CONTAINING LINKS TO 58103 STORIES FROM THE NETWORKS' NIGHTLY NEWSCASTS
     TYNDALL HEADLINE: HIGHLIGHTS FROM MARCH 07, 2013
The successful filibuster by Sen Rand Paul (R-KY) was Story of the Day. He stayed on his feet for 13 hours to demand an explicit disavowal from the Obama Administration of the use of assassination drones against domestic targets. After he left for a bathroom break, which ended his effort, the letter he requested did indeed arrive from Attorney General Eric Holder. NBC's lead story was the filibuster, filed from the White House by Chuck Todd. ABC too covered Paul from the White House, via Jonathan Karl, although its lead was from Martha Raddatz on North Korea's nuclear threat. CBS had Nancy Cordes cover the drone debate from Capitol Hill while, for its lead, anchor Scott Pelley promoted Sunday's 60 Minutes.    
     TYNDALL PICKS FOR MARCH 07, 2013: CLICK ON GRID ELEMENTS TO SEARCH FOR MATCHING ITEMS
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video thumbnailNBCSen Rand Paul (R-KY) stages old-fashioned filibusterSucceeds in extracting domestic ban on drone warChuck ToddWhite House
video thumbnailNBCNorth Korea nuclear weapons, missile programThreatens pre-emptive nuclear attack on USAndrea MitchellWashington DC
video thumbnailABCSuspected al-Qaeda network leaders manhuntFormer spokesman, bin Laden in-law arrestedBrian RossNew York
video thumbnailNBCCamden NJ is in longterm decline, mired in povertyManufacturing has disappeared, crime is rampantBrian WilliamsNew Jersey
video thumbnailCBSAbortion: restrictions urged by pro-life politiciansArkansas ban after pregnancy's twelfth weekJan CrawfordWashington DC
video thumbnailCBSMeningitis outbreak from tainted steroids shotsCompounding pharmacy labs were out-of-controlScott PelleyNo Dateline
video thumbnailCBSDance: Bolshoi Ballet director maimed by acid attackDancer admits hiring hitman against Sergei FilinElizabeth PalmerLondon
video thumbnailNBCAutomobile new model designs: hybrids, electricsRenault's tiny Twizy navigates Roman trafficAnne ThompsonRome
video thumbnailABCStorms, high winds, heavy rains in mid-AtlanticNor'easter roils tides, causes coastal floodsRon ClaiborneNew Jersey
video thumbnailCBSCivil War history: Battle of Hampton RoadsRemains of pair of USS Monitor sailors recoveredDavid MartinVirginia
 
TYNDALL BLOG: DAILY NOTES ON NETWORK TELEVISION NIGHTLY NEWS
MR PAUL COMES TO WASHINGTON, BATTLES DRONES The successful filibuster by Sen Rand Paul (R-KY) was Story of the Day. He stayed on his feet for 13 hours to demand an explicit disavowal from the Obama Administration of the use of assassination drones against domestic targets. After he left for a bathroom break, which ended his effort, the letter he requested did indeed arrive from Attorney General Eric Holder. NBC's lead story was the filibuster, filed from the White House by Chuck Todd. ABC too covered Paul from the White House, via Jonathan Karl, although its lead was from Martha Raddatz on North Korea's nuclear threat. CBS had Nancy Cordes cover the drone debate from Capitol Hill while, for its lead, anchor Scott Pelley promoted Sunday's 60 Minutes.

Not only CBS, but NBC too, used their anchors to file preview features of in-depth stories in primetime magazine programing. Pelley's on CBS examined last year's meningitis outbreak, which CBS' evening newscast covered more heavily than its two rivals at the time. Now Pelley has an interview with Joe Connolly, a laboratory technician at New England Compounding, the pharmacy that produced the contaminated steroids shots that infected spinal fluid, ultimately killing 48 patients.

