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Reply #5: As far as that tv station goes, I generally stand behind Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting's take [View All]

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Selatius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-02-07 09:41 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. As far as that tv station goes, I generally stand behind Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting's take
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3107

...

That commercial TV outlets including RCTV participated in the coup is not at question; even mainstream outlets have acknowledged as much. As reporter Juan Forero, Jackson Diehl's colleague at the Washington Post, explained (1/18/07), "RCTV, like three other major private television stations, encouraged the protests," resulting in the coup, "and, once Chávez was ousted, cheered his removal." The conservative British newspaper the Financial Times reported (5/21/07), " officials argue with some justification that RCTV actively supported the 2002 coup attempt against Mr. Chávez."

As FAIR's magazine Extra! argued last November, "Were a similar event to happen in the U.S., and TV journalists and executives were caught conspiring with coup plotters, it’s doubtful they would stay out of jail, let alone be allowed to continue to run television stations, as they have in Venezuela."

When Chávez returned to power the commercial stations refused to cover the news, airing instead entertainment programs—in RCTV's case, the American film Pretty Woman. By refusing to cover such a newsworthy story, the stations abandoned the public interest and violated the public trust that is seen in Venezuela (and in the U.S.) as a requirement for operating on the public airwaves. Regarding RCTV's refusal to cover the return of Chávez to power, Columbia University professor and former NPR editor John Dinges told Marketplace (5/8/07):

What RCTV did simply can't be justified under any stretch of journalistic principles…. When a television channel simply fails to report, simply goes off the air during a period of national crisis, not because they're forced to, but simply because they don't agree with what's happening, you've lost your ability to defend what you do on journalistic principles.

...

(End snip)

If this had been done to a sitting president in the US, that station's broadcasting license would've been revoked as well, because the air waves aren't to be used as political weapons. What RCTV had done would likely not have been allowed to go unpunished in any of the industrialized nations of the world.
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