Post by dgriffin on Oct 24, 2009 23:40:50 GMT -5
Tiff over White House camera crew and Fox
By DAVID BAUDER (AP)
NEW YORK — The Obama administration allowed a Fox News Channel reporter to interview Treasury Department "pay czar" Kenneth Feinberg after other network news executives said they wouldn't use a pool arrangement to speak to him unless Fox was included.
The dispute over the interview on Thursday comes in the midst of an ongoing battle between the White House and Fox over the network's coverage of President Barack Obama.
The White House said it had received requests from TV networks to speak to Feinberg and had asked that the interviews be recorded through the networks' pool arrangement. The pool is set up and paid for by ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN and Fox to save time and resources, so a single camera crew can record interviews done by separate network correspondents.
The White House said Fox had not asked for an interview and the White House sent its request for a pool reporter without including Fox. Bureau chiefs held a quick conference call and decided that their networks would not do the interviews unless Fox was given the opportunity, said a network executive who spoke on condition of anonymity because the person did not wish to be a part of the White House-Fox tiff.
After this decision was relayed, the White House quickly agreed to include Fox, the person said Friday.
"The White House has demonstrated our willingness to exclude Fox from ... television interviews," administration spokesman Joshua Earnest said Friday, "but yesterday we didn't."
Fox representatives Irena Brigant and Dana Klinghoffer did not immediately return a phone call and e-mails seeking comment. In an on-air report, Fox said that the administration had specified that "all members of the pool were welcome except for Fox News."
In its report, Fox said the White House "relented" after the pool's decision.
www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5grZ9qgSRNN5sAMW8smsQXGMwrwzgD9BH47R02
This is bad stuff, folks. Whether or not you're a Fox fan, the squabble is bound to affect the quality of White House reporting. Fox News is a business, just like the other news organizations, and can hardly afford to shoot themselves in the foot and engage in a range war with the White House. Eventually it'll be over, but Fox and the other networks will be a little more careful in the future and the Presidential Fanboys will be just a little bit tougher to deal with, and we'll all be served a little bit less of the facts from either side.