Articles of impeachment were filed against Dick Cheney yesterday, and the LA Times just had two paragraphs on A15 even though it was the first time in history a vice president had been impeached. The managing editor tries to defend their token coverage.
What's missing from yesterday's front page?
Articles of impeachment were filed on Dick Cheney, probably for the first time for a vice president in American history, and the Los Angeles Times could only muster two paragraphs buried on A15, while legalizing abortion in Mexico City merited front page coverage.
Kucinich's impeachment effort is important not just for Cheney's past sins, but for what he and Bush still want to do: bomb Iran. At best, this would lead to Iran unleashing terrorists on us and Israel. At worst, it could spark a nuclear war with China and Russia since they have told us to butt the hell out.
I haven't written these guys in a while, but I had an interesting exchange last time (I even got Greg Palast involved), so I thought it was worth a shot.
My past exchanges:
Arnold & Enron
Response on Arnold & Enron
The editor's mistakes on his own paper's coverage
Editor's mistake on pending Enron lawsuit
Greg Palast weighs in on LA Times, Enron, & Arnold
Same editor on electronic voting
Exchange with head editor on generally vapid content
Here's how it's gone so far this time:
FROM: Professor Smartass
TO: Leo.Wolinsky@latimes.com, john.montorio@latimes.com, douglas.frantz@latimes.com, melissa.mccoy@latimes.com
(the managing editors and one layer below them)
SUBJECT: Why only token coverage of Cheney Impeachment?
Why did articles of impeachment filed against Dick Cheney by Dennis Kucinich only warrant two briefs paragraphs?
Your headlines above the fold today are on legalized abortion in Mexico City, another story on Virginia Tech that is more personal interest than news, and a power struggle in the Baath Party, who aren't a major player in Iraq anymore. Are those more important than articles of impeachment against Cheney? How many front page stories did you do on impeaching Clinton?
When was the last time a vice president was impeached?
When were such serious charges raised against a vice president or president?
Don't you think this warrants a little more coverage given the tax dollars and lives the actions of the Bush administration has cost us?
FROM: Leo Wolinsky (managing editor)
TO: Professor Smartass
SUBJECT: RE: Why only token coverage of Cheney Impeachment?
At this point there is no indication that this effort has substantial support. If it does gain momentum we will certainly write a great deal about it. But our job is to determine which stories have the most impact at the time they happen. I do appreciate your views on this and we'll watch the effort closely.
Best,
Leo Wolinsky
FROM: Professor Smartass
TO: Leo Wolinsky
SUBJECT: Whose support for impeachment of Cheney are you waiting for?
Whose support are you waiting for?
Public support for impeaching Bush is already nearly double what it was for impeaching and removing Clinton at the height of all that hype according to the Wall Street Journal.
Don't regular people like your readers count or do we have to be advertisers or major investors in the Tribune Group?
FROM: Leo Wolinsky
TO: Professor Smartass
SUBJECT: RE: Whose support for impeachment of Cheney are you waiting for?
If the support of the public is there, this will become evident quickly and I can assure you we will cover the story.
Rather than berate the mainstream media, we should take this as a challenge to get this on their radar. So go to the post office, buy a pack of five postcards, and send one to your congressman with these three words on it:
SUPPORT
CHENEY
IMPEACHMENT
You can find your congressman's address here:
http://www.house.gov/...
Remember to put a return address on it, so they know you are a constituent.
Send the other four postcards to the managing editor of your local paper and any TV news you want with these three words:
COVER
CHENEY
IMPEACHMENT