[lit-ideas] Fair and Gender-Role Balanced FOX News

  • From: Eric Yost <NYCEric@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: Lit-Ideas <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 04 Oct 2004 13:59:56 -0400

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/03/politics/campaign/03fox.html?oref=login

   Fabricated Kerry Posting Leads to Apology From Fox News
By ERIC LICHTBLAU

Published: October 3, 2004


Washington, Oct. 2 - Plenty of news media analysts thought Senator John 
Kerry looked good at Thursday night's presidential debate, but Fox News 
went a step further, posting a made-up news article on its Web site that 
quoted Mr. Kerry as gloating about his fine manicure and his 
"metrosexual" appearance.

Fox News quickly retracted the article, saying in an editor's note on 
its Web site that the article "was written in jest and should not have 
been posted or broadcast.'' It said, "We regret the error, which 
occurred because of fatigue and bad judgment, not malice."


The article, posted on Friday on foxnews.com, was written by Carl 
Cameron, the chief political correspondent for Fox News, and included 
several bogus quotes from Mr. Kerry, supposedly assessing his 
performance in the debate.

"Didn't my nails and cuticles look great? What a good debate!" the 
article quoted Mr. Kerry, the Democratic candidate, as telling his 
supporters in Florida after the event.

"Women should like me! I do manicures," the story also quoted him as 
saying. It also had Mr. Kerry contrasting himself with President Bush: 
"I'm metrosexual - he's a cowboy."

Before the debate, several Fox News commentators remarked on the air 
about how Mr. Kerry had reportedly gotten a manicure that day.

Mr. Cameron has been reprimanded over the incident, said Paul Schur, a 
spokesman for the network. "This was a stupid mistake and a lapse in 
judgment, and Carl regrets it," Mr. Schur said.

He declined to say how Mr. Cameron had been reprimanded or whether 
action had been taken against others at Fox News who reviewed the 
article before it was posted. Mr. Cameron, who is well respected in news 
media circles, declined to discuss the incident when reached on 
Saturday. He is continuing to report from the campaign trail.

The gaffe comes at a time when journalistic errors and lapses both big 
and small have called into question the credibility of a number of major 
news organizations.

Less than two weeks ago, CBS News and Dan Rather - who is a frequent 
target of conservatives who accuse him of liberal bias - apologized for 
a "mistake in judgment" in relying on unsubstantiated documents for a 
report about President Bush's National Guard service.

On Saturday, it was Democrats who were chuckling over the incident at 
Fox News, a network that portrays itself as "fair and balanced" but is 
often accused by liberals of having a pro-Republican bias.

The Kerry campaign sought to turn the Fox retraction against Mr. Bush.

"Fox is doing the right thing by admitting its mistake and correcting 
the record," said Phil Singer, a spokesman for the Kerry campaign. 
"George Bush would be well served to heed the lesson and admit to his 
own mistakes."


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