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CNN Says "No More Missing White Women"

Finally, one of the "News" channels has taken the high road and has decided its fortunes do not lie with endless reporting of missing white women.

CNN's Anderson Cooper actually did a story about their counterparts at Fox and MSNBC, and a look into CNN shows they have spent hardly any time in comparison to the other two on the Holloway story (excepting Nancy Grace on Headline News who mentions the story occasionally):

From the August 11 edition of CNN's Anderson Cooper 360:

COOPER: Well, in Aruba today, not much happened in the 11th week of the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, but you'd never know that if you listen to just about every other cable news channel. We did a number of stories after the American teen went missing, and her family's anguish is and terrible and hard to imagine, and we understand why they want the story to remain in the news. But we've been kind of stunned because every night, our cable competitors devote hours and hours to this story, even though, sadly, nothing new is happening. We decided to start tracking their coverage because, to be honest, it's getting downright ridiculous. Here's what the other guys were reporting just last night:

[begin videotape]

O'REILLY: Not much new in the Natalee Holloway mystery.

RITA COSBY (MSNBC host): The big mystery, of course, is taking place on the island of Aruba.

ABRAMS: Let's go to Aruba. It's getting ugly. Natalee Holloway's mother is fighting back.

SCARBOROUGH: Meanwhile, a new battle is brewing between Natalee's mom and a key suspect. We brought you that story last night.

GRETA VAN SUSTEREN (Fox News host): Tonight, Natalee Holloway's mother just received a tip in the search for her daughter. Does this tip tend to corroborate existing theories or is this a new theory that's separate and apart from the three who have been suspects thus far?

BETH HOLLOWAY TWITTY (Natalee Holloway's mother): Right now, I really don't want to comment on the nature of it right now.

SCARBOROUGH: You're not going to believe it -- courthouse filings today and [suspect in Holloway's disappearance] Joran [van der Sloot]'s lawyers claiming that the Dutch boy's human rights were being violated. Are you kidding me?

VAN SUSTEREN: In terms of this tip, one-to-ten scale, ten being the most helpful, how do you possibly rate this tip?

TWITTY: There's no way I can, Greta. There's no way I can.

O'REILLY: It's a phenomenon. It's a phenomenon.

VAN SUSTEREN: Are people responding or does it sort of seem unrelated to the tips coming in?

TWITTY: You know, I don't know, Greta.

O'REILLY: -- two and a half months, I've never seen in my 30-year career a crime story covered this way, ever. It's a mystery. It's a soap opera. It's a reality show, and each night, people come in for the latest. I thought it would dissipate. I thought it would go away. It has not.

[end videotape]

COOPER: It certainly has not. The only thing we can honestly report to you tonight is that a young woman is still missing, a family is still in anguish. Until something else happens, until there really are developments, we'll leave the rest to the other guys.

---

Interestingly, the residents of Aruba's growing hostility to the presence of Mrs. Holloway (ie. "go back to the trailer park where you came from," "if you raised your daughter they way you act yourself I would want to go missing too," "I'd give the murderer a free pass just to annoy this trashy family," and "who cares if she's dead - I don't.") doesn't seem to get much play on the domestic media but it sure does overseas. There are even growing calls on the Netherland Antilles' government to deport the entire family back to the USA, preferably taking the media with them.

Only the media and the people that want to be media stars seem to bring people to the point of overlooking intentional murder just to be rid of the circus.

At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually resist the stampede. Will it last though.
 
