CNN News Staffers Revolt Over Blown Coverage
“Embarrassing.” “Fucking humiliating.” “Shameful.” A veteran producer jumps the gun, a young correspondent goes too far, and the network's crisis deepens.
News staffers at the cable network CNN, long the gold standard in television news, were on the verge of open revolt Tuesday after CNN blew the coverage on the most consequential news event of the year.
As Chief Justice John Roberts began reading his decision on the future of President Obama's health care overhaul, the CNN team inside the courtroom jumped the gun, believing that Roberts was saying the individual mandate was unconstitutional and would be overturned.
A producer inside the courtroom, Bill Meers, communicated the information to a relatively junior reporter, Kate Bolduan, the face of the network's coverage outside on the courthouse steps.
Bolduan then reported, on air, that the invidual mandate was “not valid,” citing producer Meers.
“It appears as if the Supreme Court justices struck down the centerpiece,” of the law, she said.
Bolduan,a 2005 graduate of George Washington University who previously worked for a local news station in North Carolina, was named the network's congressional correspondent last year.
The 29 year old was also named one of Washington's 50 Most Beautiful people in 2011 by The Hill. [OP note: what's this got to do with anything?]
Moments after Bolduan spoke, the false story began to metastasize inside the network's online operation.
The erroneous breaking news was made into a chryon at the bottom of the screen. CNN also sent out a breaking news alert.
And a half dozen top on-air reporters and producers within the esteemed news organization told BuzzFeed they are furious at what they see as yet another embarrassment to a network stuck in third place in the cable news race, and torn between an identity as the leader in hard news and the success of their opinionated, personality-driven rivals, Fox News and MSNBC.
“Fucking humiliating,” said one CNN veteran. “We had a chance to cover it right. And some people in here don’t get what a big deal getting it wrong is. Morons.”
“Shameful,” another long-time correspondent told BuzzFeed.
"It's outrageous and embarrassing,” a third CNN staffer vented. “Maybe this will shake the company into understanding that CNN has not been the 'most trusted name in news' for a very long time."
A fourth CNN source noted simply “obviously, it’s embarrassing,” but defended legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, and stressed that it’s the challenge of breaking news.
“It looked to all the world like the chief justice was going to strike down the law,” legal analyst Toobin later said on air, seeking to explain the CNN confusion.
CNN also released a statement explaining the mistake: "In his opinion, Chief Justice Roberts initially said that the individual mandate was not a valid exercise of Congressional power under the Commerce Clause. CNN reported that fact, but then wrongly reported that therefore the court struck down the mandate as unconstitutional. However, that was not the whole of the Court’s ruling. CNN regrets that it didn't wait to report out the full and complete opinion regarding the mandate. We made a correction within a few minutes and apologize for the error."
In recent weeks, CNN had been defending its slide in the ratings by staking its pride on excellent news coverage, while criticizing Fox and MSNBC’s partisan slant.
The mistake was not missed by its rivals. Tweeted NBC’s PR director Erika Masonhall: "Important to underscore something I said at @NBCNews social media workshop last week: We'd rather be right than first."
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CNN wasn't the only one to get it wrong in the rush to be first: CNN, Fox, HuffPo and Time all got it wrong.
“Embarrassing.” “Fucking humiliating.” “Shameful.” A veteran producer jumps the gun, a young correspondent goes too far, and the network's crisis deepens.
News staffers at the cable network CNN, long the gold standard in television news, were on the verge of open revolt Tuesday after CNN blew the coverage on the most consequential news event of the year.
As Chief Justice John Roberts began reading his decision on the future of President Obama's health care overhaul, the CNN team inside the courtroom jumped the gun, believing that Roberts was saying the individual mandate was unconstitutional and would be overturned.
A producer inside the courtroom, Bill Meers, communicated the information to a relatively junior reporter, Kate Bolduan, the face of the network's coverage outside on the courthouse steps.
Bolduan then reported, on air, that the invidual mandate was “not valid,” citing producer Meers.
“It appears as if the Supreme Court justices struck down the centerpiece,” of the law, she said.
Bolduan,a 2005 graduate of George Washington University who previously worked for a local news station in North Carolina, was named the network's congressional correspondent last year.
The 29 year old was also named one of Washington's 50 Most Beautiful people in 2011 by The Hill. [OP note: what's this got to do with anything?]
Moments after Bolduan spoke, the false story began to metastasize inside the network's online operation.
The erroneous breaking news was made into a chryon at the bottom of the screen. CNN also sent out a breaking news alert.
