Moonie Journalism

McNichol, Tom

Moonie Journalism by Tom McNichol At The Washington Times, it's better than you might think Last November, an unusual thing happened to The Washington Times, no stranger to the unusual. In...

...In what has become a familiar pattern, those still at the Times say it's a matter of a disgruntled employee crying "Moon...
...When the Post's sports section came out with a prominently played story this past summer saying that former quarterback Joe Theismann had a drinking problem, the Times didn't hop on the bandwagon, so to speak...
...Very early in the game, the Koreans got the word that the best way to influence public opinion was to have their paper resemble everyone The Times is trying to bury its Moonie image scoop by journalistic scoop...
...While the Times should get credit for devoting so much space to commentary, the chief weakness of the section continues to be its utter lack of dramatic tension...
...Within a week of its debut, a coalition of black organizations staged what would be a three-month long protest against the Post, dumping copies of the magazine on the doorstep of the paper's office building every Sunday afternoon...
...And the Times's headlines seem calculated to make the right-wing salivate...
...Some of them have told us that if we had a different ownership wed advertise in [the Times] tomorrow," says de Borchgrave...
...bombing raid when, it turns out, he was still in Libya...
...ownership controversy, scoop by journalistic scoop, the Times has found that the job might be done better with a 10-ton earth mover...
...For instance, in 1984, when the Post prominently mentioned the Times in a series on the Unification Church, the Times quickly countered with its own "investigative" series, "Inside the Post...
...In contrast to the great, grey Post, the Times makes liberal use of color, probably the only thing it does liberally...
...On issues such as welfare, minority hiring, and Martin Luther King Jr:s place in history, Wades views are not very different from those shared by most white country club conservatives...
...His views are simpatico with those of Colonel Hi Bo Pak, the chief executive officer of the Times's holding company, and a man who has loftier ambitions than conquering suburban markets...
...As evidence mounted that Gorbachev's reforms were at least as substantive as any seen recently, the Times regrouped...
...Even when the Times is wrong, it can be an important player in Washington...
...Of late, the most ridiculous Russian word for the Times is "glasnost ." When the term first surfaced in the national press, the Times went out of its way to pooh-pooh the notion that the Soviets are capable of change—glasnost was nothing but a smokescreen...
...Even on less subtantive, but juicier, sidelights to the Barry story, the kind of gossip that is the Post's trademark, the Times has fared better, for instance beating the Post by days on the mayor's strange visit to the apartment of a young part-time model, Grace Shell...
...Since launch, the Times has cost its parent company, News World Communications, between $200 and $250 million...
...The Moon and the Star While many Unification Church papers, particularly The New York City Tribune, are dressedup propaganda sheets produced almost exclusively by church followers, theTimes's reporters are mostly professional journalists, though a few Moonie holdovers from the paper's earlier days remain in the newsroom...
...Already the owners have spilled twice as much red ink as Time Inc...
...This sort of thinking saves a lot of worrying about treaty verification...
...Now whether or not they'll be successful I think is another thing...
...Indeed, the Times made prominent note of Mandela's statement that, faced with the choice, he would prefer communism to apartheid...
...As if that hadn't covered all the bases, an item later in the month declared that a semantic engineer had determined that the correct translation for "glasnost" is not "openness" but instead "ballyhoo...
...Because syndication companies favor the Post's big circulation and better name, the Times misses first-run conservative columnists such as William Buckley, and first-run comics such as Bloom County...
...The Times's headlineorth's lawyer slams Inouye's personal slurs"—not only missed the story but telegraphed its bias...
...The Sulzbergers and Grahams may have skeletons in their closets, but you don't see them marrying off their progeny in Madison Square Garden...
...But the Times has tried hard to give its pages life...
...In fiscal 1987-88, the company will blow $30 million on Insight, a national weekly newsmagazine...
...Cutbacks have already taken a big bite out of the Times's foreign bureaus and have prevented it from hir-, ing all of the reporters it would like for the expanded paper that debuted in September...
...The Miami Herald, for instance, has been excoriated by Miami CubanAmericans...
...According to market research, uncluttered layout and color appeal to a wide range of readers, blacks among them...
...The federal bureaucracy, a beat often given short shrift at the Post, has been taken seriously by the Times...