> Finally, one of the "News" channels has taken the high road
> and has decided its fortunes do not lie with endless
> reporting of missing white women.
>
> CNN's Anderson Cooper actually did a story about their
> counterparts at Fox and MSNBC, and a look into CNN shows
> they have spent hardly any time in comparison to the other
> two on the Holloway story (excepting Nancy Grace on Headline
> News who mentions the story occasionally):
>
> From the August 11 edition of CNN's Anderson Cooper 360:
>
> COOPER: Well, in Aruba today, not much happened in the 11th
> week of the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, but you'd
> never know that if you listen to just about every other
> cable news channel. We did a number of stories after the
> American teen went missing, and her family's anguish is and
> terrible and hard to imagine, and we understand why they
> want the story to remain in the news. But we've been kind of
> stunned because every night, our cable competitors devote
> hours and hours to this story, even though, sadly, nothing
> new is happening. We decided to start tracking their
> coverage because, to be honest, it's getting downright
> ridiculous. Here's what the other guys were reporting just
> last night:
>
> [begin videotape]
>
> O'REILLY: Not much new in the Natalee Holloway mystery.
>
> RITA COSBY (MSNBC host): The big mystery, of course, is
> taking place on the island of Aruba.
>
> ABRAMS: Let's go to Aruba. It's getting ugly. Natalee
> Holloway's mother is fighting back.
>
> SCARBOROUGH: Meanwhile, a new battle is brewing between
> Natalee's mom and a key suspect. We brought you that story
> last night.
>
> GRETA VAN SUSTEREN (Fox News host): Tonight, Natalee
> Holloway's mother just received a tip in the search for her
> daughter. Does this tip tend to corroborate existing
> theories or is this a new theory that's separate and apart
> from the three who have been suspects thus far?
>
> BETH HOLLOWAY TWITTY (Natalee Holloway's mother): Right now,
> I really don't want to comment on the nature of it right
> now.
>
> SCARBOROUGH: You're not going to believe it -- courthouse
> filings today and [suspect in Holloway's disappearance]
> Joran [van der Sloot]'s lawyers claiming that the Dutch
> boy's human rights were being violated. Are you kidding me?
>
> VAN SUSTEREN: In terms of this tip, one-to-ten scale, ten
> being the most helpful, how do you possibly rate this tip?
>
> TWITTY: There's no way I can, Greta. There's no way I can.
>
> O'REILLY: It's a phenomenon. It's a phenomenon.
>
> VAN SUSTEREN: Are people responding or does it sort of seem
> unrelated to the tips coming in?
>
> TWITTY: You know, I don't know, Greta.
>
> O'REILLY: -- two and a half months, I've never seen in my
> 30-year career a crime story covered this way, ever. It's a
> mystery. It's a soap opera. It's a reality show, and each
> night, people come in for the latest. I thought it would
> dissipate. I thought it would go away. It has not.
>
> [end videotape]
>
> COOPER: It certainly has not. The only thing we can honestly
> report to you tonight is that a young woman is still
> missing, a family is still in anguish. Until something else
> happens, until there really are developments, we'll leave
> the rest to the other guys.
>
> ---
>
> Interestingly, the residents of Aruba's growing hostility to
> the presence of Mrs. Holloway (ie. "go back to the trailer
> park where you came from," "if you raised your daughter they
> way you act yourself I would want to go missing too," "I'd
> give the murderer a free pass just to annoy this trashy
> family," and "who cares if she's dead - I don't.") doesn't
> seem to get much play on the domestic media but it sure does
> overseas. There are even growing calls on the Netherland
> Antilles' government to deport the entire family back to the
> USA, preferably taking the media with them.
>
> Only the media and the people that want to be media stars
> seem to bring people to the point of overlooking intentional
> murder just to be rid of the circus.
>
> At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually resist
> the stampede. Will it last though.
>

Who cares what people in Aruba thinks about this family? If it werent for Americans spending A LOT of money over there than that island would not exist. The entire case is corrupted because it involves a judge and his kid... and the reason it is getting a lot of press is because they are lieing about everything and the Aruban government and authorites are idiots. The island is what? 25 miles wide? and after 2-3 months they have NO IDEA whatsoever about anything? Come on. The American media is making that island look bad.. and they should. If Aruba wants to keep making tourism dollars from Americans.. then they should treat this case a little more professional.

