home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0607>
- <title>
- Dec. 06, 1993: The Arts & Media:Press
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 06, 1993 Castro's Cuba:The End Of The Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 72
- Press
- Easing The Sleaze
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Their style is cheesy, but the hustling tabloid shows have changed
- TV news. Now they want respect.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--Reported by Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles and William Tynan/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> By the time Joey Buttafuoco was sentenced to six months in
- prison for having sex with the teenage girl who later shot his
- wife, most Americans were probably sick to death of the Amy
- Fisher story. But for the syndicated magazine show A Current
- Affair, the courtroom denouement launched the tabloid-TV equivalent
- of Super Bowl week. When the sentence was announced, the show
- had cameras at the Buttafuoco home to monitor wife Mary Jo's
- reaction. When Joey was hauled off to jail, correspondent Steve
- Dunleavy was there to debrief him. Husband and wife were interviewed
- separately throughout the week, then brought together for a
- climactic joint confessional. Conceded Mary Jo: "In my irrational
- moments, I've blamed him." Offered Joey: "I'm no angel, but
- I love her with all my heart."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe it's the November ratings "sweeps"; maybe a lunar convergence
- of high-profile sex-and-crime stories. Whatever the reason,
- the tabloid shows have been in high gear lately. Charges of
- child molestation against Michael Jackson, along with his self-proclaimed
- addiction problem, have sent reporters scurrying across Europe
- in search of the missing superstar. When River Phoenix died,
- Hard Copy was the first to tell the world (through an unnamed
- hospital employee) that the death was probably the result of
- a drug overdose. John Bobbitt, owner of perhaps the most famous
- sex organ in America, told his story to American Journal, the
- newest syndicated magazine show. Inside Edition got an exclusive
- interview with serial killer David ("Son of Sam") Berkowitz.
- Hard Copy responded with its own murderer, John Wayne Gacy,
- convicted of killing 33 young boys.
- </p>
- <p> The tabloid shows are the disreputable stepchildren of TV journalism.
- The Big Three--A Current Affair, Hard Copy and Inside Edition--are scorned by mainstream journalists, dismissed by most
- critics, laughed at by many viewers. Yet when sensational crimes
- and celebrity scandals grab the nation's attention, these are
- the shows that do the spadework, uncover the dirt, get the scoops.
- Their style may be cheesy and their tactics dicey (including
- liberal use of the checkbook), but they are doing a lot of old-fashioned,
- roll-up-your-sleeves journalism. What's more, at a time when
- the network-magazine shows are not only embracing more sensational
- material but also getting into serious trouble for employing
- some irresponsible techniques (as in Dateline NBC's use of explosive
- charges to hype a report on safety problems in General Motors
- pickup trucks)--these second-class citizens of the news world
- believe they can legitimately demand respect.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, they are eagerly seeking it. All three dominant
- shows are attempting to downplay their sensationalistic aspects
- and be taken seriously. The main reason can be traced, as usual,
- to the bottom line: many blue-chip advertisers are reluctant
- to be associated with sensation-seeking shows, and stations
- have expressed their concerns to the companies that distribute
- them. "These programs have never had much of a problem attracting
- viewers," says John Rohr of Blair Television, which represents
- local stations. "The problem is selling the ad time."
- </p>
- <p> A Current Affair, the six-year-old pioneer of the genre, whose
- ratings have been sinking, has been trying to clean up its act
- for the past couple of seasons. Greg Meidel, president of Twentieth
- Television, the show's syndicator, admits that in past years
- the show "stepped over the line of what is in good taste." Now,
- he says, the emphasis is on harder news--stories "that you
- would find on page two or three of any major newspaper." Hard
- Copy, the four-year-old competitor from Paramount TV, this fall
- brought in two new executive producers--both women--and
- is emphasizing a broader range of stories, from the Malibu fires
- to an investigation of animal abuse at a Wisconsin puppy farm.
- "If you look back at Hard Copy over the years, you'd find a
- tremendous amount of stories about strippers and the terrible
- things that happened to them," says co-executive producer Linda
- Bell Blue. "You won't see them on this show anymore."
- </p>
- <p> Inside Edition, produced by King World, continues to garner
- the strongest ratings of the three by taking the high road,
- stressing investigative stories that are sometimes (the show's
- producers like to point out) pursued later by the network magazine
- shows. Two months before Dateline NBC ran its report on General
- Motors' pickup trucks, the same story was covered on Inside
- Edition--without the exploding gas tank. The tabloid show
- also raised questions about the fund-raising activities of TV
- evangelist Robert Tilton well before the same topic was covered
- (in considerably more depth) by ABC's PrimeTime Live.