...Misled by intelligence sources, the Times reported that Muammar Qaddafi had fled to Yemen after the U.S...
...Moonie Journalism by Tom McNichol At The Washington Times, it's better than you might think Last November, an unusual thing happened to The Washington Times, no stranger to the unusual...
...Even if a Democratic president sends the Moonies packing, de Borchgrave insists the Times will survive...
...the Times doesn't even publish on weekends...
...The Times is at its crankiest in the Commentary section, not just an op-ed page but a full pull-out section each day...
...For a paper that pays handsome salaries, the Times is curiously penny-conscious, recently offering all employees a small cash stipend for each new subscription they gather...
...According to one administration official, quoted in The Washington Post, Reagan became disturbed when he read a headline in his favorite paper, the Times, saying that the joint committee held a "Smoking Gun...
...More importantly, the occupant of the White House will change...
...On Labor Day, the Metro and Business sections expanded, given their own front "faces" (previously, the sections had been buried inside the paper...
...This] paper's not going to close down," he says...
...Several times it has paid off with a big story, notably the defection of KGB official Vitaly Dzurtchenko...
...corporations trading with the Soviet Union: "So, while the Soviets push dope to destroy virtually every pillar of American society, these American businesses, and many others, are doing everything they can to strengthen the economy of the nation that is trying to murder us...
...Not only are many of the Star alums conservative, like their bosses, but they also share an almost pathological hatred of the Post, the liberal nemesis that put them on the street and lacked the good sense to offer them jobs...
...Often, they're as biased as any from William Randolph Hearst's Journal American...
...That was certainly the case last July when the chairman of the Iran-contra committee, Senator Daniel Inouye, appeared on "Face the Nation...
...Several of Mayor Marion Barry's top aides are in jail, and while Barry himself has not been formally charged with any crime, he has had to deny a host of accusations, including graft, drug abuse, and a relationship with a convicted drug dealer...
...The fact that nearly every hawker is black may reinforce the perception that the Times is a "black" paper...
...Obviously, that's been an impediment ." Some believe the next two years could go a long way toward deciding the fate of the Times...
...Indeed, if you were to visit the Times's building and then USA Today's lobby, which is dominated by a huge bust of owner Allen Neuharth, you would have a tough time deciding which one was owned by a cult leader...
...Such snarling has yet to hurt the Post, whose 796,000 circulation is roughly eight times that of the Times...
...While acknowledging that their stories are right-leaning, Times editors insist that they are not unfair...
...the other, a piece by Post columnist Richard Cohen that seemed to side with local shopkeepers who refused to admit young, black males because they are statistically more likely to shoplift...
...Brimming with quotes from unnamed conservatives in Congress and the administration, it read like a legal brief against Nitze's nomination...
...One of the best ways conservatives have found to press their own agenda is to leak a story to the Times as a sort of pre-emptive strike...
...The way to sting the Post," says de Borchgrave, formerly of Newsweek, "is to get stories they want, and get them in the paper before they get them in theirs...
...It's been suggested that the Korean owners will pull out if the Democrats win, convinced that their paper will no longer grace the breakfast tables of power...
...Yet, the Chirac scoop and many others like it are helping to shift the public focus from the Times's ownership to its performance, and by that standard the Times is a pretty good paper...
...That The Washington Times broke a major story wasn't news...
...Meanwhile, blacks in the Reagan administration get big play...
...Nor was it unusual that the Times interview produced an international flap, causing an uproar in France where it became known as "l'affaire Chirac...
...Take its Soviet coverage...
...We don't 'cook' stories here," says managing editor Pruden...
...Pruden's protestations notwithstanding, its fair to say that the Times leans at least as sharply to the right as conservatives accuse the Post of leaning to the left...
...I think some of their columnists will have black readers running away quicker than they can recruit them...
...While the Post carried no story on the fight to fill this slot, the Times ran it as their lead article...
...Editor de Borchgrave says one of his first mandates as editor was to find more stories about blacks, and he clearly isn't losing any sleep over the Post's well-publicized problems with the black community...
...What is it that I kept reading in The Washington Post about the blacks is that they shoot their veins all the time," says de Borchgrave...
...Moderator Leslie Stahl followed up by asking whether the memo constituted a smoking gun...
