Difference between revisions of "Dan Rather"

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== References ==
 
== References ==
 
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==External Links==
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*[http://www.aim.org/wls/author/dan-rather/ What Liberals Say - Dan Rather], [[Accuracy In Media]]
  
 
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Revision as of 11:58, May 26, 2008

Dan Rather (b. October 31, 1931) was the anchor of the CBS Evening News for twenty-four years, until his retirement in March 2005. He also contributed to the show "60 Minutes". Rather covered many important events during his twenty-four years, and was known for his coverage of Nixon in the Watergate Affair and of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. He has been accused of having a liberal bias, and retired suddenly under a cloud after the scandal known as "Rathergate" was exposed. In September 2007, Rather sued CBS News for $70 million, claiming that they gave him insufficient airtime on 60 Minutes after forcing him to step down as anchor of the CBS Evening News in March 2005.[1]

Rathergate

In September 2004, the middle of the presidential election, Rather claimed on "60 Minutes" that he had authentic typed documents from the 1970's which called into question Bush's National Guard service. These documents were almost immediately questioned in blogs to be forgeries based on font and script print that was not available to typewriters of that time period. Indeed, it appeared to be written in Microsoft Word, a program that did not exist at the time the documents claimed to have been written. Instead of admitting the documents may have to be looked at further, the initial response of Rather and CBS was to stick to their guns that they were genuine.
"As a standard practice at CBS, each of the documents broadcast on "60 Minutes" was thoroughly investigated by independent experts and we are convinced of their authenticity"
Indeed, CBS had actually been warned by some of the people they interviewed for the story that the document they were talking about was probably a forgery, but they were dismissed as 'pro-Bush'. Only when it was overwhelmingly apparent that they were shoddy forgeries, did CBS and Rather relent. CBS and Rather later apologized for running the story, but their obstinance in light of the building evidence had already done its damage.[2][3][4].

The documents were reviewed by experts who decided that the documents were false, and that CBS was negligent in airing them.[5][6][7] Four CBS employees were later fired over the controversy, including the Senior Vice President, and many suspect that Rather retired in order to avoid the same fate.[8]

Some have said that Rather intentionally ran the story in order to influence the election. Others claim that the rush to be the first to break the story was the reason behind the false documents inclusion, and that they were not intentionally used for political purposes. A senior official of the Kerry campaign made a phone call to the man who was the source of the false documents four days before they were aired, a rather odd coincidence. Republicans have pointed to this as a conspiracy.[9] Kerry claimed that his employee did nothing wrong.[10] A few desperate Democrats tried to blame Karl Rove, but apart from a knee-jerk accusation to deflect attention, there was no evidence.[11]

References

  1. Rather’s Lawsuit Says CBS Made Him a ‘Scapegoat’, New York Times, 20 Sept 2007. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  2. Dan Rather Statement On Memos, CBS News, 20 Sept 2004. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  3. '60 Minutes' Bush Guard Documents Questioned, NewsMax.com, 9 Sept 2004. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  4. '60 Minutes': Witness Who Contradicted Forged Docs Was Too 'Pro-Bush' , NewsMax.com, 11 Sept 2004. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  5. Document Experts Say CBS Ignored Memo 'Red Flags' , The Washington Post, 15 Sept 2004. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  6. Some Question Authenticity of Papers on Bush, The Washington Post, 10 Sept 2004. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  7. Appendix 4: Panel Observations Peter Tytell's Analysis of Typestyle Issues (PDF), CBS News. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  8. CBS Ousts 4 For Bush Guard Story, CBS News, 10 Jan 2005. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  9. Parties lob accusations over suspect papers, USAToday, 21 Sept 2004. Accessed 20 Nov 2007.
  10. [1], Washington Times.
  11. [2], Washington Times.

External Links