MEDIA WATCH SPECIAL: THE NEW
CROSSFIRE DEBUTS
April 1, 2002
Scroll Down for 4/2/02 update on the post-debut "retooling"
The new Crossfire debuts, making sure to feature Fmr. President Bill Clinton.....details below....

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The expanded Crossfire comes
on at the dinner hour here in the Mountain Time zone and in spite
of my best intentions, I managed to get to the TV with only
fifteen minutes remaining. Frankly, that was more than
enough time to form an opinion of this new format.
If things continue the way
they were going during the final fifteen I saw, this might be the
bomb of a lifetime. I have to admit I was very wary when
Carville and Begala were courted by CNN, because I feared they
wouldnt appear as often on other shows on other channels,
both cable and network. Being attached to one show on CNN
might limit their visibility and make them part of CNNs
stable and erode their well-cultivated images as
freewheeling Democratic fighters.
From what I saw, the
slugfest format could make all involved sorry
theyve signed on. The boxing ring images and that
silly little bell the hosts kept ringing were enough to turn the
whole mess into a travesty. Embarrassing is too kind a word to
use in describing this debut. The camera work needs to get
organized and whats with the audio??? The sound
was very poor and the screaming voices of the panel certainly
didnt help.
Besides the emphasis on
pugilism, the other new twist is the live audience. Since
the show is aired from George Washington University in D.C. the
audience is mostly young. I have to say they
exhibited far more dignity than those on stage. James
Carville and Paul Begala were on together for this first
showin the future, Begala will be on three weeks with
Carville picking up the fourth week. Tucker Carlson was on
stage, while Robert Novak was out of the auditorium at some
unknown location for some unknown reason.
Of course, I had to tune in
just as the discussion inevitably turned to Bill Clinton. Guest
Terry MacAuliffe was there, along with a man I suppose was the
head of the RNChe wisely kept his mouth shut. Tucker
Carlson asked, Whats Bill Clinton doing to make
the world a better place? and said Clinton was
buckraming. MacAuliffe got a dig in about
Clinton having to pay off his legal fees from the independent
counsel investigation that came up with zero. Someone
threw out the phrase right wing nuts and Tucker
raised the stakes by describing the former President as being
like a pig at the trough. Terry Mac appeared to
take real offense and told Tucker to cut it out and
then brought up Reagans $2 million pay day in Japan and
Bush Sr.s many speeches. James Carville woke up as
clapped MacAuliffe on the arm and said Youre beating
him too bad. I dont know why Carville was
wearing dark glassesmaybe he was trying to hide during this
ridiculous display.
That was the end of the
segment and the cutaway was to a picture of a boxing ring and the
graphic heralding Round 6 as Tucker promised more
rumbling.
Round 6 was introduced by
Begala who described it as the segment where the hosts go
after each other. The topic was the Middle East.
Novak swooped in from wherever he was roosting to screech that he
was disgusted with James Carvilles
lionizing Bill Clinton and criticizing Bush, calling
it cheap party politics. Begala called
Bushs Middle East policy an abject failure and
said, The President is rudderless and clueless.
Carville, now without the glasses, came back saying Let me
apologize
Im happy hes disgusted
for
letting the American people know whats really
happening. Novak shouted, Why dont you
get over Bill Clinton? and the whole thing degenerated from
there.
Someone rang the sacred bell and Begala spat out that Bushs policy has been incoherent.
From the Middle East, the
next topic was college basketball and low graduation rates. I cut
out. Then there was a brief hello from Christiane Amanpour.
Finally, the last segment
called Fireback began with emails from the viewing
audience. Two out of the three were anti-Carville and Begala.
With great trepidation, I watched as Tucker announced that
questions would be taken from the audience.
But I was pleasantly
surprised. Some very bright and well-informed young people
asked questions like How can Democrats fight Bush without
looking like theyre against the war on terrorism? and
what the long range effects of campaign finance reform would be.
Carville answered the question about the Democrats by saying that
the Dems support the war effort but one can point out the deficit
and disengagement from the Middle East, for example. Begala
said that John Ashcroft says we cant disagree then put up
his hands and said, Lock me up!
Overall, I was pretty
disappointed by what transpired. Carville did not look
happy. Begala was working hard at being outrageous. Carlson
was nasty and shrill. I dont know what Novak adds to
all thishe simply looked mean. All looked like they had
been ordered to scream at the top of their lungs and to put any
semblance of civility aside. Frankly, it looked like they
were trying to out-Hannity Hannity and out- OReilly
OReilly all at the same time. No wonder CNN
didnt want Bill Press any morePress could never
muster up this sort of ghastly hostility.
The whole boxing
ring setup has got to go. The bell has got to go.
Going after each other has got to go. The gratuitous
email segment probably wont develop much beyond criticisms
or praise of the hosts, so why not end that quickly? Wouldnt
it be nice just to get questions from the audience??
While it sounds like Carville and Begala got plenty of digs in during the segment I watched, my impression was that there was so much loud talking over everyone else that the casual viewer could easily be frustrated and switch channels. Because I focused on listening and picking up comments I managed to hear them but even I found it tiresome and aggravating. I have a feeling that if things continue this way, Crossfire will not be the opportunity for lots of Democratic ideas to get aired. Maybe there were just too many people on tonight and things will get organized when either Carville or Begal