NBC, with the backing of the Ford Foundation, unveiled an occasional series on urban poverty dubbed In Plain Sight, which anchor Brian Williams told us would continue in primetime on Rock Center. He selected Camden NJ, across the river from Philadelphia, a beat the anchor covered when he was a rookie reporter. "In a dream I saw a city invincible," as the poet put it. Camden is the same hardscrabble 'hood that ABC anchor Diane Sawyer selected six years ago for her coverage of urban misery before she moved on to the rural depression of Appalachia. Williams' predecessor at NBC, Tom Brokaw, also chose the suburbs of Philadelphia for his portrait of urban despair a couple of years ago, but Brokaw chose Reading Pa instead.

The most heavily covered location for urban poverty in plain sight is, of course, Detroit. Its mean streets were already a specialty at NBC before Ford Foundation funding came along.


THURSDAY’S THOUGHTS At first, ABC's Martha Raddatz was downright petrified of North Korea's declaration of pre-emptive nuclear war against the United States, throwing around the adjectives "stunning" and "terrifying" and deploying her network's Virtual View computer-animated graphics to show ICBM flight paths. But then she talked herself down, concluding that there was "nothing imminent" to worry about. CBS was, by contrast, nonchalant, confining itself to only a passing mention of Pyongyang. On NBC, Andrea Mitchell did what she does, and used her lunchtime show on MSNBC as a newsgathering venue to collect soundbites that she folded into her nightly package.

If you look at the last couple of years of coverage of the manhunts for the leadership of al-Qeada, you will see that CBS and ABC have kept track of the Global War on Terrorism, whereas NBC has largely lost interest. So it was no surprise who got the assignment when Sulaiman abu-Ghaith, al-Qaeda's spokesman back in 2002 and a son-in-law of the late Osama bin Laden himself, was arrested in Turkey: CBS' Bob Orr and ABC's Brian Ross. NBC not so much.

After South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Nebraska and Texas imposed stricter and stricter restrictions on abortion, Arkansas became the strictest yet: Supreme Court watchers Jan Crawford on CBS and Pete Williams on NBC were on the case.

The computer graphic artists at ABC were kept busy. Not only did Virtual View have to animate intercontinental ballistic missiles for Martha Raddatz, it had to depict tiny dying hairs inside the cochlear to illustrate the warning of in-house physician Rich Besser against iPod's ear-bud headphones.

For Civil War buffs, CBS' Pentagon man David Martin brings us the artifacts and dead sailors of USS Monitor.

Remember Monday, when ABC's Dan Harris did not even bother to tell us the name of the town -- Bakersfield -- where that eightysomething woman failed to receive CPR. Well Harris' sloppiness is spreading at ABC. Cecilia Vega told us about a lion that mauled a 24-year-old woman to death somewhere or other in California. She posted video from daytime TV's Ellen and Jungle Jenny, which portrayed the killer cat as cute and narrowed the location down to Fresno. Maybe ABC holds a grudge against the Central Valley.

More on the Bolshoi Ballet back stage feud: CBS' Elizabeth Palmer, once based in Moscow, now filing from London, tells us that Pavel Dmitrichenko admits he hired a hitman to intimidate Sergei Filin, possibly at the behest of "too fat" ballerina Anzhelina Vorontsova, but it was the hitman's idea to use acid.

NBC's Anne Thompson admitted it. While kicking her heels waiting for the Conclave of Cardinals to get going, she is on a Roman Holiday. And is she having a ball, too, tooling around town in her electric Twizy!

Back in May 2009, when Nick Watt was based in London for ABC, he filed a promotional piece on the Great Barrier Reef for the Australian Tourism Council, by promoting its Best Job in the World competition. The annual competition is coming round again and Watt, now based in Los Angeles, was only able to mention it in passing before being assigned to find out what occupations make workers feel most happy. Happiness is apparently newsworthy in ABC's eyes -- this was the seventh such feature on that newscast in the last three years. Believe it or not, the clergy, firefighters, and dentists.

By the way, it rained and the winds blowed and the waves crashed against the shore in stormy weather in March. All three newscasts found this normal weather newsworthy: NBC's Ron Allen and ABC's Ron Claiborne in New Jersey; CBS' Jim Axelrod in Massachusetts.