Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.
America's Media Darling: Osama bin Laden
Also in MediaCulture
Our Media Have Been So Wrong for So Long
Jayne Lyn Stahl
Obama's Triumph Over Media Frivolity
Norman Solomon
The Violent Language of Right-Wing Pundits Poisons Our Democracy
Jeffrey Feldman
What the Pentagon Pundits Were Selling on the Side
Diane Farsetta
ABC's Mickey Mouse Media
Eric Alterman
Wall Street Journal on Brink of Becoming Journalistic Disaster
Dean Starkman
If I asked you which station devoted more attention to Osama bin Laden's latest videotape, your answer would most likely be Al Jazeera. Well, I have news for you. It was FOX News.
FOX dedicated one hour and seven minutes to continuous coverage of Bin Laden's video, only interrupted by commercials. News anchor Shepard Smith read a script of Bin Laden's speech and then interviewed analysts on air for 30 minutes. This was followed by the business news show Your World with host Neil Cavuto, who discussed the effects of Bin Laden's speech on the stock market. Cavuto interviewed analysts for another 30 minutes. Talk show host John Gibson extended the coverage of the Bin Laden story for an additional seven minutes before moving onto other news.
Brigitte Gabriel, author of "Because They Hate: A Survivor of Islamic Terror Warns America" and one of the guests interviewed by Neil Cavuto, told FOX, "He (Bin Laden) knows that it is going to get great publicity right now in the Arabic world. As I'm speaking to you, Arabic television -- Egyptian, Syrian, and Lebanese -- are playing this live."
As I was listening to her, I glanced at the more than two dozen Arab television sets playing in my office. These included four Lebanese television stations (New TV, LBC, NBN and Future), one Egyptian (Al Masriya), the Syrian Arab Republic Television, as well as other Arab satellite channels from Jordan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Libya, and the United Arab Emirates. I was only able to find one 10-minute news segment about Bin Laden on Al Jazeera and another one, less than two minutes long, on Sudan Television.
Meanwhile, the story monopolized American television. Wolf Blitzer, anchor of CNN's The Situation Room, covered the Bin Laden story in four separate news segments of 32 minutes, spread over four hours of air time. In the first 13-minute segment, Blitzer asked Peter Bergen, author of "The Osama Bin Laden I Know: An Oral History of Al Qaeda's Leader" about Bin Laden's beard. Toward the end of the segment, Blitzer turned to commentator Jack Cafferty, saying, "But you notice they groomed him (Bin Laden) a little bit. He doesn't have that gray beard anymore. He's got a little bit of a darker beard."
Blitzer announced that he would air additional segments of Bin Laden's tape. He fulfilled his promise, but only after three hours and dozens of commercials.
After the second video segment, which was six minutes long, with subtitles reading, "Terror Warning" and "Bin Laden's codes of terror," Blitzer asked Peter Bergen about Bin Laden's beard again. The third segment, subtitled "Bin Laden Attack Warning" aired three-and-a-half hours later. Blitzer asked Michael Scheuer, former chief of the Bin Laden unit at the Counterterrorist Center, about Bin Laden's whereabouts. After another half an hour, Blitzer reported on Bush's reactions to Bin Laden's tape.
In contrast, Al Jazeera covered Bin Laden's video in a 10-minute report, at least one or two hours after FOX and CNN had broken the news. This is significant, because it means that Al Jazeera did not think that Bin Laden's tape was important enough to interrupt its regular programming. Instead, Al Jazeera waited until 1:00 p.m., the regular time of its daily news hour.
Although FOX and CNN spent significantly more air time on Bin Laden's latest tape than Al Jazeera did, they still missed the most important point in the entire tape: the reason behind Bin Laden's invitation for Americans to embrace Islam.
While Western analysts interviewed on CNN and FOX were quick to conclude that the reason was religious, Arab analysts interviewed on Al Jazeera reached a different conclusion.
See more stories tagged with: osama bin laden, fox news, al jazeera, media
Jalal Ghazi is the associate producer of the Peabody Award-winning show Mosaic: World News from the Middle East, and the author of the weekly column Eye on Arab Media for New America Media.
Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from MediaCulture! Sign up now »