Ex-CBS reporter delivers some 'Bad News'
ANTHONY VIOLANTI The Buffalo News
Tom Fenton symbolized the once-grand stature of CBS News as a foreign correspondent. Now Fenton has become something else to television news: a voracious critic. His book, "Bad News," comes out Tuesday and is an insider's condemnation of the declining standards and bottom-line mentality of the news business.
"I wrote this book out of conviction," Fenton said in a telephone interview from his home in London. "I don't have a lot of illusions it's going to change things."
Fenton does not spare his former employer for what he terms CBS' cutbacks in foreign news. He tells how in 1996 he was setting up an interview with Osama bin Laden.
"Our bosses saw him as an obscure Arab of no interest to our viewers," Fenton writes. "More concerned with saving dollars than pursuing the story, they killed the project."
CBS, which claims it is spending millions to cover the war in Iraq and other foreign news, is an easy target. Dan Rather, after the flawed reporting on President Bush's National Guard service, is in his final days as anchor. The nightly newscast has struggled with ratings and credibility.
Fenton, though, seemed to be the last person anyone expected to knock CBS.
"Tom is the embodiment of the wise and worldly CBS News correspondent," Andrew Hayward, president of CBS News, said in December when Fenton, 74, retired after 34 years of service. "He's a true gentleman," Hayward added.
That was then.
"Now I've become slightly radioactive as far as some of the CBS hierarchy is concerned," Fenton said. "I started the book last year before all this happened and I'm sorry it's coming out when everybody is jumping on CBS. The timing is coincidental."
Bush's National Guard story on "60 Minutes," was symbolic of the problems in network news, Fenton believes. He wrote, "the networks can no longer vouch for much of what they put on the air. Just as Dan Rather did ... with those phony Bush memos ... they take it on trust."
But, "Dan was let down by the people who served him," Fenton said in the interview. "He's over-used. He was working on four or five things that day and didn't get involved in the story to the extent he should have.
"That being said, CBS management and Dan himself should have been a little more wary about putting a story of that nature on the air in the midst of an election campaign without being damn sure they had everything nailed down."
Bob Schieffer is scheduled to take Rather's anchor chair in March on a temporary basis.
"I think he will help," Fenton said. "He's a respected person. I can't think of any reason why his credibility will be challenged."
No matter who sits behind the anchor desk, it's impossible for the networks to provide depth on a nightly basis, Fenton said, when the news of the world is "dumbed down" into 18 minutes at the dinner hour.
"Once you get halfway through the CBS Evening News, the rest of it you can turn off," he added. "There's nothing there you need to know. It's an attempt to entertain people and pump up ratings. If I want entertainment, I'll watch "The Daily Show.'"
The network battles took a toll on Fenton, and may have caused him not to battle hard enough to get bin Laden on the air.
"Perhaps I could have fought harder," he said. "But eventually, you really do get beaten down. Reporters work in the field. We can propose. The editors and producers dispose. There's no way you can force them to put something on the air."
In writing the book, Fenton applied the same standards as his news coverage, which earned him four Emmys. He was part of the old CBS guard, a foreign correspondent who spoke with insight and not only covered a country, but lived there.
"I tried to write the book as a reporter," Fenton said. "There was no point in pulling punches."
For a brief period after 9/11, Fenton said there was a resurgence of foreign news reporting, "but it didn't last," Fenton said.
Network news has left its mark on the nation.
"We have literally dumbed down our public," Fenton said. "We have trained them to accept the coverage they're getting. We so rarely explain what's going on, there's no context. So, people of course, aren't interested. They have no idea what's going on."
And what about those who say Fenton belongs to another time with other news standards.
"I'd say this is now and it's a different world," Fenton said. "It's a world in which we have an enemy, which our government tells us is trying to acquire chemical and biological weapons and waiting to pull off another spectacular attack. We have a duty to inform the public."
Regardless of cost.
Tom Fenton symbolized the once-grand stature of CBS News as a foreign correspondent. Now Fenton has become something else to television news: a voracious critic. His book, "Bad News," comes out Tuesday and is an insider's condemnation of the declining standards and bottom-line mentality of the news business.
"I wrote this book out of conviction," Fenton said in a telephone interview from his home in London. "I don't have a lot of illusions it's going to change things."
Fenton does not spare his former employer for what he terms CBS' cutbacks in foreign news. He tells how in 1996 he was setting up an interview with Osama bin Laden.
"Our bosses saw him as an obscure Arab of no interest to our viewers," Fenton writes. "More concerned with saving dollars than pursuing the story, they killed the project."
CBS, which claims it is spending millions to cover the war in Iraq and other foreign news, is an easy target. Dan Rather, after the flawed reporting on President Bush's National Guard service, is in his final days as anchor. The nightly newscast has struggled with ratings and credibility.
Fenton, though, seemed to be the last person anyone expected to knock CBS.
"Tom is the embodiment of the wise and worldly CBS News correspondent," Andrew Hayward, president of CBS News, said in December when Fenton, 74, retired after 34 years of service. "He's a true gentleman," Hayward added.
That was then.
"Now I've become slightly radioactive as far as some of the CBS hierarchy is concerned," Fenton said. "I started the book last year before all this happened and I'm sorry it's coming out when everybody is jumping on CBS. The timing is coincidental."
Bush's National Guard story on "60 Minutes," was symbolic of the problems in network news, Fenton believes. He wrote, "the networks can no longer vouch for much of what they put on the air. Just as Dan Rather did ... with those phony Bush memos ... they take it on trust."
But, "Dan was let down by the people who served him," Fenton said in the interview. "He's over-used. He was working on four or five things that day and didn't get involved in the story to the extent he should have.
"That being said, CBS management and Dan himself should have been a little more wary about putting a story of that nature on the air in the midst of an election campaign without being damn sure they had everything nailed down."
Bob Schieffer is scheduled to take Rather's anchor chair in March on a temporary basis.
"I think he will help," Fenton said. "He's a respected person. I can't think of any reason why his credibility will be challenged."
No matter who sits behind the anchor desk, it's impossible for the networks to provide depth on a nightly basis, Fenton said, when the news of the world is "dumbed down" into 18 minutes at the dinner hour.
"Once you get halfway through the CBS Evening News, the rest of it you can turn off," he added. "There's nothing there you need to know. It's an attempt to entertain people and pump up ratings. If I want entertainment, I'll watch "The Daily Show.'"
The network battles took a toll on Fenton, and may have caused him not to battle hard enough to get bin Laden on the air.
"Perhaps I could have fought harder," he said. "But eventually, you really do get beaten down. Reporters work in the field. We can propose. The editors and producers dispose. There's no way you can force them to put something on the air."
In writing the book, Fenton applied the same standards as his news coverage, which earned him four Emmys. He was part of the old CBS guard, a foreign correspondent who spoke with insight and not only covered a country, but lived there.
"I tried to write the book as a reporter," Fenton said. "There was no point in pulling punches."
For a brief period after 9/11, Fenton said there was a resurgence of foreign news reporting, "but it didn't last," Fenton said.
Network news has left its mark on the nation.
"We have literally dumbed down our public," Fenton said. "We have trained them to accept the coverage they're getting. We so rarely explain what's going on, there's no context. So, people of course, aren't interested. They have no idea what's going on."
And what about those who say Fenton belongs to another time with other news standards.
"I'd say this is now and it's a different world," Fenton said. "It's a world in which we have an enemy, which our government tells us is trying to acquire chemical and biological weapons and waiting to pull off another spectacular attack. We have a duty to inform the public."
Regardless of cost.