home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1775>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: The Busybodies on the Bus
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 23
- COVER STORIES
- The Busybodies on the Bus
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As reporters feed lower on the news chain, public figures face
- shifting standards for their private conduct
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson
- </p>
- <p> Society's busiest busybodies are in the press, where,
- under cover of the Constitution, they expose, scold and ridicule
- public figures, and sometimes win Pulitzer Prizes for it. In the
- putative national interest, reporters have taken on the roles
- of mother superior, party boss, neighborhood snoop and cop on
- the beat. No one knows exactly what the moral code is, but
- anyone who runs for office, or otherwise pre-empts public
- attention, violates it at his peril.
- </p>
- <p> We do know, however, that in its police function the press
- relies less on the Constitution than on the Ten Commandments,
- although not all of them. "Thou shalt not steal" is much less
- interesting than "Thou shalt not commit adultery." Until
- recently, the cautious public figure searching for a baseline
- against which to measure his conduct could look to the Gary Hart
- scandal of 1987. Roughly translated, the Hart standard meant
- that the conduct in question had to be verified, reckless,
- substantial and current, by a candidate running for President.
- The challenge Follow Me was optional.
- </p>
- <p> Then came former Senator John Tower of Texas, who was
- rejected as Secretary of Defense in part for decades-old,
- unverifiable boozy womanizing. As for drug use, the other major
- area of press scrutiny, Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas
- provides the most current guide. It is no longer disqualifying
- to have smoked marijuana as a student, especially if it was an
- experiment and was not enjoyed. Anyone who smoked in Vietnam
- actually scores points with the press.
- </p>
- <p> But the hurdles change often: as competition for
- advertising spins out of control, the mainstream press is
- increasingly willing to feed lower on the news chain. This
- spring NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw, slumming as host of a
- prime-time show called Expose, dusted off a seven-year-old story
- alleging that Virginia Senator Charles Robb had spent an evening
- at a hotel with a former beauty queen and attended parties where
- drugs were used. Once it knew that Brokaw was going with the
- story, the Washington Post, which had decided against running
- it before, took the clothespin off its nose and played the story
- on the front page.
- </p>
- <p> Brookings Institution analyst Stephen Hess likens the
- lowered standards to "a tabloid-laundering operation in which
- respectable news organizations get into a story through the back
- door by reporting on a tabloid's reporting on a story." The
- value of Brokaw, a respected pro who wins journalism awards and
- dines at the White House, in such a cleanup operation is high.
- In April, Brokaw sanitized the use of the name of the alleged
- Palm Beach rape victim in the William Smith case under the
- guise of reporting on the ethics of a supermarket scandal sheet,
- which had used the name first. This purified the issue
- sufficiently for the New York Times, which ran a lurid profile
- of the woman the next day, violating most of the newspaper's
- rules about printing unsubstantiated charges from unnamed
- sources and naming victims in rape cases. Other publications,
- which would not take their cues from a tabloid but which felt
- noble taking them from the Times, followed suit.
- </p>
- <p> Reporters in Washington held their collective breath last
- week wondering who, if anyone, would perform the laundering
- service for the vicious story in a gay magazine claiming that
- a Pentagon official is homosexual. The Los Angeles-based
- Advocate tried to get publicity for itself by offering an
- advance copy of the piece to major news outlets that would agree
- to run it. Although the individual has not been antigay or
- hypocritical or done any of the other things gay groups use as
- excuses for "outing" people, Jack Anderson broke the story in
- his syndicated column, deciding that being first was better than
- being right.
- </p>
- <p> The Washington Times last week lobbed a pre-emptive strike
- against Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton, warning that his private
- life will be fair game if he decides to run for President. The
- main inspiration for the paper is political gadfly Robert
- ("Say") McIntosh, a Little Rock restaurateur known as the
- "Sweet Potato Pie King," who is trying to stir up trouble for
- Clinton in Arkansas, handing out rumormongering leaflets.
- </p>
- <p> In the world of moral shakedown, all sources--bored
- beauty queens who want to be models, models who want to flack
- for No Excuses jeans--are unimpeachable, and no sexual charge
- is too old or trivial to pass up. If the country loses the
- candidacy of one of the nation's most successful Governors to
- moral terrorism, the press may yet come to see that there is
- more to journalism than moving product, no matter how heated the
- competition. But so far, with only slightly fewer correspondents
- assigned to the alleged Palm Beach rape case than to the Moscow
- summit, there seems no end to busybodying in sight.
- </p>
- <p> Few would argue for a return to the John Kennedy standard,
- where reporters enjoyed nudging each other over the President's
- affairs but didn't feel the public had a right to know. For the
- President, the standard must be high: there are no off-hours,
- and wars can start in the middle of the night. But there is a
- moral statute of limitations, a sense of proportion, that still
- applies.
- </p>
- <p> Not every aspiring candidate who has his picture taken
- with his wife puts his sexual history into play. The public
- looked at Hart's egregious pattern of conduct and,
- understandably, had qualms about what it revealed about the man
- who would be President. Hart, after all, flaunted his affairs
- and taunted the press to expose him. But the specter of the
- press pursuing the issue of whether Robb got a massage or
- something more from the former Miss Virginia, as if there were
- a Pulitzer at stake, makes the public wonder why the reporters
- aren't off sorting out the savings and loan scandal. Who among
- the busybodies can know what really happens behind a closed
- door, inside a marriage or in the human heart, or what it means?
- Uncovering an affair a public official may have had tells us
- that he's not perfect. But not much more.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-