60 Minutes Chief: Dan Rather’s Work 'Not Even Close to the Standards We Expect'
Sunday’s
Los Angeles Times
had an update on Dan Rather’s continuing lawsuit against CBS News over
what Dan might call the
“forged-memos-to-torpedo-Bush’s-re-election-in-2004 scandal.” Rather
scalded CBS with language he used to save exclusively for
conservatives: “
Their strategy is to string it out, wear me out,
suck the will from me, and make it so painful on the pocketbook that I
want to give up....But I don't think anybody who knows me would say
that there's any give-up in me.”
But media writer Matea Gold said CBS had also “made available
several executives who spoke acidly about the anchor whose work they
once touted.” 60 Minutes executive producer Jeff Fager trashed Rather’s
work as deficient: “
I hate to say it in public, but many of [his] stories were not even close to the standards we expect at 60 Minutes.”
Gold also said that Rather’s pursuit of CBS has brought to light the
fact that the ex-Evening News anchor was turned down for jobs at: ABC,
NBC, CNN, A&E, History, HBO, Discovery and National Geographic.
At one point, National Geographic even hired disgraced ex-CNN reporter Peter Arnett (part of the discredited
Operation Tailwind reporting team), so that one has to really hurt. On the other hand, National Geographic then had to
fire Arnett in 2003
after he appeared on Iraqi state TV during the last days of the Saddam
Hussein regime to claim the U.S. war plan had “failed,” so maybe they
learned from the experience.
Here are some excerpts from Gold’s
August 16 feature on Rather and his lawsuit:
"I think it was hard for him to sit there listening to
the eulogies for Walter Cronkite as the most trusted man in America,
knowing he would never have that," said a former CBS employee who left
the network in the fallout over the Bush story.
Rather is financing his lawsuit alone, at significant expense. But
perhaps more dear has been the personal price. After working for 44
years at CBS, 24 of those as the face of the network, he is now persona
non grata.
At Cronkite's funeral last month, prominent CBS figures filled the
front pews of St. Bartholomew's Church in Midtown Manhattan. Rather sat
apart, about 10 rows back.
He refers to his former CBS colleagues as "our adversaries." CBS is
pushing back at him in increasingly vituperative language. The network
made available several executives who spoke acidly about the anchor
whose work they once touted.
"I just think it's sad that Dan can't do what the rest of the people
involved in this have done, which is stood up and been accountable for
their role in what was a huge embarrassment in the history of the news
division," said Andrew Heyward, the former president of CBS News.
"It's hard to watch," said Jeff Fager, executive producer of "60
Minutes." "It's like he is in some paranoid nightmare where everybody
is out to get him. We're all witnessing the poor guy thrashing around,
tormented.
"I can't for the life of me understand why he's doing this, how he
could turn such a storied career into this train wreck," he added....
Fager said Rather had one of the largest staffs at "60 Minutes," but
much of his work was not well-conceived. "I hate to say it in public,
but many of [his] stories were not even close to the standards we
expect at '60 Minutes,' " Fager said....
The suit has also forced Rather to dredge up details that he'd
probably prefer to keep private, including a round of meetings he had
in spring 2006 with CNN/U.S. President Jon Klein, ABC News President
David Westin and NBC News President Steve Capus, all of whom politely
declined his services. A slew of other networks, including A&E,
History, HBO, Discovery and National Geographic, also turned Rather
down.
The anchor recently extended his deal with HDNet, where he has a
weekly news show, and hopes to work there "as long as I can go." He's
planning a reporting trip to Afghanistan in the coming months.
Rather said he doesn't fret about his legacy. "My record is my
record," he said, ticking off the tent-pole events of the last
half-century that he has covered: the assassination of President
Kennedy, Watergate, the Gulf War, the Iraq war, Tiananmen Square, the
Sept. 11 attacks.
But will this particular story forever overshadow all of that? The
usually loquacious newsman leaned back in his chair, silent for a
moment.
"I have no idea," he said quietly. "Ever is a long time."
—Rich Noyes is Research Director at the Media Research Center.