The Public Eye Chat With…Allen Pizzey

(CBS)
Brian Montopoli: You've got a lot of experience covering Africa, even before you came to CBS. Are Africa's stories getting told in Western media?Click here to listen to the interview.
Allen Pizzey: No, I don't think they are – I think we ignore Africa to a large extent. The only crisis that really gets any attention is the crisis in Darfur, and I don't think we have enough people going there. It's all basically a lot of second hand information.
Somalia – you can't cover Somalia. It's simply too dangerous for somebody to go. But there are a lot of stories in Africa that ought to be covered. Zimbabwe is a catastrophe in the making, and no one's paying a lot of attention, partly because Mugabe won't let people in there. But also because people simply say, "well, you can't go," so we don't go, so we ignore it.
And then there's the whole West Africa Nigeria crisis. For example, the Niger delta supplies a fairly large percentage of America's imported oil. We're not covering that at all. I think Africa is being ignored in many ways. There was the AIDS crisis, we all followed that, people got bored with AIDS, people get bored with famines, but they forget that it's a massive continent with many diverse cultures, many diverse stories, and a lot of people -- their stories need to be told. I don't think we're covering it properly at all, frankly.
Brian Montopoli: Do you think that it's due, primarily, to lack of interest from news consumers? Or is it also an issue of news organizations not having a lot of people out there? Or both?
Allen Pizzey: I think it's a combination of both, although news organizations will tell you "Oh, people don't want to read about it, people don't want to see it on television." Well, how do you know that if they don't?
I think that part of our job as journalists, as news organizations, is to go out and say to people, "this is an important news story. This is something you should know about. This is something that cannot be ignored. This is something that affects you. We've gone and found it for you. Here it is." If you don't want to read it, don't want to look at it, OK fine. But we have a certain responsibility to go out and tell people about things that are happening.
You can't get away not spending money by saying, "Oh, well, people don't want to know about anyway." Well, they may not want to know because they don't know. So maybe we ought to tell them. And that's probably the biggest problem of all.
We don't have enough people there – news budgets have been crunched, and so you spend your money where it needs to go. I've just come from Baghdad, which is a great, sucking black hole for money as far as newspapers and television stations are concerned. So it is an excuse, because you have to cover Iraq. But I think that more effort could be and should be put into covering places like Africa.
Brian Montopoli: Did the deaths of Paul Douglas and James Brolan and the injury to Kimberly Dozier, who were friends and colleagues of yours, give you any second thoughts about whether it's worth it to keep entering areas like Baghdad?
Allen Pizzey: Yes, very much so. I was very good friends with Paul. We covered Bosnia and Sarajevo together. We'd been in a lot of bad places together. And, yeah, it gave me a lot of second thoughts. I was asked to go back in August, and I said no. That was the first time in my entire life I've said no to an assignment. I just didn't want to be there so soon after they were killed.
You think about it, yeah, because Paul and James were the kind of guys who weren't crazy. They had the same philosophy that I do. I mean, we're all crazy to go to war zones, you take that as a definition, but they had the same philosophy that I do, which is that there are certain risks that aren't worth it. They were doing something that any one of us would have done, 'cause it was within the zone of what we consider acceptable. It makes you think, yeah.
I wrote it the time – I wrote a eulogy to them – something that I've believed for a long time: that if you cover war zones, luck is like a blind trust fund. You can't make deposits, only withdrawals, and you have no idea how much is left until it's gone.
Brian Montopoli: It seems that some reporters, including yourself and CNN's Michael Ware, have really taken umbrage at John McCain's recent comments, essentially saying that there are a lot of neighborhoods where you can walk around relatively safely. Is it fair to say that that really sort of bothered reporters?
Allen Pizzey: Yes. It's disgraceful for a man seeking highest office, I think, to talk utter rubbish. And that is utter rubbish. It's electoral propaganda. It is simply not true. No one in his right mind who has been to Baghdad believes that story.
Now, McCain and some other senators were there on Sunday, and they claimed, "Oh, we walked around for a whole hour…and we drove in from the airport. Gosh, aren't we great, we drove in from the airport." Excuse me, Mr. McCain, you drove in in a large convoy of heavily armed vehicles. The last one had a sign on it saying "Keep back 100 yards. Deadly force authorized." Every single car that they approached or passed pulled over and stopped, because that's the way it is. When one of those security details goes by, every ordinary person gets the hell out of the way, in case they get shot.
