July 9th, 2007

Katie Couric "Beats" News Staffer

 by David R. Usher  
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ktcrc.jpgIf a male news anchor slapped a female staffer even once, he would be out the door before the news even hit the streets.

If Joe Hagan’s New York Magazine article “Alas, Poor Couric” is correct  — that Katie Couric slapped a fellow male editor in anger “over and over and over again on the arm” — she should be fired immediately.

It appears that feminist spin control is already working overtime.  The early release on Drudge indicates, “It had seemed like a joke at first, but it quickly became clear that she wasn’t kidding.”  But an “insider” claims otherwise: "Look, it wasn't serious, whatsoever.”

But Couric grudgingly agrees that her act was not a mock act: “I sort of slapped him around,” Couric admits. “I got mad at him and said, ‘You can’t do this to me. You have to tell me when you’re going to use a word like that.’ I was aggravated, there’s no question about that.”

This morning, Couric dropped her own countermeasures, pointing fingers at CBS, painting them as rigid fuddy-duddies holding her news broadcast back – in spite of all the changes at CBS Evening News making the show “more personable, more accessible, a little less formal, a little more approachable.” 

Sorry, Katie – changing the subject does not change the subject.

Couric and a few other feminist “news” hounds blame sexism for Couric’s failure.  I disagree.  Being an exciting “reality” talk show personality who gets on-air colonoscopies does not qualify one as a serious news reporter or analyst. 

If there is any point about sexism to be made, it is that news does not feminize well.  News junkies want the straight stuff not filtered by pink sunglasses bespectacled with catchy bling.  In fact, it would be sexist to not hold Couric to the same standards of professional behavior others are held to in the workplace – including the standards on workplace violence.

Couric is a card-carrying feminist who thinks adherence to feminism is more important than facts – revealed when she accused Suzanne Sommers of “throwing the baby out with the bathwater” for proving that feminist statistics on “Football Sunday” domestic violence are hogwash. 

Couric wants a free pass to move feminist neo-patriarchalism into the CBS news room.  This would be a smart move only if CBS wants its news show to be rated against Oprah – and lose there too.

No extended oratory is required.  If a male news anchor slapped a female staffer even once, he would be out the door before the news even hit the streets.  Physical violence is never acceptable in the workplace – even if your name is Katie Couric.

Culture: Media, Feminism, Abortion, Euthanasia



David R. Usher is President of the American Coalition for Fathers and Children, Missouri Coalition.
davidrusher@swbell.net
http://www.dadsnow.org/ACFC-MO/

Read more articles by David R. Usher

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  1. In America we have two standards. One for those who follow the rules and declare themselves to be conservative. These people are held to a high standard and are blasted by the media at the least transgression. Then there are the elites who have no rules and are protected no matter what they do. I do not like this but that is the America I live in. I still love this country with all of its faults. Couric in my opinion is on the list of faults.

    Comment by fbaginski | July 9, 2007

  2. "…it would be sexist to not hold Couric to the same standards of professional behavior others are held to in the workplace – including the standards on workplace violence."

    Voyeurism: A man peeks into a woman’s bathroom window and sees her naked.

    Indecent exposure: A woman peeks into a man’s bathroom window and sees him naked.

    Comment by sedonaman | July 10, 2007

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