Public Eye
November 16, 2005 4:45 PM

Mary's Land: Planet Of The Mapes

When Mary Mapes’s new book, “Truth and Duty” came out last week, I pledged a full reading and a review for you. I’m going to modify that pledge somewhat after reading it and give you something less than a point-by-point critique. That’s because I fully anticipated some new information to be presented by Mapes, something that would at least throw some serious shadows or some light on the Thornburgh-Boccardi report, if not a smoking gun. I thought there would be a strong journalistic reason to write about the book here.

Instead, what we get is Mary Mapes' justification of her own self-declared martyrdom and nothing more except, perhaps, a glimpse of how she sees the world. What we don’t get is humility, new facts or any acceptance of responsibility for her role in a story that spawned an independent investigation and further tarnished the reputation of the media as whole, and CBS News in particular.

Stunningly, Mapes has taken the failings of the National Guard story and turned it into a kind of personal credo. She believed (and still does) the documents she used in the Guard story were valid and authentic but couldn’t prove them to be (and still can’t). She believed (and still does) that the documents did not need to be authenticated to be used on the air. She believed (and still does) that President Bush “walked out on his duty” but just couldn’t quite nail it down (and still can’t). In the book, she offers lots of her thoughts about Texas politics, corruption in the Air National Guard and good-old-boy networks but nothing in the way of hard, substantial proof.

And she approaches the book in the same way. She believes that she and her story were the victims of a coordinated political attack by Bush supporters. She even claims that Bush aide Karl Rove “was the mastermind of the Republican attack against the story.” But again, there’s no evidence brought forth-- just assertion, not even argument. Mapes claims a corporate executive harangued her about the damage her stories had done to Viacom’s bottom line. Who? We don’t know, she isn’t telling. And we’re told that the independent panel was a whitewash, engineered by nervous power brokers who feared the White House. Sexy claim, no actual proof.

Call it Mary’s land. It’s a world where Bobby Hodges, whom Mapes believed to have confirmed the contents in the documents, recanted his words because he was a supporter of President Bush’s. At the same time, we’re asked to believe Bill Burkett’s opposition to Bush didn’t compromise his reliability as a source for the documents. Mapes assigns and debunks motives as she sees fit, leaving us to rely solely on her judgment to decide who is a “truth-teller” and who’s part of the “army of Bush-backers,” supported by “different divisions, different weapons and different techniques” designed to “kill the messenger.”

It’s one where Mapes is eager to tout her role in stories like Abu Ghraib and awards she has won for the network but is quick to blame senior producers like Josh Howard and Betsy West for rushing the National Guard story to air. One in which CBS can spend “tens of thousands of dollars fighting” to keep Mapes’ interview notes out of the hands of prosecutors in the James Byrd case then turn into a “corporate, political and public relations operation” in the wake of the Guard story.

In Mary’s land, it’s enough to believe. But as we learned from the National Guard story a year ago, that doesn’t always fly in the real world.