If he did walk around that market, and I didn't see him do it, and he didn't announce he was going to do it, you can bet your life there were an awful lot of soldiers deployed to make sure that nobody came near that place. He's talking rubbish. And he should not get away with it.
Brian Montopoli: There used to be a pretty vigorous debate about whether the media is reporting the war through an anti-administration liberal bias lens, though that has died down a little bit of late. How do you feel about that argument?
Allen Pizzey: I dismiss that. Because I think the Bush administration in particular thinks that anything that doesn't wholly support everything they say is against them. And you don't have to support one side or the other. If the administration makes idiotic claims, or claims that are patently, to us on the ground, wrong, why should we not report that they're wrong? All we're doing is reporting what we can see and understand.
Now, no reporter is as objective as we'd like to be. Objectivity is a principle to which we strive to adhere, but we all have our own little biases – our upbringing, our personal political beliefs, whatever touches us in a human way. All of that affects our reporting. But I don't think that we have a particular administration bias. I don't care one way or another. I'm not even American. I just happen to work for Americans. I just do my job.
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See all 63 CommentsThe MSM were clearly lying about Iraq for the last four years since things have really been getting better and better all the time.
Which is why we now have the "surge", which will
make the paradise that is Iraq even better.
Hey look - a painted school.
Posted by acmoreno at 01:51 PM : Apr 05, 2007
Please post a link to these blogs. I'd like to read them. Thanks in advance.
What a crock of manure!
There is so much empirical and anecdotal material showing the MSM bias especially when you talk to troops who are there and I quote this site: http://www.tbo.com/news/opinion/
U.S. Army Command Sgt. Major Benny Hubbard who says: "When I got here [he's with the Corps of Engineers], I found the mission was wholly different from what I saw on television, though I try not to watch CNN,Fox, and ter media outlets. Most everyone you see on television, they're the ones knocking in doors; the Corps' job is to put the door back on the hinges and build infrastructure for the Iraqis."
And to see how biased the MSM is has CBS done a story on this:
Dianne Feinstein has resigned from the Military Construction Appropriations subcommittee. As previously and extensively reviewed in these pages, ...
I found this doing a Google on news with this request: Results 1 - 8 of 8 for "Feinstein resigns".
And there is no systemic, organized MSM bias?
As prior comments have stated most Americans are ignoring CBS et.al., as most Americans according to polls think the MSM is very biased!
This is very disheartening.
Here's another comparison for anti-Iraq War people to consider. Please name one war that met your idealistic standards of no casualties, very low cost, instantaneous postwar rebuilding, the spontaneous incorporation of a new democratic government, and the total lack of deadender holdouts attempting to delay the inevitable.
Gee, suddenly Iraq doesn't look that bad for a WAR, does it?
Colbert said all information has a liberal bias, but really, you guys don%u2019t HAVE to prove him right.
For your teeth-grinding amusement, I give you liberal bias. The U.S. embassy's security coordinator wouldn%u2019t sign off on McCain's visit because it was too risky.
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/contentions/index.php/boot/322
And gba7700... are you kidding me? Of course he's seen it! If you weren't paying attention, he just came back from Baghdad. He said he doesn't want to go back because of the recent loss of his two friends there. Why don't you go over there and cover war and see if you're dying to go back. Get over yourself.
Iraqis like Suaada Saadoun?
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/30/world/middleeast/30sectarian.html?hp=&pagewanted=print
Ms. Saadoun was a Sunni Arab living in a Shiite enclave of western Baghdad. A widowed mother of seven, she and her family had been chased out once before. This time, she called American and Kurdish soldiers at a base less than a mile to the east. The men tried to drive away, but the soldiers had blocked the street. They pulled the men out of the car.
"If anything happens to us, they're the ones responsible," said Ms. Saadoun, 49, a burly, boisterous woman in a black robe and lavender-blue head scarf. The Americans shoved the men into a Humvee. Neighbors clapped and cheered as if their soccer team had just won a title.
The next morning, Ms. Saadoun was shot dead while walking by a bakery in the local market.