- </p>
- <p> Which is not to say the tabloids have become clones of 60 Minutes.
- A typical week on the tabloid-TV beat is a festival of hype
- and humbug, titillation and voyeurism, hidden cameras and ambush
- interviews. A Current Affair, still the tawdriest of the trio,
- recently sent a married couple to a "desert island," where a
- camera spent the week eavesdropping as the pair tried to work
- out their love problems. Hard Copy did a story about a deranged
- woman who was "stalking" Jacqueline Onassis; two weeks later,
- with a blithe lack of irony, Hard Copy was the stalker, airing
- hidden-camera footage of her on the anniversary of President
- Kennedy's assassination. Even Inside Edition's vaunted investigative
- reports all too often dwell on the seamy (organized sex tours
- to Asia) and the trivial (David Letterman's speeding tickets).
- </p>
- <p> Though the mainstream press increasingly covers such stories,
- the tabloids play by a different, looser set of rules. For one
- thing, they are not news shows but unabashed entertainment,
- with no obligation to cover "important" stories--only those
- likely to draw a big audience. For another, they pay for many
- of their stories. The amounts are escalating sharply. A few
- years ago, sums of $10,000 or $20,000 were enough to land exclusive
- interviews with major newsmakers. But Inside Edition reportedly
- paid $300,000 for the Berkowitz interview. (The money was actually
- paid to a free-lance producer who arranged the interview, not
- to Berkowitz.) A Current Affair is believed to have paid the
- Buttafuocos $500,000 for its weeklong exclusive. Several hundred
- dollars is the going rate for what one tabloid source describes
- as "trained seals"--experts who go on camera to corroborate
- charges and add credibility.
- </p>
- <p> The free-spending ways of the tabloid shows have had a widespread
- impact. Network reporters trying to land an interview are now
- accustomed to fielding one question up front: "How much will
- you pay?" The networks claim they do not pay for interviews,
- though tabloid sources insist that such payments are often disguised
- as "consultant fees" to freelance producers or as purchases
- of video footage. The tabloids too are suffering the consequences
- of their checkbook journalism. In the wake of the Michael Jackson
- child-abuse charges, people started coming out of the woodwork
- offering dubious tales of other alleged abuse involving the
- singer--for a price. "Ironically, even the people who'll say
- good things about Michael Jackson want to get paid," says a
- tabloid source.
- </p>
- <p> These shows sometimes draw the line. Hard Copy was offered pictures
- of River Phoenix in his casket but turned them down. Among the
- other offers Hard Copy has passed on: $50,000 for an interview
- with Charles Manson.
- </p>
- <p> Tabloid producers contend that these payments are not as widespread
- as frequently assumed and that many scoops still come the old-fashioned
- way--by hard work. Despite a claim that Hard Copy paid $1,000
- for its newsmaking peek last August at a social worker's report
- on the molestation charge against Jackson, reporter Diane Dimond
- describes spending three hours in a Santa Monica bar copying
- every word of the 25-page file in longhand. (She could not legally
- take away the original, which documented the plaintiff's story.)
- "I didn't pay one dime on the Jackson story," says Dimond, "and
- everybody in the world is now following us."
- </p>
- <p> Even when they do pay for stories, tabloid producers insist,
- the practice is used carefully and does not compromise credibility.
- Inside Edition anchor Bill O'Reilly argues that paying for interviews
- is a legitimate way of competing with the networks, whose offer
- of prime-time national exposure carries more clout. "To level
- the playing field, we have to offer incentives to some people
- to come on our air." Some journalistic watchdogs agree that
- the traditional stigma against pay-for-play reporting may be
- breaking down--and for good reason. "It's hard to argue that
- the ordinary person shouldn't share in the benefit of what's
- going to be a commercial product," says Everette Dennis, executive
- director of Columbia University's Freedom Forum Media Studies
- Center.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever their ethics or methods, the tabloid shows are clearly
- having a major impact. Parochial crime stories, once confined
- to the local paper's front page and the 11 o'clock news, now
- become national obsessions. There's still a major difference
- between the smash-and-grab tactics of the tabloids and the relatively
- sober treatment these stories usually get on the networks. But
- it's no longer possible to deny that the two genres increasingly
- mirror each other across their divide.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-