CONTAINING LINKS TO 58103 STORIES FROM THE NETWORKS' NIGHTLY NEWSCASTS
     TYNDALL HEADLINE: HIGHLIGHTS FROM JUNE 7, 2011
The second day of Scott Pelley's tenure as CBS Evening News anchor saw him keep to the hard-news high ground that he staked out on Monday. Even though the salacious details of Anthony Weiner's cyber-sexlife qualified as the Story of the Day and the lead item on ABC's newscast, CBS did not dignify the congressman's embarrassment with a mention. Instead, on this very light day of news, CBS aired a mixture of economic hard times (double dips, foreclosures, union-busting) and foreign policy stories (Libya, Egypt), before rounding off with human interest--Steve Hartman's Assignment America tribute to the healing power of forgiveness.    
     TYNDALL PICKS FOR JUNE 7, 2011: CLICK ON GRID ELEMENTS TO SEARCH FOR MATCHING ITEMS
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video thumbnailCBSLibya politics: Moammar Khadafy is longtime rulerNATO air raids kill civilians; dictator survivesAllen PizzeyLibya
video thumbnailABCYemen politics: President Saleh injured, in exileUS commandos, diplomats at risk amid chaosMartha RaddatzWashington DC
video thumbnailCBSEgypt politics: President Hosni Mubarak oustedRural physician welcomes renewed democracyElizabeth PalmerEgypt
video thumbnailABCPentagon Nightwatch plane prepares for nuclear warFlying 747 command center in case of doomsdayDiane SawyerNo Dateline
video thumbnailABCObama Presidency poll approval ratingsABC News finds decline over economic leadershipJake TapperWashington DC
video thumbnailCBSAerospace firm Boeing machinists' strike aftermathNew non-union plant may be illegal retaliationJim AxelrodSouth Carolina
video thumbnailNBCWild brush fires in southwestern forestsMountain towns threatened, smoke plume spreadsGeorge LewisArizona
video thumbnailNBCInternet coupon networks offer discount dealsGroupon helps businesses attract new customersKevin TibblesChicago
video thumbnailNBCInternet encyclopedia is open to user-contributorsWikipedia protects Paul Revere from PalinitesLee CowanSan Francisco
video thumbnailABCRep Anthony Weiner (D-NY) has lewd twitter feedWill not resign, faces House ethics probeJonathan KarlWashington DC
 
TYNDALL BLOG: DAILY NOTES ON NETWORK TELEVISION NIGHTLY NEWS
PELLEY STICKS TO HIS WEINERLESS HIGH GROUND The second day of Scott Pelley's tenure as CBS Evening News anchor saw him keep to the hard-news high ground that he staked out on Monday. Even though the salacious details of Anthony Weiner's cyber-sexlife qualified as the Story of the Day and the lead item on ABC's newscast, CBS did not dignify the congressman's embarrassment with a mention. Instead, on this very light day of news, CBS aired a mixture of economic hard times (double dips, foreclosures, union-busting) and foreign policy stories (Libya, Egypt), before rounding off with human interest--Steve Hartman's Assignment America tribute to the healing power of forgiveness.

NBC, with substitute anchor Lester Holt, led with the wildfires in the high Arizona desert and embarrassed itself with shameless self-promotion for NBC Sports. Holt aired a three-minute interview from Lausanne Switzerland with Mark Lazarus, the networks' sports honcho, allowing Lazarus to boast about his Comcast-controled success in securing rights to cover the Olympic Games over the long haul, through 2020, not just on television, but on all platforms, even those not yet invented.

Speaking of online platforms, NBC not only had Kelly O'Donnell cover Weiner's sexual texting, it also had Kevin Tibbles in Chicago on the coupon beat as Groupon prepares to cash in on Wall Street, and Lee Cowan in San Francisco where Wikipedia.org is working to keep Paul Revere's history free from Palinite revision.

As for ABC, anchor Diane Sawyer hosted her newscast from Washington DC, one day after reporting from Kabul. En route, she took a ride with Secretary Robert Gates in the Pentagon's Nightwatch, the so-called Doomsday Plane, a Cold-War-era jumbo jet, designed to keep flying indefinitely during any thermonuclear Armageddon, sending commands for retaliatory ICBM strikes to the navy's strategic submarine fleet. Our tax dollars at work, as the saying goes, although Sawyer did not tell us how many of them.

Sawyer's stop-off in Washington provided the pretext for a double-barreled inside-the-Beltway lead: Jonathan Karl on Weiner's woes was followed by Jake Tapper on ABC's in-house opinion polling, which showed Barack Obama's declining standing as the economic recovery slows to a crawl. In the horse race for 2012, Tapper reported that Obama is now being headed by the GOP frontrunner, Mitt Romney. ABC's third DC-based report was from Martha Raddatz, on the civil strike in Yemen. What made it a Washington story was that she was her concern for the American commandos and diplomats on the scene.