The authorites are not telling that family anything.. wtf do you expect? I feel very bad for her family. They have treated this case cocky, clueless, and unprofessional IMO.

Was she drugged? Was she raped? Was she sold, Did she slip and fall in the ocean? Who knows, but after this much time, the Aruban authorites should at least have some clue.. and they have nothing. 17 year old kids are making them look like a bunch of dumbasses.

The girl has vanashed and IMO the American general public is interested in this story. It's a complete soap opera.. and I myself am actually interested with developments.

I understand that people go missing all the time, but because of her family wanting to keep this in the media.. the media has jumped all over it.

The family needs to try and keep this in the media so that they can somehow find out exactly what happened to their daughter.
<P ID="signature">______________
www.1Club.FM INTERNET RADIO STATION
30 Channels... 1 Club DOT FM</P></P>
 
> > Finally, one of the "News" channels has taken the high
> road
> > and has decided its fortunes do not lie with endless
> > reporting of missing white women.
> >
> > CNN's Anderson Cooper actually did a story about their
> > counterparts at Fox and MSNBC, and a look into CNN shows
> > they have spent hardly any time in comparison to the other
>
> > two on the Holloway story (excepting Nancy Grace on
> Headline
> > News who mentions the story occasionally):
> >
> > From the August 11 edition of CNN's Anderson Cooper 360:
> >
> > COOPER: Well, in Aruba today, not much happened in the
> 11th
> > week of the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, but you'd
> > never know that if you listen to just about every other
> > cable news channel. We did a number of stories after the
> > American teen went missing, and her family's anguish is
> and
> > terrible and hard to imagine, and we understand why they
> > want the story to remain in the news. But we've been kind
> of
> > stunned because every night, our cable competitors devote
> > hours and hours to this story, even though, sadly, nothing
>
> > new is happening. We decided to start tracking their
> > coverage because, to be honest, it's getting downright
> > ridiculous. Here's what the other guys were reporting just
>
> > last night:
> >
> > [begin videotape]
> >
> > O'REILLY: Not much new in the Natalee Holloway mystery.
> >
> > RITA COSBY (MSNBC host): The big mystery, of course, is
> > taking place on the island of Aruba.
> >
> > ABRAMS: Let's go to Aruba. It's getting ugly. Natalee
> > Holloway's mother is fighting back.
> >
> > SCARBOROUGH: Meanwhile, a new battle is brewing between
> > Natalee's mom and a key suspect. We brought you that story
>
> > last night.
> >
> > GRETA VAN SUSTEREN (Fox News host): Tonight, Natalee
> > Holloway's mother just received a tip in the search for
> her
> > daughter. Does this tip tend to corroborate existing
> > theories or is this a new theory that's separate and apart
>
> > from the three who have been suspects thus far?
> >
> > BETH HOLLOWAY TWITTY (Natalee Holloway's mother): Right
> now,
> > I really don't want to comment on the nature of it right
> > now.
> >
> > SCARBOROUGH: You're not going to believe it -- courthouse
> > filings today and [suspect in Holloway's disappearance]
> > Joran [van der Sloot]'s lawyers claiming that the Dutch
> > boy's human rights were being violated. Are you kidding
> me?
> >
> > VAN SUSTEREN: In terms of this tip, one-to-ten scale, ten
> > being the most helpful, how do you possibly rate this tip?
>
> >
> > TWITTY: There's no way I can, Greta. There's no way I can.
>
> >
> > O'REILLY: It's a phenomenon. It's a phenomenon.
> >
> > VAN SUSTEREN: Are people responding or does it sort of
> seem
> > unrelated to the tips coming in?
> >
> > TWITTY: You know, I don't know, Greta.
> >
> > O'REILLY: -- two and a half months, I've never seen in my
> > 30-year career a crime story covered this way, ever. It's
> a
> > mystery. It's a soap opera. It's a reality show, and each
> > night, people come in for the latest. I thought it would
> > dissipate. I thought it would go away. It has not.
> >
> > [end videotape]
> >
> > COOPER: It certainly has not. The only thing we can
> honestly
> > report to you tonight is that a young woman is still
> > missing, a family is still in anguish. Until something
> else
> > happens, until there really are developments, we'll leave
> > the rest to the other guys.
> >
> > ---
> >
> > Interestingly, the residents of Aruba's growing hostility
> to
> > the presence of Mrs. Holloway (ie. "go back to the trailer
>
> > park where you came from," "if you raised your daughter
> they
> > way you act yourself I would want to go missing too," "I'd
>
> > give the murderer a free pass just to annoy this trashy
> > family," and "who cares if she's dead - I don't.") doesn't
>
> > seem to get much play on the domestic media but it sure
> does
> > overseas. There are even growing calls on the Netherland
> > Antilles' government to deport the entire family back to
> the
> > USA, preferably taking the media with them.
> >
> > Only the media and the people that want to be media stars
> > seem to bring people to the point of overlooking
> intentional
> > murder just to be rid of the circus.
> >
> > At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually resist
> > the stampede. Will it last though.
> >
>
> Who cares what people in Aruba thinks about this family? If
> it werent for Americans spending A LOT of money over there
> than that island would not exist. The entire case is
> corrupted because it involves a judge and his kid... and the
> reason it is getting a lot of press is because they are
> lieing about everything and the Aruban government and
> authorites are idiots. The island is what? 25 miles wide?
> and after 2-3 months they have NO IDEA whatsoever about
> anything? Come on. The American media is making that island
> look bad.. and they should. If Aruba wants to keep making
> tourism dollars from Americans.. then they should treat this
> case a little more professional.
>
> The authorites are not telling that family anything.. wtf do
> you expect? I feel very bad for her family. They have
> treated this case cocky, clueless, and unprofessional IMO.
>
> Was she drugged? Was she raped? Was she sold, Did she slip
> and fall in the ocean? Who knows, but after this much time,
> the Aruban authorites should at least have some clue.. and
> they have nothing. 17 year old kids are making them look
> like a bunch of dumbasses.
>
> The girl has vanashed and IMO the American general public is
> interested in this story. It's a complete soap opera.. and I
> myself am actually interested with developments.
>
> I understand that people go missing all the time, but
> because of her family wanting to keep this in the media..
> the media has jumped all over it.
>
> The family needs to try and keep this in the media so that
> they can somehow find out exactly what happened to their
> daughter.
>


