The Elephant in the Room:
Talking Points
Demonstrations and Protestors
· Although Anarchy is often associated with a political philosophy that many attribute with violence. Many protestors are embracing the original spirit of the word which has little to do with violence, from the Greek: “arkhos” (ruler) and the prefix “a” (the absence of) to develop strategies that are leaderless attempts by many to accomplish a common goal.
· Security at the RNC will face new forms of anarchistic action from some protestors who will trade black masks and centralized plans for tech-savy, radically democratic protest tools: using special transmitters to break briefly into radio frequencies and broadcast information on commercial radio stations, laptops and GPS cameras, backpack broadcasting and high tech counting systems to get a more accurate accounting of demonstrator numbers.
· Only a handful of protestors were arrested at the Boston Convention; the global prominence of New York city and high number of anti-war demonstrations raise concerns for major disruptions at the RNC.
· At least 250,000 protesters are expected to demonstrate at the convention: a number six times larger than that at the legendary
· Protestors are angry at being penned and herded into “Free Speech Zones” a great distance from the event: some note that in the last few years, protests in American are being treated increasingly like those in countered like Egypt – demonstrations allowed only in controlled spaces and police intervention at the hint of “spontaneity and disorder.”
· Legal and illegal protests, marches and demonstrations are anticipated every day of the convention; some fear police response like the November Free Trade protest in
Newsroom Coverage and Diversity
· More than four of five journalists of color surveyed believe that racial diversity in Washington Bureaus would impact coverage and nearly half say the impact would be significant.
· 9 out of 10 journalists of color believe the Washington Press Corps is at least somewhat out of touch with its audience back home and most of them believe the lack of diversity in the
Getting information: Campaign coverage
· The three major networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) will devote only three hours to convention coverage.
· Network affiliate airtime for commercials outnumbers campaign news coverage by a 4 to 1 ratio.
· Of the 2004 ad spots analyzed through July, 60% are devoted to policy and 40% to character issues – the majority of TV news stories are devoted to the “horse race” coverage of polls and candidates. In a February study, at the height of the Democratic nomination battle only 18% of evening news stories examined the candidates’ stances or voting records.
· Between 1968-1988 the average length of at typical political news story and the number of political news stories decreased by 20%
· Horse race coverage of campaigns increased from 58% of television news stories in 1988 to 71% in 2000.