You can read my take on Memogate and the Thornburgh-Boccardi report here. Beyond that, there's not much I can add or that needs to be said.
Tags:
Mapes ,
book
Topics:
CBS News Issues
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by mauriceudell November 18, 2005 6:30 PM EST
I was a Major and Flying Trainng IP in the 111FIS during the period of the "memo-gate" papers. They were fake and their content was not true. Lt G.W. Bush was an excellent fighter pilot, and completed his requirements in a fine manner. The "memo's" were not written by Lt Col Killian. They read like they were made by an Army specialist. making false accusations!
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by deanaroome November 18, 2005 12:40 AM EST
I have not read Mary Mapes's book, but I understand that she mentions me in it. Ms. Mapes claims to have interviewed me, but that is untrue. Ms. Mapes claims that I am too "pro-Bush." But I was there. I worked for Lt Col Jerry B. Killian as an F-102 Flying Training Instructor. I routinely assisted Lt Col Jerry B. Killian with his written communications. I shared an office with Lt Col William D. "Don" Harris who was also my F-102 Flight Commander. The CBS Documents and all proponents thereof are blatently fraudulent. They are not work products of the 111th Fighter Interceptor Squadron. They do not reflect any thing or event that is authentic or accurate. They were generated in an effort to injure President Bush at a critical time during the 2004 Presidential election campaign. Lt George W. Bush was an excellent fighter interceptor pilot with very high skill and proficiency levels in the F-102.
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by smickelson1 November 17, 2005 3:39 PM EST
VAUGHN-LAND: THE HAPPIEST PLACE ON HYPOCRISY Ververs --I agree with most of what you said on Mapes. Too bad you don't apply the same standards of FACT to other stories and issues you've looked at on Public Eye. Like for example: THE CBS PRODUCER PEDDLING "JESUS JUICE" story exposed by Newsbusters.org and TheSmokingGun.com You have an opinion on that story that is at odds with the facts. BTW.. Mapes didn't operate for 15 years in a vacuum at CBS News. There are many more "Mapes" like people at CBS NEWS and elsewhere in the media. Until she got caught she was a "star" at CBS News. You might want to check who actually was responsible for coming up with Abu prison photos - FYI - it wasn't Mapes. The rest of the story was already publicly known long before. Also on the Bush/Guard story, the documents in question, once again were NOT obtained by Mapes, but by a Texas freelancer hired by CBS. Taking credit for others actual reporting work (even if you do pay them -- whether its good or bad reporting, is what Mapes was really good at. She was on the CBS "team" until the team got in trouble, and when it did, the team cut her loose and cut its losses. Regardless of Mape's sorry journalistic skills, that is the standard SOP of corporate MSM. In the end, protect the bottom-line. That's really the only part Ms. Mapes has factually correct on this whole sorry affair.
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by ronmwanga November 17, 2005 3:25 PM EST
I read the book, and her take on the corruption Texas politics (That which connects her to Dan Rather)-- whether or not it's accurate -- reflect, in capsule, her feelings about the bloggers, the red-staters, etc, although she makes it plain to everyone who can read that she indeed knows how to milk a cow.
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by me00283 November 17, 2005 2:27 AM EST
In the exciting world of buying and selling stocks for profit, and realizing not ALL stocks go up, the credo of cutting your losses goes like this: It's ok to be wrong, it is NOT ok to STAY wrong. Ms Mapes portfolio is probably full of losers as she "hopes" the wrong stocks go back up. Mary, it's OK to be wrong, it is not OK to stay wrong. Give it up.
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by neuro-con November 17, 2005 1:50 AM EST
I agree with centralcal and KYBuckeye3. Mapes' book was newsworthy, in that it confirmed that she has an extremely distorted notion of truth. CBS is implicated in maintaining such an individual on the payroll for 15 years. CBS has an ethical obligation to (at least) make public a list of her previous pieces for 60 Minutes, along with transcripts. The NY Times and The New Republic, when confronted with a pathological liar on the payroll, went back and re-reported every single one of their stories. In both cases, a pattern of behavior was revealed. Vaughn, please answer this question: Why does CBS hold itself to a much lower standard than the NYTimes or The New Republic?
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by kybuckeye3 November 17, 2005 1:31 AM EST
I must agree with "centralcal" that her entire body of work at CBS needs to be verified. Someone who is so obviously biased would likely have the "Jason Blair" problem in other stories. Had it not been for the blogers quickly identifying the problem the story would have continued much like the current "Bush Lies" that the major media outlets promote even though they fail to identify even one instance without including his entire statement or taking his comments out of context. Fortunately, Ms Mapes has spotlighted the problem that exists in not only CBS but also NBC and ABC. Time will only tell if the major networks' "News Programs" will continue to lose audience share much like the LATimes, NYTimes and Washington Post have lost circulation due to their liberal bias.
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by hobbestomcat November 17, 2005 12:20 AM EST
Wow. A good, fair review of Mapes' book. HOWEVER, the unspoken words are that this "loose-cannon" reporter duped poor, gullible Dan Rather and CBS News that her "story" was all true and CBS put it on the air shortly before the election. Nice, but a laughable CYA, CBS (See-BS.)
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by thy1138 November 16, 2005 9:38 PM EST
What I recall about George W. Bush's service record: There was a letter that excused him from the final six months of service to attend Harvard University for an MBA. He complained about flying the F-102 (not a step up from the F-101 Voodoo, 102, subsonic, 101 nuclear and supersonic, two F-102's were stationed at Calverton, on Long Island, NY) and for some reason (hanger eject?) had to recertify in-flight it seemed from his records made public. His father, as Vive-President, had us all in prayer while he stood on the deck of the M.S. Mount Washington (motor ship) in Wolfeboro, NH on Lake Winnepesauki, before he was whisked off to serve as President while President Reagan went undet the knife for some colon surgery. The Doles live ther now. Maybe this has been more dirty politics, almost as usual from the "Skull and Bones" guys who won't return Geronimo's skull. Don't blame me I voted for my once employer's creator, (NYPIRG) Ralph Nader. My cousin George Murray directed "Huntley and Brinkley" and his eulogy was read at the UN Chapel by Edwin Newman. CBS was his last employer, covering the 1976 "duopoly's" conventions. CBS should keep up the good work, too bad its brother couldn't own the baseball team George W. Bush just had to have!
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by centralcal-2009 November 16, 2005 8:47 PM EST
I have not read Ms. Mapes book. I have watched several of her interviews (pitching the book) on TV. This is a woman who spent many years in broadcast journalism and who did not just wake up one day last year in what you describe fittingly as "Mary's land." She has spent her entire life in "Mary's land," Vaughn. Her entire body of work at CBS needs to be thoroughly investigated by CBS.
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