I live in the Birmingham market, and the media barrage this story has gotten over the past 3 months has thoroughly sickened me, both nationally and locally.

The ONLY reason something like this should get heavy coverage is if that may lead to tips that assist law enforcement in finding the missing person. Since it didn't even happen in this country, I doubt that anyone watching US news channels has access to such information. And if anyone in Aruba did have this knowledge and was thinking of divulging it, they have probably been thoroughly turned off by the crass and xenophobic actions of Beth Holloway.

Bully for CNN. They'll be my news choice for the foreseeable future.
 
> Who cares what people in Aruba thinks about this family?

The Arubans. It's their country. The Netherlands Antilles are not hurting a bit over this matter, and wouldn't if they rode the mother onto a ship or plane and sent her home.

> The authorites are not telling that family anything.. wtf do
> you expect? I feel very bad for her family. They have
> treated this case cocky, clueless, and unprofessional IMO.

I personally stopped caring about this woman and her family when she trashed Aruba as some backwards banana republic filled with ignorant people. The best response I heard came from one of the local reporters who commented, "considering where she comes from, it takes one to know one." Snap!

> The family needs to try and keep this in the media so that
> they can somehow find out exactly what happened to their
> daughter.

Assuming Bill O'Reilly and the rest of Fox airing this to an American audience helps people in Aruba be informed about it to come forward with new information is a fantasy. It's exploitation for ratings, pure and simple. There isn't a person at Fox or MSNBC who really cares about this woman.

