Truth and duty the press, the president, and the privilege of power

It was the kind of story any news producer would love to report, nail down and get on the air. And that's just what Mary Mapes and her team did in September, 2004, when they aired their report on President George W. Bush's dereliction of his National Guard duty for CBS News. The firestorm...

Full description

Main Author: Mapes, Mary.
Format: Books Print Book
Language: English
Published: New York : St. Martin's Press, c2005.
Edition: 1st ed.
Subjects:
Summary: It was the kind of story any news producer would love to report, nail down and get on the air. And that's just what Mary Mapes and her team did in September, 2004, when they aired their report on President George W. Bush's dereliction of his National Guard duty for CBS News. The firestorm that followed trashed Mapes' career, caused Dan Rather to resign from his anchor chair a year early, and led to an unprecedented "internal inquiry" into the story. This book is Mapes' account of the often-surreal, always-harrowing fallout she experienced for raising questions about a powerful sitting president. It answers questions about the solidity of the documents at the heart of the National Guard story as well as where they came from. This is an account of how the public's right to know--or even to ask questions--is being attacked by an alliance of politicians, news organizations, bloggers and corporate America.--From publisher description.
Item Description: Includes index.
Physical Description: 371 p. ; 25 cm.
ISBN: 031235195X
Author Notes: For twenty-five years, Mary Mapes has been an award-winning television news producer and reporter--the last fifteen of them for CBS News, primarily for The CBS Evening News with Dan Rather and 60 Minutes II . In 2004, her last year at CBS, in addition to the George W. Bush National Guard story, she broke the stories of the existence of Strom Thurmond's unacknowledged bi-racial daughter, Essie Mae Washington, and the Abu Ghraib prison tortures, for which she won a Peabody Award in 2005. She began her career at KIRO-TV in Seattle, Washington in 1979. She lives in Dallas, Texas.