Let's start pitching "Costas and Galloway" to the networks,  we're gonna get
rich ...!

dd

-----Original Message-----
From: PEN-L list [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Louis
Proyect
Sent: 07 July 2005 20:51
To: [email protected]
Subject: Sports talk show host shows spine lacking elsewhere


(If this blog entry by Katrina vanden Heuvel of the Nation Magazine whets
your appetite, you can read the entire transcript of the CNN show in which
sportscaster (!) Bob Costas holds the feet of pro-war politicians of both
parties to the fire at: http://www.marxmail.org/CNN.htm)

http://www.thenation.com/blogs/edcut?bid=7&pid=4659

Maybe we need sportscasters to ask informed, incisive questions of our
pundits and politicians? It certainly was refreshing to watch Bob Costas
sub for Larry King the night of Bush's Iraq speech. I happened to flick on
CNN's premier talk show, expecting the usual vapid questions and
platitudinous replies, and found the veteran sportscaster asking some smart
and (relatively) tough questions. (Click here to read the transcript.)

Costas: ...There were no weapons of mass destruction. There has been no
contact or connection between Iraq and al Qaeda or 9/11 established. Vice
President Cheney says the insurgency is in its final throes. Secretary of
Defense Rumsfeld says the insurgency could last a decade or more. Does the
the Bush Administration now face a credibility gap?" (Both Time's Jay
Carney and Newsweek's Richard Wolffe said yes.)

I sat up and started listening.

Then, Senator Kerry came on.

Costas: In the aftermath of 9/11, did Democrats, yourself included, do a
poor job of playing the role of the loyal opposition? Were they too docile
and too compliant, and did they fail to ask the skeptical questions and
raise the objections they should have in the run-up to war?

Now I was sitting straight up and listening carefully.

Kerry mumbled, "I plead guilty. And I think a lot of people in the party
would. But I think a lot of Americans would."

Senator McCain came on.

Costas: You are, no doubt, familiar with what your Senate colleague, Chuck
Hagel, Republican of Nebraska, said recently. But to refresh the memories
of our audience, I 'll read it. 'Things are getting worse. The White is
completely disconnected from reality. It's like they're just making it up
as they go along. The reality is, we are losing in Iraq.' What say you to
that?"

Even the usually unflappable McCain looked a little shaken, as if he missed
Larry King's softball questions.

Costas continued: "Senator McCain, I hope this question doesn't seem
impertinent, but we often hear that if these terrorists are not confronted
in Iraq, they'll be in New York or wherever. What is to stop them from
being in New York simultaneously, if they could get here?"

I was rooting for more impertinent, informed questions.

Costas: Are we up against a situation here that maybe we should take a
big-picture look at? Iraq isn't really a natural country. It was cobbled
together by force after World War I. There are different regional and
religious factions. It was always held together by brutal central
governments. And might it not naturally go the way of the Soviet Union or
Yugoslavia, where these factions just naturally break off once that central
force is removed? ..Are we trying to hold together a country that has no
democratic tradition and is not really, in the true sense, a country?

McCain looked like he wanted to throttle Costas.

Costas: Senator McCain, we now find that more than 60 percent of Americans
recently polled think that President Bush has no clear plan for victory in
Iraq, and now more than fifty percent believe it was a mistake to go there
in the first place. What would you say to a mother or father whose son or
daughter is being recruited--there is no draft--is being recruited to join
the military under these circumstances?

Congressman Christopher Shays (R, CT) came on.

Costas: Congressman Shays, you're aware that Lindsey Graham, Republican
from South Carolina, recently said: 'Public support in my state is
turning.' Congressman Walter Jones of North Carolina, Republican
congressman, is among those who have submitted a bipartisan resolution that
would call upon the US to begin troop withdrawals from Iraq no later than
2006. This isn't the Michael Moore wing of the Democratic Party. These are
solid Republicans, and they and their constituents are increasingly
concerned about where we're doing here.

By this time, I was ready to launch a bye-bye Larry (King) campaign.

Last month, CNN President Jonathan Klein made Costas a regular substitute
anchor for the show. (The odious Nancy "You're Guilty Before You're
Innocent" Grace was also named a regular sub.)

Maybe Costas towered that night because of the barrenness of the landscape
around him, but he certainly was a refreshing antidote to the info-tainment
featured on prime cable talk/ news programs these days. If CNN wants to
become a news outlet again, one step would be devise an exit strategy for
Larry and install Costas as King.

--

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