As the country that found OJ Simpson not guilty, we have nothing to say about the justice systems of other countries.
 
> > > Finally, one of the "News" channels has taken the high
> > road
> > > and has decided its fortunes do not lie with endless
> > > reporting of missing white women.
> > >
> > > CNN's Anderson Cooper actually did a story about their
> > > counterparts at Fox and MSNBC, and a look into CNN shows
>
> > > they have spent hardly any time in comparison to the
> other
> >
> > > two on the Holloway story (excepting Nancy Grace on
> > Headline
> > > News who mentions the story occasionally):
> > >
> > > From the August 11 edition of CNN's Anderson Cooper 360:
>
> > >
> > > COOPER: Well, in Aruba today, not much happened in the
> > 11th
> > > week of the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, but you'd
>
> > > never know that if you listen to just about every other
> > > cable news channel. We did a number of stories after the
>
> > > American teen went missing, and her family's anguish is
> > and
> > > terrible and hard to imagine, and we understand why they
>
> > > want the story to remain in the news. But we've been
> kind
> > of
> > > stunned because every night, our cable competitors
> devote
> > > hours and hours to this story, even though, sadly,
> nothing
> >
> > > new is happening. We decided to start tracking their
> > > coverage because, to be honest, it's getting downright
> > > ridiculous. Here's what the other guys were reporting
> just
> >
> > > last night:
> > >
> > > [begin videotape]
> > >
> > > O'REILLY: Not much new in the Natalee Holloway mystery.
> > >
> > > RITA COSBY (MSNBC host): The big mystery, of course, is
> > > taking place on the island of Aruba.
> > >
> > > ABRAMS: Let's go to Aruba. It's getting ugly. Natalee
> > > Holloway's mother is fighting back.
> > >
> > > SCARBOROUGH: Meanwhile, a new battle is brewing between
> > > Natalee's mom and a key suspect. We brought you that
> story
> >
> > > last night.
> > >
> > > GRETA VAN SUSTEREN (Fox News host): Tonight, Natalee
> > > Holloway's mother just received a tip in the search for
> > her
> > > daughter. Does this tip tend to corroborate existing
> > > theories or is this a new theory that's separate and
> apart
> >
> > > from the three who have been suspects thus far?
> > >
> > > BETH HOLLOWAY TWITTY (Natalee Holloway's mother): Right
> > now,
> > > I really don't want to comment on the nature of it right
>
> > > now.
> > >
> > > SCARBOROUGH: You're not going to believe it --
> courthouse
> > > filings today and [suspect in Holloway's disappearance]
> > > Joran [van der Sloot]'s lawyers claiming that the Dutch
> > > boy's human rights were being violated. Are you kidding
> > me?
> > >
> > > VAN SUSTEREN: In terms of this tip, one-to-ten scale,
> ten
> > > being the most helpful, how do you possibly rate this
> tip?
> >
> > >
> > > TWITTY: There's no way I can, Greta. There's no way I
> can.
> >
> > >
> > > O'REILLY: It's a phenomenon. It's a phenomenon.
> > >
> > > VAN SUSTEREN: Are people responding or does it sort of
> > seem
> > > unrelated to the tips coming in?
> > >
> > > TWITTY: You know, I don't know, Greta.
> > >
> > > O'REILLY: -- two and a half months, I've never seen in
> my
> > > 30-year career a crime story covered this way, ever.
> It's
> > a
> > > mystery. It's a soap opera. It's a reality show, and
> each
> > > night, people come in for the latest. I thought it would
>
> > > dissipate. I thought it would go away. It has not.
> > >
> > > [end videotape]
> > >
> > > COOPER: It certainly has not. The only thing we can
> > honestly
