WASHINGTON - JULY 20 - Today, David Brock, President and CEO of Media Matters for America, sent a letter
to Steve Capus, president of NBC News, sparked by a report that NBC chief
Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski accepted $30,000 from the Greater
Providence Chamber of Commerce to address its Business EXPO 2007 -- an event at
which Miklaszewski attacked presidential candidate and former Sen. John Edwards
(D-NC), calling him a "loser" for defending a pricey haircut.
The letter asks Capus to make public NBC's
policy pertaining to journalists participating in paid speaking engagements and
to explain whether Mr. Miklaszewski violated that
policy.
In 2002, Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz
reported that professional journalists' accepting speaking fees is widely
frowned upon by the media, and that a "number of news organizations including
ABC and NBC, [have] banned the practice."
In 2006, responding to controversy
surrounding Chris Matthews' acceptance of speaking fees from several corporate
interests, then-MSNBC president Rick Kaplan clarified publicly that NBC has a
strict policy prohibiting anchors from personally accepting speaking fees, and
that anyone who did so "would risk being fired."
Excerpts from the
letter:
"We recently learned that earlier this
spring NBC News chief Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski accepted $30,000
from the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce to address its Business EXPO
2007 -- an apparent violation of NBC News' policy banning paid speaking
engagements."
"Equally troubling, during his remarks
Miklaszewski cast aspersions on presidential candidate and former Senator John
Edwards (D-NC), calling him a 'loser' for defending a pricey haircut."
"As we have noted, Mr. Miklaszewski's
remarks appear to be in direct violation of your network's ban on paid speaking
engagements. I respectfully ask that you publicly release NBC's ethics and
conflict-of-interest policies for journalists, and explain whether Mr.
Miklaszewski's conduct comports with those
policies."
Full text of the letter:
July 19, 2007
Mr. Steve Capus
President, NBC News
NBC Television Group
30 Rockefeller
Plaza
New
York, NY
10112-0037
Dear Mr. Capus,
We recently learned that earlier this
spring NBC News chief Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski accepted $30,000
from the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce to address its Business EXPO
2007 -- an apparent violation of NBC News' policy banning paid speaking
engagements.
Equally troubling, during his remarks
Miklaszewski cast aspersions on presidential candidate and former Senator John
Edwards (D-NC), calling him a "loser" for defending a pricey haircut. While this
personal attack is not the chief reason for writing this letter, it is clearly
inappropriate for a professional, impartial journalist to make and deserves your
direct attention as well.
In 2002, Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz
reported that professional journalists' accepting speaking fees is widely
frowned upon by the media, and that a "number of news organizations including
ABC and NBC, [have] banned the practice."
In 2006, responding to controversy
surrounding Chris Matthews' acceptance of speaking fees from several corporate
interests, then-MSNBC president Rick Kaplan clarified publicly that NBC has a
strict policy prohibiting anchors from personally accepting speaking fees, and
that anyone who did so "would risk being fired."
As we have noted, Mr. Miklaszewski's
remarks appear to be in direct violation of your network's ban on paid speaking
engagements. I respectfully ask that you publicly release NBC's ethics and
conflict-of-interest policies for journalists, and explain whether Mr.
Miklaszewski's conduct comports with those policies. If Mr. Miklaszewski's
decision to give a speech paid for by a special interest group in which he
attacked a presidential candidate is consistent with NBC's policies, I ask that
you revise those policies to prohibit such actions.
Sincerely,
David Brock
President &
CEO
Media Matters for
America
###