...Its exclusive interview with imprisoned South African black leader Nelson Mandela made headlines around the world...
...De Borchgrave said he has "called my friends in the administration and said as soon as a black gets promoted somewhere, gets an important job in the bureaucracy, I want to know about it ." That must keep his phone ringing off the hook...
...The World & I, a glossy journal of opinion which often runs an encyclopedic 700 pages will cost $15 million...
...In 1984, editor Jim Whalen quit over what he called church influence...
...Serious journalists at the Times, who have to suffer the Moonie stigma, could only roll their eyes...
...Even today, there's more Star than Moon in The Washington Times...
...All said, the Times is well worth the quarter...
...Unlike most organizations associated with funding a major daily newspaper, the Unification Church has been accused of brainwashing its followers, aiding the Korean CIA, and trying to establish a worldwide theocracy...
...To lead the charge, the Times hired someone who really knew it, Mark Tapscott, assistant director of public affairs at the Office of Personnel Management under Reagan...
...By June 18, the Times had covered itself with a story which began: "A senior administration official reports mounting opposition to Mikhail Gorbachev's 'glasnost' reform campaign and predicts that if the Soviet leader persists in his efforts, he will be out within two years ." The Times verdict: glasnost is a fake...
...Inouye said that the committee held possession of a memo suggesting that the president had been briefed on the diversion of Iranian arms sales profits for covert activities...
...In the early days, we used to say that the Star was alive and living on New York Avenue," recalls Wesley Pruden, now Times managing editor...
...The numbers are virtually without precedent in journalism, except perhaps for USA Today, which has recently crept into the black...
...Editorially, their paper has run a spate of black "success" stories so light they nearly floated off the page, such as the magazine cover story, "A Joyful Noise," about a black church choir...
...And other publications within the company are vying for limited funds...
...I know of three groups and one individual that want to buy, because they cannot conceive of Washington going back to a single voice...
...The series was mostly cocktail party back-biting accompanied by a crude drawing of a feeding shark, by the daughter of Times Executive editor Smith Hempstone...
...They're conservatives, like de Borchgrave, whose best-selling novel The Spike was a good-natured look at the Soviet manipulation of the American media...
...did in its unsuccessful effort to save the floundering Washington Star in its last days...
...Advertisers haven't exactly embraced the Times, a comparatively lowcirculation paper with the added ownership problem...
...Their coverage of municipal corruption is typical...
...All totaled, News World's Washington ventures will lose about $80 million next year alone...
...But Wade gets to validate his remarks by writing, "and I'm black, too," a phrase which he inserts into his copy with revealing regularity...
...A recent editorial, headlined "Love Among the Tractors," ridiculed what the Times said is an "abysmal ignorance" among the Soviets about sex...
...Cheshire maintains that de Borchgrave, acting on behalf of the owners, pressured him to kill an editorial critical of the South Korean government...
...Between now and then, the owners will discover whether its current marketing and circulation drive makes the paper worth keeping...
...But when there's an opportunity to present a conservative perspective on an issue that you won't see anywhere else, we'll do that...
...It's the section that is said to be read regularly by President Reagan, and most of it must comfort him...
...De Borchgrave and others at the paper insist that a Democratic administration will only make the Times a stronger, more vigorous "paper in opposition ." Indeed, its coverage of the liberal Barry administration provides strong evidence that the Times can blanket "unfriendly" politicians as well as its pals...
...General Edward Rowny...
...This past summer, the Post unofficially recognized the the Times's clout when a Post night editor on the metro desk called over to ask that a copy of Times be delivered upon publication...
...Its coverage of the Redskins is particularly strong, an important factor considering that the Redskins boast more public support than any political candidate in Washington...
...To enjoy The Washington Times, it probably helps to be a conservative...
...Of course, even de Borchgrave must realize that big-talking potential backers become considerably more elusive when it comes time to put the money on the table, particularly the fat wad it will take to keep the paper going for the next few years...
...Local radio station WGMS AM-FM won't even talk to anyone employed by The Washington Times, ad reps or reporters...
...Tapscott has broken several important stories on the machinations of NASA and Morton Thiokol both before and after the space shuttle disaster...
...Last April editorial page editor William Cheshire and four colleagues resigned with similar complaints...