> > > report to you tonight is that a young woman is still
> > > missing, a family is still in anguish. Until something
> > else
> > > happens, until there really are developments, we'll
> leave
> > > the rest to the other guys.
> > >
> > > ---
> > >
> > > Interestingly, the residents of Aruba's growing
> hostility
> > to
> > > the presence of Mrs. Holloway (ie. "go back to the
> trailer
> >
> > > park where you came from," "if you raised your daughter
> > they
> > > way you act yourself I would want to go missing too,"
> "I'd
> >
> > > give the murderer a free pass just to annoy this trashy
> > > family," and "who cares if she's dead - I don't.")
> doesn't
> >
> > > seem to get much play on the domestic media but it sure
> > does
> > > overseas. There are even growing calls on the
> Netherland
> > > Antilles' government to deport the entire family back to
>
> > the
> > > USA, preferably taking the media with them.
> > >
> > > Only the media and the people that want to be media
> stars
> > > seem to bring people to the point of overlooking
> > intentional
> > > murder just to be rid of the circus.
> > >
> > > At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually
> resist
> > > the stampede. Will it last though.
> > >
> >
> > Who cares what people in Aruba thinks about this family?
> If
> > it werent for Americans spending A LOT of money over there
>
> > than that island would not exist. The entire case is
> > corrupted because it involves a judge and his kid... and
> the
> > reason it is getting a lot of press is because they are
> > lieing about everything and the Aruban government and
> > authorites are idiots. The island is what? 25 miles wide?
> > and after 2-3 months they have NO IDEA whatsoever about
> > anything? Come on. The American media is making that
> island
> > look bad.. and they should. If Aruba wants to keep making
> > tourism dollars from Americans.. then they should treat
> this
> > case a little more professional.
> >
> > The authorites are not telling that family anything.. wtf
> do
> > you expect? I feel very bad for her family. They have
> > treated this case cocky, clueless, and unprofessional IMO.
>
> >
> > Was she drugged? Was she raped? Was she sold, Did she slip
>
> > and fall in the ocean? Who knows, but after this much
> time,
> > the Aruban authorites should at least have some clue.. and
>
> > they have nothing. 17 year old kids are making them look
> > like a bunch of dumbasses.
> >
> > The girl has vanashed and IMO the American general public
> is
> > interested in this story. It's a complete soap opera.. and
> I
> > myself am actually interested with developments.
> >
> > I understand that people go missing all the time, but
> > because of her family wanting to keep this in the media..
> > the media has jumped all over it.
> >
> > The family needs to try and keep this in the media so that
>
> > they can somehow find out exactly what happened to their
> > daughter.
> >
>
>
> I live in the Birmingham market, and the media barrage this
> story has gotten over the past 3 months has thoroughly
> sickened me, both nationally and locally.
>
> The ONLY reason something like this should get heavy
> coverage is if that may lead to tips that assist law
> enforcement in finding the missing person. Since it didn't
> even happen in this country, I doubt that anyone watching US
> news channels has access to such information. And if anyone
> in Aruba did have this knowledge and was thinking of
> divulging it, they have probably been thoroughly turned off
> by the crass and xenophobic actions of Beth Holloway.
>
> Bully for CNN. They'll be my news choice for the
> foreseeable future.
>

