Over the weekend, as the media focused on the third anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq, the White House played “blame the messenger.”
Dick Cheney said, “There is a constant sort of perception, if you will, that’s created because what’s newsworthy is the car bomb in Baghdad.” (He didn’t say, “Look at all the cars that didn’t explode,” but he came close.) For that matter, Donald Rumsfeld added, “Fortunately, history is not made up of daily headlines, blogs on Web sites or the latest sensational attack.”
ABC News correspondent Jake Tapper told CNN yesterday that he tried to do a good-news story. In fact, as a sign of the new freedoms enjoyed in Iraq, Tapper was going to do a feature on a new Iraqi sitcom. It didn’t go well.
Tapper: We wanted to do a story about the freedom of the press in Iraq, and we went to the set of a new Iraqi sitcom that they’re filming, because there’s been -there’s all this entertainment now, and it’s one of the things that the ambassador there has trumpeted.
Howard Kurtz: So what happened?
Tapper: We got there, and the guy who had set it up with us, we shot, we shot for a little while, and the guy who had helped us arrange it was assassinated the very morning while we were there on the set. And so our cameras were rolling while the director and the producer and the cast and crew found out that the guy that had green-lit the show and the guy that had set up our being there was killed. So no matter how hard we try to cover the positive, the violence has a way of rearing its head.
Indeed, it does.