...Marketing research by White House pollster Richard Wirthlin convinced the Times to spruce up its graphics and cut down on jumps (continued on . . . ) for stories...
...As he told Conservative Digest: Reverend Moon "would like to liberate Moscow by the year 2000...
...Last winter, the paper printed a special section honoring Martin Luther King's birthday, even though the paper's opinion pages were at best cool to the idea of a holiday for King...
...More importantly, the Post's lead in annual advertising revenue ($473 million to $4.2 million) makes it practically invincible...
...When Robert McFarlane disputed key points of Oliver North's testimony, the Times instead focused on the protests of North's lawyer, Brendan Sullivan, a sideshow to the main event...
...Since it was founded in 1982, the paper has spent nearly as much time explaining its ownership as it has chasing down stories...
...In September, for instance, hawks opposed to the nomination of Paul Nitze to head the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, leaked the story that he had been chosen over the even more hardline Army Lt...
...It's quite possible that the paper will never be self-supporting...
...Attorney's office in pursuing the case and possible racketeering charges against members of the Barry administration...
...The Times, putting the two together in its own way, ran a headline the next day: "Committee Holds 'a Smoking Gun: Chairman Reveals...
...But the inroads the Times has managed to make in five years, despite an ownership which at every turn diverts attention from the product, can't be overlooked...
...On Sundays, the Post is read by an incredible 78 percent of the Washington area, the highest "penetration" in the country...
...When The Washington Times was launched in May 1982 it could draw from a ready pool of reporters who had been laid off when The Washington Star folded the year before...
...It's no coincidence that the Times's strong suits include de Borchgrave's primary areas of interest—foreign policy and intelligence...
...Post Executive Editor Ben Bradlee and Publisher Donald Graham have since made several public displays of contrition...
...While it is impossible to know precisely what control the Moonie owners have, it's clear that most of the editors don't need their arms twisted...
...Fat wad Where the Unification Church clearly reenters the story of The Washington Times is in talk of the future of the paper...
...Times columnists never seem to have a problem reaching a consensus—everyone seems to agree with everyone else...
...The paper's scoops are all the more remarkable since the Times's 230-member staff is less than half that of the Post...
...else's...
...His relentless coverage of House Speaker Jim Wright's support of overextended Texas savings and loans—dubbed "S&Leaze-gate"—was particularly strong...
...For the The Washington Times, it was something of a breakthrough...
...Somehow, it's hard to imagine David Broder earning pin money by bringing in new subscriptions to the Post...
...The Times isn't all conservatives and corruption...
...President Reagan calls it his favorite paper which should say something about both the paper's conservative tilt and its colorful easytoread format...
...The paper's "Weekend" section was moved to Thursday, beating the Post by a day, and an expanded TV section debuted in July...
...those no longer at the Times say its a matter of disgruntled Moonies crying for tighter control of their paper...
...Black & white and read all over While it may come as no surprise that the conservative Times is attracting conservative readers, the rest of its audience is less predictable-46 percent of its readership is black...
...By being the conservative paper under a conservative administration, it has scored its share of exclusives...
...even if it's not, it won't last...
...Also, the Times has revived a dying tradition in many American cities—hiring young hawkers to sell copies of the paper at the city's downtown subway stations...
...And with thorough local coverage, this unabashedly conservative Koreanowned paper is stealing black readers from the more liberal Washington Post...
...The church's pockets are deep enough to absorb those losses, but no one knows how long it will want to keep reaching into them...
...What was unusual was the way it was covered by The New York Times...
...But the charges were unusually fierce and the racism label was especially painful for the Post's editors, who had prided themselves as the city's liberal conscience...
...Last autumn, the complaints became more pointed when the debut issue of the newly revamped and much-ballyhooed Washington Post Magazine featured two articles that outraged many blacks...
...The Times rarely passes up an opportunity to jam its editorial fingers into the eye sockets of the Evil Empire (the one headed by Mikhail Gorbachev, not Ben Bradlee...
...Such chumminess with conservative sources has its drawbacks for the Times—not everyone leaks straight...
...But in its efforts to bury the Tom McNichol is a Washington writer...
...The newspaper of record published Chirac's charges, credited The Washington Times, and managed to avoid a single mention of the Rev...