Well, actually, Dateline NBC did a similiar story a few weeks back.....so they beat CNN, as far as "taking the high road" is concerned.

All of the networks beat this story to death! Only recently, due to outspoken TV critcs/blogs/newspaper columnists, etc., has NBC, and now CNN, decided to take the: "Hey, we're not all about Natalie like the other guys are! We care about other things too, you know!....Like missing black women!" position.

Dampier, face it, CNN is no better (or worse) than the other news networks!
CNN is just following NBC's lead, that's all!
 
>
> Assuming Bill O'Reilly and the rest of Fox airing this to an
> American audience helps people in Aruba be informed about it
> to come forward with new information is a fantasy. It's
> exploitation for ratings, pure and simple. There isn't a
> person at Fox or MSNBC who really cares about this woman.
>

I couldn't agree more. "A Current Affair" goes haywire with the Holloway case as well as the missing groom story they've been puting on every single day. WHEN WILL TIM GREEN AND HIS A-HOLE NEWS BUDDIES GET A LIFE? THERE IS NO STORY!!!! GO BACK TO WRITING NOVELS YOU FRANKENSTEIN LOOKING......<P ID="signature">______________
Tape Traders Central/Retro Blog</P>
 
> two on the Holloway story (excepting Nancy Grace on
> > > Headline
> > > > News who mentions the story occasionally):
>

Apparantly Mr Cooper doesn't consider Headline News a part of CNN. Ms Grace has been on this story just as much as the people that Coop slammed at the other networks. Its one reason I removed the former "CNN2" from my favorites.
 
> The girl has vanashed and IMO the American general public is
> interested in this story. It's a complete soap opera.. and I
> myself am actually interested with developments.


As someone part of the 'American general public', I can safely say that I'm not interested in Natalee Holloway, don't care about the nutjob family of Natalee Holloway, don't care about the crazy location that hosted Natalee Holloway, nor any of the related hyperbole remotely related to Natalee Holloway.<P ID="signature">______________
Why don't you ask yo' mama for a cute closing signature?</P>
 
> The girl has vanashed and IMO the American general public is
> interested in this story. It's a complete soap opera.. and I
> myself am actually interested with developments.

I, nor anyone I know cares about this story other than the fact that it represents what is wrong with these so called all news networks. <P ID="signature">______________
WCBS = We're Crazy Buffoons and Schmucks
<a href=http://chuck.spotteddogs.org/tv/>Spotted Dog TV Talk - for all your non-news TV Talk</a></P>
 
> Finally, one of the "News" channels has taken the high road
> and has decided its fortunes do not lie with endless
> reporting of missing white women.

Well now I have to withdraw the whole damn thing because while I watching the airhead Paula Zahn last night, they ran promos promising new developments tonight in the Holloway case! Maybe the computer worm did more damage then they thought. That's a new media flip flop speed record.
 
> Dampier, face it, CNN is no better (or worse) than the other
> news networks!
> CNN is just following NBC's lead, that's all!

I'm being optimistic. :) That lasted less than 24 hours.

Ted Turner would have never let this happen.
 
> Finally, one of the "News" channels has taken the high road
> and has decided its fortunes do not lie with endless
> reporting of missing white women.
>
> At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually resist
> the stampede. Will it last though.
>
Guess what's on Larry King tonight (8/18). That right, more on the Missing White Woman saga in Aruba.
 
> At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually resist
> the stampede.

If CNN wanted to show how much they have in the way of guts, they'd cancel Nancy Grace. That show's been nothin' but Holloway since June.<P ID="signature">______________
The only thing I gotta do is stay terrestrial and die!</P>
 
> > At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually resist
> > the stampede.
>
> If CNN wanted to show how much they have in the way of guts,
> they'd cancel Nancy Grace. That show's been nothin' but
> Holloway since June.
>
... and lets not forget Larry King.<P ID="signature">______________
www.1Club.FM INTERNET RADIO STATION
30 Channels... 1 Club DOT FM</P></P>
 
> > Finally, one of the "News" channels has taken the high
> road
> > and has decided its fortunes do not lie with endless
> > reporting of missing white women.
> >
> > At least CNN seems to have enough guts to actually resist
> > the stampede. Will it last though.
> >
> Guess what's on Larry King tonight (8/18). That right, more
> on the Missing White Woman saga in Aruba.
>

... so, unlike what everone below said (besides me)... the "general public" is still interested in the story... People that post all day on a TV Message Board is not the general public... they are TV and Media enthusiasts.<P ID="signature">______________
www.1Club.FM INTERNET RADIO STATION
30 Channels... 1 Club DOT FM</P></P>
 
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