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Viacom Dios
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The Los
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Angeles Times , New York Times ,
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and USA
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Today each lead with Viacom's acquisition of CBS, a $36 billion
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transaction, resulting, if approved by shareholders and the federal government,
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in a huge new multimedia entity. The Washington Post top-fronts the deal, but leads instead with
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a story breaking in the Russian press that none of the other American big
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dailies has: A Swiss investigation's fresh evidence that a company receiving
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major Kremlin contracts paid tens of thousands of dollars in bills on credit
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cards belonging to Boris Yeltsin and his two daughters, and $1 million to a
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Hungarian bank account associated with Yeltsin.
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For those scoring at home, the WP says Viacom/CBS is the third-largest media deal ever, with the
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new company becoming the third-largest media enterprise, while both the
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NYT and LAT say it's the biggest media deal ever resulting in the
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No. 2 media outfit, behind only Time Warner. The papers explain that the deal
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exemplifies the virtues of vertical integration, nicely defined by the
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WP as "the ability to produce entertainment and simultaneously
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distribute it." The LAT notes that this feature of the deal, tying up as
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it does many production and distribution entities, could stimulate other
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similar mergers among companies now needing more than ever to tie up their
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own.
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The coverage notes the two largest speed bumps for the get-together: Viacom
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owns half of UPN, and current federal rules prevent a company from owning two
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broadcast networks. Also, there is a rule limiting a media company's TV reach
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to 35 percent of all households, and the new company will reach 41 percent. The
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papers note that Sumner Redstone, Viacom's No. 1, and his counterpart at CBS,
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Mel Karmazin, will be visiting the FCC in Washington today to appeal for
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special dispensation on these matters.
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The deal coverage is shot through with the usual attempts at dramatizing the
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essentially undramatic activity of guys in suits writing themselves checks. The
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LAT , for instance, bathetically refers to "a series of secret meetings
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at Karmazin's penthouse apartment," during which Redstone "grew to see the
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magic of the marriage Karmazin was proposing." Perhaps the day's definitive
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merger porn is this line from Redstone about Karmazin, quoted in one of the
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NYT's seven (!) inside stories about the deal: "This began as a deal
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involving some television stations. Then he started talking about cable
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networks. Then I could see it coming. He is a master salesman, and he began to
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turn me on." Just about the only relief from all this breathlessness comes from
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the WP , which quotes an academic as saying, "It seems to me that this
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is, by any definition, an undemocratic development. The media system in a
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democracy should not be inordinately dominated by a few very powerful
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interests."
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Everybody reports that just ahead of a looming Friday deadline, a group of
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Puerto Rican nationalists has accepted the politically explosive clemency
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recently offered by President Clinton. This means they will have to foreswear
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violence or its advocacy. Two prisoners offered the deal declined it.
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The NYT and Wall Street Journal run stories reporting that Treasury,
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State, and White House officials learned last spring of massive Russian
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money-laundering involving the Bank of New York but didn't pass the information
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along to Al Gore or President Clinton. The WP buries this information
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near the bottom of its lead.
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The LAT , the NYT , and WP front reports that on the eve
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of former HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros' trial on various charges stemming from
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his payment of hush money to a paramour, Cisneros pleaded guilty to a single
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count of lying to the FBI when asked about the cash, netting a fine but no
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jail. The case had been developed by an independent counsel under the
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now-lapsed statute. The NYT and WP headlines emphasize the
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incommensurability of the case's cost ($9 million) and its result.
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Yesterday's NYT ran a sprawling front-page "special report" raising the question of whether the now-confirmed
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ability in recent years of China to miniaturize nuclear weapons was a result of
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spying on the United States or just hard, independent work. The effort,
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conducted by one of the paper's most able science writers, William J. Broad,
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says high up that the congressional report issued late last year asserting that
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espionage was the main explanation "went beyond the evidence," and that his
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thorough review shows that perhaps "thousands" of individuals had access to the
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information that the report and the federal investigation suggest came from one
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dismissed scientist, Wen Ho Lee. Now, given that the Times ran hard and
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often with the congressional report and the line it took, does this piece
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represent some sort of about-face? Or worse, some sort of illegitimate attempt
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by the paper to revise its history of coverage on the subject? Today's Papers
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doesn't think so. The paper's coverage has generally been clear in attributing
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the Wen Ho Lee-probably-did-it line to particular (named and unnamed)
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government sources. And anyway, a paper should be encouraged to revisit a topic
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as more information becomes available and better understood. Today's Papers'
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only complaint about Broad's re-look is that it somewhat unfairly chips away at
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the impression the paper had originally created: The three-page piece waits
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until the second-to-last column to state that the consensus of the American
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intelligence agencies is that espionage played a role in China's catch-up even
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if there is no smoking-gun evidence for this.
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