The final hours of Ms. Saadoun's life reveal the ferocity with which Shiite militiamen are driving Sunni Arabs from Baghdad house by house, block by block, in an effort to rid the capital of them. It is happening even as thousands of additional American troops and Iraqi soldiers have been sent to Baghdad as part of President Bush's so-called surge strategy.
Reporters are asked not to report on progress for fear of insurgent retaliation. *That%u2019s* security?
http://youtube.com/watch?v=6I420_fPM2E
I would be willing to bet that you have never been to Iraq, or personally know anyone who has been there, so neither you nor I know just how fair the reporting is. You're guessing just like me.
Is it safe? Pizzey, who has been in Baghdad in person may times, who lost three colleagues in Baghdad during the last year, claims that it is not safe, that to say it is safe is "talking rubbish." But a bunch of right-wing posters who have never been within five thousand miles of Baghdad are absolutely positive that Pizzey is wrong.
Korla Pundit,
Which dingbat government said "Mission accomplished", stated that oil revenues would pay for the Iraq reconstruction within a year, promised it would pull its troops out within a few years, and declared that the insurgency was "in its last throes."
Yep, the most intellectually and morally bankrupt administration in US history.
Now go back to milking a cow.
You are right most of us have not been within 5,000 miles of Iraq and I dare say that I'm pretty sure you haven't either. You chose to believe, Pizzey. I chose to believe McCain.
Based on McCain track record versus that of the main stream media, I%u2019m pretty comfortable with my choice.
As a member of the military, I can tell you that Iraq is fairly safe; certainly safer than Detroit, Michigan, where there are 18-30 homicides per week in a two square mile radius around Detroit Mercy Hospital. The homicide bombings that the terrorists carry out kill so many people precisely because they're feeling safe enough to go to the markets to shop, going to school to learn, etc. McCain is certainly more right than the reporter; Baghdad is reasonably safe. libs have to stop believing the bunk sold to them by anti-american slimebag reporters that appear on all the networks, like cnn, cbs, abc, nbc. Fox news is slanted too far to the right, but overall it's much closer to the truth than the other networks in terms of accuracy of reporting and impartiality.
If Dearborn is more dangerous than Iraq then it is obviously time to bring the troops home. And it is obvious that the spending on the US military is being wasted and should be used to make our country safer at home.
The logic of the military defies common sense. The generals continually lie to the public and sacrifice our troops to protect their own pensions. The military cannot be trusted any longer. The war has been lost by corrupt and incompetent military leadership. It is time to admit that the enemy that the military cannot even identify are running circles around our tactics and leadership. Wehn you have led your troops into the middle of a minefield, it is not time to call for reinforcements.
"It's not newsworthy until it is bad. For example, there is no more amputation (in Sierra Leone), ... that is not newsworthy."
Rescue dogs eventually get tired and depressed if they find only dead bodies, so trainers will sometimes hide other trainers in a rubble heap and play with the dogs as a reward for a "find." Similarly, we must acknowledge that there is a "Tragedy Threshhold" for how much death and dying there is in Africa and find the new millionaires, and the good times on the Dark Continent. For further reference, Tivo: "Inside Africa" on CNN.
no, of course not. too much trouble; besides, what can *those* people tell us? noooo, what's needed here - for REAL minitruth-approved propaganda - we need to hear the unsourced *opinions* of....another reporter.
that small wee buzzing noise you guys hear? that's you, as you (& your audience) shrink ever smaller to little bitty insect size. preaching only to the choir. and the choir gets smaller every day. what's the analogy wanted? france, 1788? louis and marie droning on about politics to their glitttering court?? that about it? (the "royalty" thing WOULD explain your contempt for real news reporting....)
Major news outlets and networks being objective?Hmm...I thought they were extinct. If the blogs I'm reading are realiable and they appeare to be since the major networks and cable are usually publish/air the same info about 3 weeks later, things in Iraq are growing more peaceful and the people are feeling more confident with each day. Why, a liquor store re-opened in Baghdad the other day. A particularly good sign that Al Quaida has pulled out of that neighborhood. I should think some of those green zone reporting correspondents would be grateful enough to go out and support this grand re-opening. I'd like to suggest that all these wellpaid green zone reporters go out and find those reopened liquor stores, give them some business then sit down try to reevaluate the way they are reporting and why they are so addicted to politically propagandizing
everything with an anti-Bush slant.
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