...But the Times's courtship of blacks does, occasionally, have a pandering tone, such as when it sent a reporter to Martha's Vineyard for a prominent feature on where the "black elite meet !' In its desire to expand circulation it occasionally put aside even strongly held beliefs...
...It was certainly not the first time that a "white" paper in a city with concentrations of minorities had come under fire...
...Take Lawrence Wade, a black columnist at the Times, and a sort of hyper-conservative balance to the Post's William Raspberry...
...Pooh-pooh The ongoing question at the Times, of course, is what about the Moonies...
...Connections to the conservative establishment make the Times a ready forum for policy battles...
...In part, this stems from strong anti-Post sentiment...
...This overstatement might have been unimportant, if not for the fact that the president himself was seemingly misled by the Times's accounts...
...Best among the section's regular heavyweights is Warren Brookes, a Detroit News economics columnist...
...Its sports section, while usually not as wide-ranging as the Post's, is often more thorough...
...It's difficult to reflect on Lofton's prodigious thrice-weekly output and pull out a truly representative excerpt of Loftonia, but for my money his best sentence appeared in a column earlier this year about U.S...
...One was the cover story about a black rap singer accused of murder...
...However, a special commendation must go to Times staff columnist and resident bomb-thrower John Lofton, a frequent "Nightline" guest who has refined liberal-bashing into something resembling an art, for those who feel that pulling the wings off of flies resembles an art...
...The Times] is making a conscious effort to plug into the black community," says Cathy Hughes, a black broadcaster who spearheaded the protest against the Post last fall...
...The Times not the Post has been the real muckracker...
...to want the Times to stick around, one need only believe that two opinions are better than one...
...Finally, the Times appeals to blacks by being a hard-nosed city paper...
...Five days passed before the Post got around to covering a Times story that the associate director of the D.C...
...Office of Human Rights had been fired after mental health officials dubbed him "dangerous" and "incapacitated ." On the Barry scandal, the Times was first to report a rift between the FBI and the U.S...
...As Times officials are fond of saying, at least once every five minutes in the presence of any outside reporter, the paper is owned, not by the Unification Church itself but by News World Communications, a for-profit holding company owned by church officials...
...Yet in recent years, particularly since the arrival of de Borchgrave, the Times has gone after the Post with dogged reporting...
...Soviet life is, of course, a rather juicy target, but the Times is not above taking a cheap shot...
...The paper seems to have cultivated a number of spooks who leak to reporters they undoubtedly consider friendly...
...For years, many of the city's black leaders have charged the Post with unfair coverage and undue neglect...
...And its coverage of the South African government from correspondent Peter Younghusband has been particularly good...
...Neither the newspaper nor its headquarters look out of the ordinary...
...Sung Myung Moon or the Unification Church...
...It had beaten the pack on stories such as Frank Carlucci's appointment to the National Security Council, James Watt's resignation, and Senator Paul Laxalt's secret mission to the Philippines in 1985...
...Its exclusive interview with Nelson Mandela, for example, would have been impossible without the cooperation of the South African government, which clearly had reason to believe that the Times would cast them in the best possible light...
...An exclusive interview with imprisoned South African black leader Nelson Mandela in August 1985 had received world-wide notice...
...In an exclusive interview, French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac told the Times's editorinchief, Arnaud de Borchgrave, that West German leaders believed a purported plot to blow up an Israeli airliner the previous April had been faked by Israel's secret service to implicate Syrian President Hafez al-Assad...
...The paper is forced to make due with Hazel, Heathcliff, and Ben Wattenberg...
...The restraint paid off—the drinking story turned out to be largely the joint effort of a Post reporter a bit too eager to break a story and of Joe Theismann, a bit too eager to sell his recently published autobiography...
...A number of his victims not only get dismembered in his columns but receive personal letters, written in black magic marker in a strange calligraphic hand...
...While many papers cover the Botha government as a monolithic impediment to social change, Younghusband more accurately covers it as a squawking and fractionalized impediment to social change...
...Just as the Times has cultivated conservatives in Washington, it has managed to tap contacts in right-wing governments abroad...
...At first, the Times was a cranky underdog, scarcely running an issue without a dig at the Evil Empire on 15th Street...

Vol. 19 • October 1987 • No. 9


 
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