CONTAINING LINKS TO 58103 STORIES FROM THE NETWORKS' NIGHTLY NEWSCASTS
     TYNDALL HEADLINE: HIGHLIGHTS FROM MARCH 04, 2013
A pair of isolated local healthcare events -- one in Mississippi, one in California's Central Valley -- sparked enough national interest to head the networks' agenda. CBS led with the Mississippi story, as in-house physician Jon LaPook told us about an unnamed baby girl, born HIV-positive and medicated immediately: she is now apparently HIV-negative. NBC led with the other end of life as Miguel Almaguer filed from Bakersfield, where an 87-year-old woman died at Glenwood Gardens, an independent living facility for the elderly. This unremarkable fact became newsworthy because of audiotape of the EMS 911 call after the woman collapsed. We heard a dispatcher urging a nurse at the home to perform CPR and the nurse refusing, under her employer's orders. The CPR dispute was Story of the Day.    
     TYNDALL PICKS FOR MARCH 04, 2013: CLICK ON GRID ELEMENTS TO SEARCH FOR MATCHING ITEMS
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video thumbnailNBCFirst aid emergencies: eldercare nurse nixes CPRUrging of EMS 911 dispatcher ignored, woman diesMiguel AlmaguerCalifornia
video thumbnailCBSAIDS: HIV infection of newborn during pregnancyMississippi baby medicated at birth is now HIV-Jon LaPookNew York
video thumbnailCBSCatholic Church to convene Conclave of CardinalsMost have arrived, planning meetings beginMark PhillipsVatican
video thumbnailNBCPakistan fighting along North West FrontierArmy urges halt to US drone war in WaziristanAmna NawazPakistan
video thumbnailNBCFormer Gov Job Bush (R-FL) is party leaderCo-author of Immigration Wars begins book tourChuck ToddNew York
video thumbnailABCCabinet members are honored by portraits in oilPaintings are much costlier than photographsDavid KerleyWashington DC
video thumbnailCBSAirline travel: disruptions, delays, cancelationsBudget cuts will slow ICE, TSA, FAA operationsChip ReidVirginia
video thumbnailABCWinter weatherNew Alberta Clipper caps season of heavy snowGinger ZeeMinneapolis
video thumbnailNBCHS hoops: state championship playoff seasonNew Rochelle HS lands 55-foot buzzerbeater, winsRon AllenNew York State
video thumbnailCBSBoy with brittle bones is inspirational speakerStyles himself Kid President in video pep talksElaine QuijanoTennessee
 
TYNDALL BLOG: DAILY NOTES ON NETWORK TELEVISION NIGHTLY NEWS
CPR AND HIV -- LOCAL STORIES GO NATIONAL A pair of isolated local healthcare events -- one in Mississippi, one in California's Central Valley -- sparked enough national interest to head the networks' agenda. CBS led with the Mississippi story, as in-house physician Jon LaPook told us about an unnamed baby girl, born HIV-positive and medicated immediately: she is now apparently HIV-negative. NBC led with the other end of life as Miguel Almaguer filed from Bakersfield, where an 87-year-old woman died at Glenwood Gardens, an independent living facility for the elderly. This unremarkable fact became newsworthy because of audiotape of the EMS 911 call after the woman collapsed. We heard a dispatcher urging a nurse at the home to perform CPR and the nurse refusing, under her employer's orders. The CPR dispute was Story of the Day.

What was remarkable was how much support there was for the nurse for refusing to launch first aid. ABC's in-house physician Jennifer Ashton told her colleague Dan Harris that CPR works only 3% of the time. NBC's in-house physician Nancy Snyderman (who also filed on the HIV negative baby) referred to CPR as sometimes "overzealous." NBC's Almaguer quoted Pamela Bradford, the dead woman's daughter and a nurse herself, as endorsing the Glenwood Gardens policy.

Sloppily, ABC's Harris, filing from New York, did not even bother to tell us the name of the town in which the 911 emergency took place. CBS' Ben Tracy covered that Bakersfield story from Los Angeles.

ABC was the only newscast not to lead with a healthcare story. For the fifth time in the last two weeks it chose to kick off with winter weather. An Alberta Clipper is just preparing to head eastwards so Ginger Zee's forecasting story amounted to a highlight reel of the other storms she has covered so far this winter -- thunder blizzards and whiteouts and snowdrifts and roof collapses. This is the playlist of her original stories; this is Zee's summary.


MONDAY’S MUSINGS Well done, Anna Nawaz, for her NBC Exclusive, packed with take-your-breath-away vistas from the top of the world. See her startled jump as artillery exploded in mid-interview with the bearded Gen Ali Abbas.

The gathering of the cardinals for the Conclave did not contain much hard news. NBC anchor Brian Williams contented himself with a brief voiceover of the scarlet visuals. ABC's David Wright showed us the fake Corpus Dei bishop, purple scarf posing as sash. CBS' Mark Phillips tried to make bricks without straw, as the Good Book puts it.

Besides the Vatican, last week's other big story was the sequester. Only CBS offered a follow-up on the spending cuts, with Chip Reid on the impact that an alphabet soup of agencies may have on airline travel. Remember how ABC's Jonathan Karl pooh-poohed the sequester, since cuts of less than 3% to any budget are easy to absorb? Well now his colleague David Kerley contradicts that pooh-poohing for his Washington Watchdog feature. As far as Kerley is concerned, federal spending of close to $400K over two years demands scrutiny -- and he ridiculed Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack for suggesting otherwise.

NBC's White House correspondent Chuck Todd left his beat to provide a plug for Jeb Bush as he begins his book tour for Immigration Wars in New York. Yet Todd made Bush seem incoherent: the sitdown started with Bush's plea for the Republican Party to be more welcoming to Hispanics; but Bush's book advocates a more punitive policy towards undocumented residents than many of the GOP's leaders -- yes to a path to a green card but no to a path to naturalization.

That was hardly a very difficult interview to land for David Muir. He just had to walk down the hallway at ABC News to get a hug and an air kiss from his subject. As for Barbara Walters herself, she is such a kidder. People always told her that she should have her head examined!

Robby Kid President Novak insisted to Elaine Quijano that he should not be thought of as "the kid who breaks a lot." You would never imagine that the nine-year-old boy's osteogenesis imperfecta would be the heart-tugger in her CBS report, would you?

When NBC's Ron Allen told us, in his story on the midcourt basketball buzzerbeater at New Rochelle High School, that the mother of the scorer, Khalil Edney, had died six years ago, you would have thought the teenager's middle name was Manti.