October 26, 2009 12:42 PM

Obama Seeks to Both Engage and Slam Media

By
CBSNews
(AP)  The same president who aggressively harnesses the power of the press to promote his agenda has taken to lacing his comments with criticisms of the media, with no bigger target than the gabby culture of cable television.

President Barack Obama's critique is biting: The media prefer conflict over cooperation, encourage bad behavior and weaken the ability of leaders to help the nation.

The White House's attempt to discredit Fox News, owned by Rupert Murdoch and popular with conservatives, as an arm of the Republican Party may have been getting the headlines, but it is only one recent window into Obama's already complex and crafty relationship with those who cover him.

All of Obama's frustration comes as he not only welcomes the ratings-mad media's constant demand for his presence, but also aggressively seeks maximum exposure to serve his own agenda.

He went on the nightly TV shows hosted by David Letterman and Jay Leno. He's held as many nightly news conferences in his first six months as George W. Bush and Bill Clinton did in eight years, and conducted far more interviews than either had at this point in their presidencies. He is the first Oval Office occupant to do five Sunday morning talk political shows in a one day.

In essence, Obama's strategy is not to tame the media to his liking or blame it for his troubles. It is both.

Obama defends independent reporting as vital to society. He touts the value of providing more openness to the public and accountability by government - indeed, it was one of his more prominent campaign promises.

And then, he's the media's chief critic.

Lamenting the rise of instant commentary at a memorial for CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite, Obama said that "What happened today?" is now replaced with "Who won today?"

Complete coverage of Walter Cronkite from CBSNews.com

"The public debate cheapens," he said. "The public trust falters. We fail to understand our world or one another as well as we should - and that has real consequences in our own lives in the life of our nation." (More on Obama's comments at Cronkite's memorial)

Sometimes the compliments and condemnation come in practically the same breath.

"The 24-hour news cycle and cable television and blogs and all this, they focus on the most extreme elements on both sides," Obama told CBS News, echoing those comments in the three more network interviews that made up his Sunday show blitz last month.

Blaming the media is almost tradition among politicians. It helps Obama by bonding him with his audience against a common target: the influential press, which many people consider to be biased or untrustworthy. But it does carry a risk of backfiring by elevating Obama's critics or making the White House look petty for pinning its problems on the press corps.

The president is sophisticated about what attracts coverage, what's in the media each day, and why. Unlike Bush, who publicly claimed little interest in news from papers or TV, Obama dives into it.

Aides say he reads four or five newspapers each morning. He catches bits of TV coverage on the sets around the Oval Office. Obama also goes online, has articles flagged for him by staff, reads news magazines on Air Force One and likes to hear which stories have aides buzzing.

So though he often does not differentiate in his criticism among the "media," he's well aware it is actually a diverse mix of print, TV, radio, and Web that is hardly homogenous in its choices about what story to cover or how.

But with more than 70 percent of Americans saying television is their main source of national and international news, according to a Pew Research survey, it's clear that Obama and his advisers are most riled by what's on nonstop cable.

With its hours and hours of TV time to fill, cable news and punditry can whip up public debate and then cause spillover coverage in other forms of media.

Senior White House leaders still mock the front-page coverage given to whether Obama's back-to-school speech to the nation's students was an attempt to indoctrinate them. Obama was openly incredulous over the media's minute-by-minute anticipation of Obama's so-called "beer summit" with a policeman and a professor at the center of a racial controversy.

And when Obama gave a major speech to Congress on health care policy, the coverage for days centered on Joe Wilson, the South Carolina lawmaker who had heckled Obama by shouting "You lie!"

"You've got to be careful about them cable networks," Obama cautioned a man at a Montana town hall who had just told him that cable was his main source of news. Earlier at that same event, Obama had pointed out that only the town halls where tempers were flaring were getting covered. "TV loves a ruckus," he told the crowd.

"If you replaced just a portion of the back and forth on something like Joe Wilson with coverage of the issue and some real discussion about what was at stake..." White House press secretary Robert Gibbs wished aloud.

The irritation has reached another level recently over Fox News, which Obama and his aides have brazenly tried to marginalize by calling it a Republican outlet that shouldn't be treated like a real news network. Yet publicly singling out one news organization is but the most highly publicized push-back from an Obama White House that began back during last year's campaign building a reputation for aggressively confronting reporters over stories it doesn't like and using hardball tactics to try to get its way.

CBS Evening News: President Obama's Feud with Fox News

Not to be lost in Obama's pique, however, is that he has a point, said Jill Geisler, a former broadcaster who teaches leadership at the Poynter Institute, a nonprofit school for journalists. Noise makes news. Nuance often does not.

"I think each of us in journalism must ask: Are we contributing to a deeper understanding of complex issues?" she said.

Predictably, Obama's media coverage has turned more negative since the start of his term.

That reflects the partisan tensions in Washington, series setbacks on many of his top agenda items, and the traditional adversarial, watchdog role of the White House press corps.

But even presidents who start with glowing press coverage always end up complaining about how they get beat up, said Martha Joynt Kumar, a political science professor at Towson University who studies White House communications.

"The press is there as a surrogate for the public, to ask the questions the public wants answers for," Kumar said. "Their job is not to stand there and provide him an opportunity to talk on any subject he wants."

AP
Add a Comment
by endurorob_5 October 26, 2009 1:56 PM EDT
Look at their staff, Roger Ailes, former Nixon staffer, Karl Rove!.....Karl Rove, fair and balanced? If you believe that you are either a republican or a four year old. How about staging those ridiculous "tea parties". Since when does a "news" organization, organize protests? Then go cover the protest....with Faux News producers whipping up the crowd prior to putting them on television, to make sure they are fair and balanced I guess.



Look at their contributors and you will also find many liberals.
Reply to this comment
by lightningF October 26, 2009 12:58 PM EDT
Be aware of silencing your critics,when you have only yes people on your side your fall will be fatal.
Reply to this comment
by johndevinejr October 26, 2009 12:41 PM EDT
President Obama is correct in singling out Faux News. They are clearly the propaganda arm of the republican party. During the Bush Administration they often used White House talking points verbatim. It was almost like they cleared everything though the Administration.

Look at their staff, Roger Ailes, former Nixon staffer, Karl Rove!.....Karl Rove, fair and balanced? If you believe that you are either a republican or a four year old. How about staging those ridiculous "tea parties". Since when does a "news" organization, organize protests? Then go cover the protest....with Faux News producers whipping up the crowd prior to putting them on television, to make sure they are fair and balanced I guess.

Faux News certainly has the right to say whatever they want to say, but that doesn't mean they shouldn't suffer the consequences of the things that they say.
Reply to this comment
by endurorob_5 October 26, 2009 12:13 PM EDT
"The press is there as a surrogate for the public, to ask the questions the public wants answers for," Kumar said. "Their job is not to stand there and provide him an opportunity to talk on any subject he wants."



And that is Obama's problem. He wants the press to sit and listne and only ask polite questions about the family dog.
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