And a half dozen top on-air reporters and producers within the esteemed news organization told BuzzFeed they are furious at what they see as yet another embarrassment to a network stuck in third place in the cable news race, and torn between an identity as the leader in hard news and the success of their opinionated, personality-driven rivals, Fox News and MSNBC.
“Fucking humiliating,” said one CNN veteran. “We had a chance to cover it right. And some people in here don’t get what a big deal getting it wrong is. Morons.”
“Shameful,” another long-time correspondent told BuzzFeed.
"It's outrageous and embarrassing,” a third CNN staffer vented. “Maybe this will shake the company into understanding that CNN has not been the 'most trusted name in news' for a very long time."
A fourth CNN source noted simply “obviously, it’s embarrassing,” but defended legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, and stressed that it’s the challenge of breaking news.
“It looked to all the world like the chief justice was going to strike down the law,” legal analyst Toobin later said on air, seeking to explain the CNN confusion.
CNN also released a statement explaining the mistake: "In his opinion, Chief Justice Roberts initially said that the individual mandate was not a valid exercise of Congressional power under the Commerce Clause. CNN reported that fact, but then wrongly reported that therefore the court struck down the mandate as unconstitutional. However, that was not the whole of the Court’s ruling. CNN regrets that it didn't wait to report out the full and complete opinion regarding the mandate. We made a correction within a few minutes and apologize for the error."
In recent weeks, CNN had been defending its slide in the ratings by staking its pride on excellent news coverage, while criticizing Fox and MSNBC’s partisan slant.
The mistake was not missed by its rivals. Tweeted NBC’s PR director Erika Masonhall: "Important to underscore something I said at @NBCNews social media workshop last week: We'd rather be right than first."
--
CNN wasn't the only one to get it wrong in the rush to be first: CNN, Fox, HuffPo and Time all got it wrong.
Also, shouldn't the "Tuesday" really be "Thursday"?
What does that have to do with the price of beans in China?
And I haven't hard the ruling yet, can someone fill me in please?
Oh wait, no I don't wonder about that at ALL.
Edited at 2012-06-28 05:10 pm (UTC)
Beautiful people aren't bright so that explains why all the fault is hers.
wow, i haven't watched cable news since 2007, when did cnn fall to 3rd?
It's hilarious that so many outlets got it wrong though. That's what you get for all of the punditry.
Sigh.
But I'm looking forward to see what the Daily Show does with it on Monday.
http://thinkprogress.org/media/2012/0
At least HuffPo's was (apparently) only a tweet, not a full-blown broadcast....
Ok, She was getting a feed from the senior member why aren't they blaming him? And why don't we know what HE looks like? Does he have good cheekbones too?
Edited at 2012-06-28 06:00 pm (UTC)
Does anyone have a nice go to resource to fight all the lies and bullshit about healthcare reform?
http://www.whitehouse.gov/healthref
And there are links on the original post about the decision here on ONTD-P.
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/20
they really fucked up.
i wanna see video of them reporting it wrong.
Edited at 2012-06-28 07:11 pm (UTC)
Hu. Imagine that. You mean they weren't the OMGVERYVERYSPOTMEFIRSTMRFIRSTREADTHISFIR
"AP orders employees to stop taunting news outlets that got the health care ruling wrong."
ROFLMAO!
If that doesn't sum up American media quite succinctly, I don't know what does, other than that picture of a dude with his head literally up his ass.
So wait. CNN, Fox, HuffPo and Time all got it wrong. How is that? Did Roberts read things in such a way that fooled all of them to jump the gun?
OMG ROBERTS TOTALLY TROLLED THE MEDIA :D
Boy these folks will be in for a shock and half when they realise that we have healthcare access for everyone! (and little flags too. Not for some but for all)
Like... how do you even respond to something like that? O_o
Fortunately enough, we tend to have a pretty good vetting team inside the news-room, so we've managed to keep things from going awry most of the time. The most memorable blunder I can recall had to do with one senior official who was indicted on charges of corruption at the beginning of the year. One of our producers jumped the gun, didn't wait for the rest of us and told the on-air anchor to say that the guy was scott-free. Cue a chorus of shouts and 'quick, give her the right info!' from the rest of us when we'd heard what she anchor had said on the live-feed!
The thing is that this will inevitably happen again and again, no matter the outlet -- it's practically encouraged by this new gung-ho, break-neck pace in reporting breaking news stories. You're only safe if you know how to pace yourself, check everything that comes in and are also willing to let the competition get in a headstart, with the upshot that you will have more meaty coverage thirty minutes later.
Oh, yeah, since forever. Thus journalism puts another fucking nail in their own coffin.