CONTAINING LINKS TO 1280 STORIES FROM THE NETWORKS' NIGHTLY NEWSCASTS
     COMMENTS: Tuesday’s Tidbits

None of the networks had a correspondent in Brazil to cover the street protests in a dozen cities over economic inequality and political corruption. Yet, with the World Cup and the Olympic Games looming, at least NBC found them newsworthy enough for Mark Potter to narrate the video with a voiceover. Potter found Brazil quite Mediterranean, putting it in the same category as Egypt, Greece and Turkey.

Back in March, CBS' Dean Reynolds filed stunning visuals on the deck of the Stewart J Cort, the iron ore freighter. Similar inspiration struck Anne Thompson at NBC. How tiny she seems on the decks of the Interlake Steamship Company's Mesabi Miner. The water is so low on the Saint Mary's River that the massive ship has a mere nine inches of clearance -- too little precipitation, too much evaporation. NBC's Thompson called Superior the largest lake in the world. Yet when it comes to size, compared with Lake Baikal, Superior is Inferior.

The gun control debate has been CBS' specialty ever since the massacre at the elementary school in Connecticut six months ago. In that period, CBS has aired more reports on the topic than NBC and ABC put together. The latest comes from Barry Petersen in Denver, where John Morse, the President of Colorado's State Senate, faces a recall petition from self-styled pro-choice activists. The "choice" in this case, Laura Carno explains, is whether or not to arm oneself.

Raytheon, the hi-tech Pentagon contractor, gets a free plug from Anthony Mason on CBS for its sponsorship of science education in middle schools: see its virtual reality 3-D cave. The USNavy SEALs get a plug from Jim Miklaszewski, NBC's man at the Pentagon, who runs video of their muddy, manly, training sessions in order to speculate about how many women would make the commando grade.

The prospects of fuel tank fires in rear-end collisions in Sports Utility Vehicles built by Jeep has exercised Lisa Stark at ABC for three years now. Her network's computer animators imagined a Virtual View of the danger. Chrysler has now relented, and agreed to a recall of the vehicles in order to add a trailer hitch as protection. Stark was skeptical that the hitch would do the trick.

Only yesterday, I ticked off examples of ABC's peculiar habit of covering alarming events in airline travel that turn out to be inconsequential. The distraught passenger who was subdued, the emergency exit door that was not opened, the engine fire that was extinguished safely, the debris that fell off a wing harming nobody. Now Clayton Sandell tells us about the scare at Denver International Airport that was relieved when a tornado passed without incident.

ABC gave us an airline twofer, with its latest installment of travelers' tips. Here is Linsey Davis on the vast variability of fares; here is Paula Faris on flexible bargain hunting; here is Brian Ross on the lookout for TSA left luggage thieves; here is Matt Gutman on wearing seatbelts. Now Linsey Davis again, consulting AirFareWatchDog.com on how to protect checked baggage.

By coincidence, both ABC and NBC closed the newscast with non-medicinal therapies for hospital patients. NBC's Stephanie Gosk brought us the Faithful Friends of the University of Maryland Medical Center: a patient's pet is allowed bedside visits -- as long as it is a dog or cat; hamsters need not apply. ABC's in-house physician Richard Besser brought us the lullabies of Rebecca Loveszy at New York Presbyterian's neo-natal unit -- music really does soothe the savage preemie's breast.

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