CONTAINING LINKS TO 58103 STORIES FROM THE NETWORKS' NIGHTLY NEWSCASTS
     TYNDALL HEADLINE: HIGHLIGHTS FROM APRIL 5, 2011
The twin angles of the federal budget were the Story of the Day. In the short run, 800,000 so-called non-essential government workers may be furloughed at the end of the week if a formula is not agreed to pay for the remainder of the fiscal year. In the long run, Paul Ryan, the House Budget Committee Chairman, unveiled the Republicans' plan for the government to spend $6tr less over the next decade--and even then it would still continue to run deficits. NBC and CBS, with substitute anchor Harry Smith, both led with the looming government shutdown (which would be no shutdown at all since services labeled essential would keep going). ABC relegated both budget stories to lower down its news agenda and chose to lead with an opinion poll for the Associated Press by LifeGoesStrong.com on babyboomers' retirement nest eggs.    
     TYNDALL PICKS FOR APRIL 5, 2011: CLICK ON GRID ELEMENTS TO SEARCH FOR MATCHING ITEMS
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video thumbnailNBCFederal budget deficit spending continuesNeed funding deal to prevent partial shutdownChuck ToddWhite House
video thumbnailCBSFederal budget deficit spending continuesRepublicans propose $6tr cuts over next decadeNancy CordesCapitol Hill
video thumbnailABCRetirement financial planning effortsBabyboomers' assets depleted, will work longerDavid MuirNew York
video thumbnailCBSLibya politics: Moammar Khadafy is longtime rulerCut-off of oil trade threatens rebels' economyAllen PizzeyLibya
video thumbnailABCMilitary role of females in uniform debatedUSAF has all-woman F-15 squad in AfghanistanMartha RaddatzNo Dateline
video thumbnailCBSJapan earthquake triggers killer tsunami, N-accidentPlug nuclear water leak at Fukushima plantCelia HattonTokyo
video thumbnailABCTuna fishery prepares for Pacific Ocean migrationFlesh may contain radioactive toxins from JapanNeal KarlinskyJapan
video thumbnailNBCDiagnostic CT scan overuse may cause cancerHospital ERs use too many scans on childrenRobert BazellNew York
video thumbnailNBCStorms, high winds, floods in southeastern statesHuge trees uprooted across region, eight killedRon MottGeorgia
video thumbnailCBSBlack Power leader Malcolm X assassination aftermathNew biography claims killers escaped unpunishedJim AxelrodNew York
 
TYNDALL BLOG: DAILY NOTES ON NETWORK TELEVISION NIGHTLY NEWS
BUDGET BATTLES NEAR & FAR The twin angles of the federal budget were the Story of the Day. In the short run, 800,000 so-called non-essential government workers may be furloughed at the end of the week if a formula is not agreed to pay for the remainder of the fiscal year. In the long run, Paul Ryan, the House Budget Committee Chairman, unveiled the Republicans' plan for the government to spend $6tr less over the next decade--and even then it would still continue to run deficits. NBC and CBS, with substitute anchor Harry Smith, both led with the looming government shutdown (which would be no shutdown at all since services labeled essential would keep going). ABC relegated both budget stories to lower down its news agenda and chose to lead with an opinion poll for the Associated Press by LifeGoesStrong.com on babyboomers' retirement nest eggs.

It was a perverse editorial decision by ABC to separate David Muir's report on babyboomers' reliance on Social Security (60% said their retirement plans have lost "significant" value since 2008) from Jonathan Karl's later report on the Ryan budget proposal--perverse because the key component of the Ryan plan was to "end Medicare as we know it" for many of those same babyboomers--those born after 1957. It would have been natural for ABC to yoke financial insecurity with healthcare insecurity into the same segment rather than making them seem separate. Neither CBS, nor even NBC, deemed ABC's choice worthy of mention--even though, if you check out LifeGoesStrong.com, it happens to be a publication of NBC Universal.

All three White House correspondents--NBC's Chuck Todd, CBS' Chip Reid, ABC's Jake Tapper--were assigned to cover the impasse between President Barack Obama and Speaker John Boehner on short-term funding. All three Congressional correspondents--ABC's Karl, NBC's Kelly O'Donnell, CBS' Nancy Cordes--attended the Ryan press conference. CBS' Cordes was not impressed: "The House Republican plan has no chance of passing, as is," she guaranteed, since the Senate is under the control of the Democrats.


TUESDAY’S TIDBITS Following up on Monday's battle coverage of Libya and Afghanistan: CBS' Allen Pizzey on the oil-economy of the Khadafy-free zone…ABC's Martha Raddatz on Amazonian USAF airwomen flying combat F-15s

NBC has stayed longer on the Japan earthquake aftermath, with Lee Cowan filing from Tokyo for the fifth time in the last seven weekdays. ABC & CBS less so

Ever since the tsunami hit Fukushima, radiation worries are back in the news: the N-power industry here; low-level radioactivity here

…The latest: ABC's Neal Karlinsky from Japan on glow-in-the-dark tuna; NBC's Robert Bazell & CBS' in-house physician Jon LaPook on children's CT scans

Historian Manning Marable died too soon for the rollout of his Malcolm X biography. CBS' Jim Axelrod gives the book its posthumous due

Unwarranted free publicity: Anne Thompson's almost-infomercial for the Orton Brothers and their Vermont Country Store in NBC's Back to Basics series…

…CBS, via Mark Strassmann, donated free airtime to its own frequent advertiser as AFLAC auditioned American Idol-style for a replacement duck