CONTAINING LINKS TO 1280 STORIES FROM THE NETWORKS' NIGHTLY NEWSCASTS
     COMMENTS: Friday’s Findings

Now we are in the second decade of C21st, the Supreme Court has decided to join, on time-delay at least, the first half of C20th. Radio! NBC's Pete Williams played the audiotape from Wednesday's Voting Rights Act hearing, the one in which Justice Antonin Scalia speculated that the renewal of that legislation amounted to a "perpetuation of racial entitlement." Neither CBS nor ABC played the audio. ABC has not mentioned the case all week.

Both ABC and NBC had fun with foreign bętes noires. In Boston, NBC's Ron Mott had Joe, the Kennedy scion, justify his praise for Hugo Chavez for his subsidized CITGO exports of home heating oil for poor families in the northeast. At the State Department, ABC's Martha Raddatz hinted that pin-stripers might take Dennis Rodman's debriefing telephone call on what it feels like to get stinking drunk with Kim Jong Un. Raddatz could not resist the delivery style of North Korean news anchors, accompanied by blaring trumpets.

After detailed coverage earlier in the year of the street violence in Chicago, all three newscasts should have followed up with February's improved homicide statistics. CBS' John Miller did, profiling the policing efforts of Superintendent Garry McCarthy. ABC's Alex Perez did, profiling the community activism of Father Michael Pfleger. NBC passed.

Both ABC's Matt Gutman and NBC's Gabe Guttierrez gave us a brief geology primer after a Florida man fell out of bed to his death in the middle of the night. Sinkholes are caused by erosion from subterranean rivers flowing through limestone caverns.

On Tuesday I noted that ABC is the newscast that showcases sharks. Well, Mark Strassmann on CBS now sets out to contradict me. Did you know what is the color of blood in sea water? Watch Strassmann's story on West Palm Beach biologists dental-flossing sets of jaws to find out.

Last week's headliner was the topic of Amy Robach's hourlong primetime documentary on ABC, The Fast Times of Oscar Pistorius. Robach aired a preview, including a replica of the legless sprinter's bedroom, built in order to reenact his account of the night he shot his girlfriend. Michael Sokolove, the magazine writer for The New York Times, who was quoted last week by ABC's Bazi Kanani and NBC's Michelle Kosinski about Pistorius' gun-loving adrenaline, appears again.

As for the three newscasts' weekending closing features…

"Get in there and learn, baby, 'cos you ain't gonna learn in that pine box," were the words of wisdom from 89-year-old Ed Bray for Steve Hartman in CBS' On the Road series.

NBC's Kate Snow tipped her hat, in passing, to Lady GaGa and Taylor Swift and Adele, while plugging the vocal stylings of Willy Mason and the retro vinyl press of Nashville's United Records.

I did not understand why it is better for working women to Lean In than to Lean Out -- yet Diane Sawyer has a track record of admiration for the worldviews of Facebook's bosses. So Sawyer recycled clips from a previous sitdown that aired last May and designated the inward-leaning author and social-networking executive Sheryl Sandberg as ABC's Person of the Week.

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