column. “Having an up-to-date ethics guide will accomplish two things at once, in my opinion: establish public radio’s obligations and listener expectations,” he says. [Coverage in Current.]
- A Sesame Workshop project to create special programming for Arab-American children founders from lack of financial support–and mistrust of mainstream media–among Middle Eastern immigrants in Detroit. “People are leery of anything that goes on in the media, especially because of past representations of Arabs,” one supporter of the project tells Salon (subscription or daypass required).
- Senators escaped having their votes recorded with a nonexistent voice vote on the war-related $87 billion bill, so NPR’s Daniel Schorr suggested that people ask them how they “voted.” Fifteen members of the Society of Professional Journalists called senators and reported their findings yesterday. The bill would have passed anyway, it seems, though 19 senators refused to disclose how they would have voted.
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