HolyCoast: White House Press Corps Feeling Left Out
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Sunday, February 07, 2010

White House Press Corps Feeling Left Out

Howard Kurtz has a list of their complaints:
Six months ago, network executives were complaining that the White House was costing them tens of millions of dollars by pressing them to carry presidential news conferences in prime time.

Problem solved: President Obama hasn't held a full-scale news conference since July. Instead, he answered a dozen people's questions last week on YouTube, most of them easily finessed and -- extra bonus! -- no annoying follow-ups of the kind posed by real, live journalists.

It would be hard -- impossible, actually -- to argue that Obama hasn't been accessible to the media, not with his constant television interviews. The man has even done color commentary at a Georgetown basketball game. But the decision to bypass the White House press corps is no accident.

"It's a source of great frustration here," says Chip Reid, CBS's White House correspondent. "It's important for us to hold the president's feet to the fire."

NBC White House reporter Chuck Todd calls the situation a "shame," saying the administration is trying to control the message rather than allowing Obama to be seen "unscripted."
They all long for the moment when they can ask that one good "gotcha" question that draws an emotional response from the president, especially if they can ask it in front of their peers and earn bragging rights at the press club.

The TV viewers got a little tired of having their evening viewing disrupted by press conferences and the more he was on TV the lower his approval ratings went. Now he's figured that he does better in one-on-one interviews and silly stunts like the YouTube questions. He still gets press coverage but at a lower personal risk.

The White House press fawned all over him in the beginning. It's almost nice hearing that they finally have something to complain about.

1 comment:

Sam L. said...

Not that they'd actually ask hard questions and say that he didn't answer them.