CONTAINING LINKS TO 58103 STORIES FROM THE NETWORKS' NIGHTLY NEWSCASTS
     TYNDALL HEADLINE: HIGHLIGHTS FROM JUNE 21, 2013
The breaking news that criminal espionage charges have been filed, under seal, against Edward Snowden, the confessed leaker of National Security Agency secrets, came too late to be fully reported on the nightly newscasts. Both NBC and CBS led with the news from federal prosecutors, but both Pete Williams and Bob Orr had to confine themselves to live studio-based summaries rather than completely-edited packages. ABC, with substitute anchor David Muir, only mentioned the prosecution's charges in passing, so the NSA did not qualify as Story of the Day. That honor went to Paula Deen, chosen by ABC as its lead. The bestselling southern-hospitality TV chef has lost her job with the Food Network.    
     TYNDALL PICKS FOR JUNE 21, 2013: CLICK ON GRID ELEMENTS TO SEARCH FOR MATCHING ITEMS
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video thumbnailNBCNational Security Agency collects data on citizensCriminal charges filed against leaker under sealPete WilliamsWashington DC
video thumbnailABCICE border controls along Mexico lineViolations already curbed; plan yet more forcesJim AvilaWashington DC
video thumbnailCBSDoE N-weapons laboratories pollution problemsEven doubled-walled storage tanks are leakingBen TracyLos Angeles
video thumbnailCBSReal estate housing market construction, sales, pricesMortgage interest rates rise during past monthAnthony MasonNew York
video thumbnailNBCWild forest fires in western statesFeds pass brush clearance chores to countiesGabe GutierrezCalifornia
video thumbnailNBCAir safety: air-traffic-control system problemsDelta jets almost crashed between JFK, LaGuardiaTom CostelloWashington DC
video thumbnailABCAir safety: in-cabin use of electronic devicesMost gadgets pose no risk to avionic systemsDavid KerleyWashington DC
video thumbnailCBSInfant formula milk tainted in ChinaParents resort to smuggling of safer importsSeth DoaneBeijing
video thumbnailABCPhotography goes digital: finish film productionPlant personalizes objects incorporating imagesDavid MuirNew York
video thumbnailNBCTV chef Paula Deen accused of racial biasPosts video apology, loses Food Network contractKaty TurNew York
 
TYNDALL BLOG: DAILY NOTES ON NETWORK TELEVISION NIGHTLY NEWS
SNOWDEN TO BE TRIED AS SPY -- NEWS BREAKS TOO LATE The breaking news that criminal espionage charges have been filed, under seal, against Edward Snowden, the confessed leaker of National Security Agency secrets, came too late to be fully reported on the nightly newscasts. Both NBC and CBS led with the news from federal prosecutors, but both Pete Williams and Bob Orr had to confine themselves to live studio-based summaries rather than completely-edited packages. ABC, with substitute anchor David Muir, only mentioned the prosecution's charges in passing, so the NSA did not qualify as Story of the Day. That honor went to Paula Deen, chosen by ABC as its lead. The bestselling southern-hospitality TV chef has lost her job with the Food Network.

So this was the second day in a row that the national TV news treated news about TV as its Story of the Day. Thursday, the untimely death of James Gandolfini in Rome grabbed headlines: now Alex Marquardt on ABC files a brief update on the actor's autopsy. Paula Deen was covered for the second day in a row by ABC's Steve Osunsami (Thursday's here), as the chef released a brief video apology for her racially-offensive behavior, and then replaced it with a second one that was more fulsome. ABC followed up with its in-house legal eagle Dan Abrams (at the tail of the Osunsami videostream), who was surprised that Chef Deen allowed herself to be interrogated under oath about using the N-word and her love for antebellum plantation dining, rather than settling the lawsuit for which she had been deposed so embarrassingly. Katy Tur covered Chef Deen on NBC, noting that she had been a no-show on NBC's Today, pleading exhaustion.

ABC piled on with a third television-related package in one newscast. Substitute anchor David Muir selected Bill Nye, of the Science Guy children's educational series, as his network's Person of the Week for inspiring a generation of children, now grown and graduating college. STEM -- science, technology, engineering, mathematics -- was also the topic of Rehema Ellis' profile of the summer fieldwork Project Exploration at Chicago's Ariel Community Academy for NBC. See how Ellis finds a student who believes that criminal forensic science has its high profile thanks to NBC's own Law & Order drama series. CBS' CSI gets nary a mention. As for CBS, STEM education already caught Anthony Mason's attention on Tuesday, when he bestowed a free plug on the virtual reality from Raytheon, the Pentagon contractor.


FRIDAY’S FINDINGS Thursday, ABC did not cover the latest jockeying in the Senate to assemble a majority in favor of immigration legislation. At the time, both NBC's Kelly O'Donnell and CBS' Nancy Cordes filed on the plan to attract Republican votes with a massive jobs program for the Border Patrol in southwestern states. ABC's Jim Avila now catches up with a reminder on the current state of the security of the border with Mexico: at the moment it is not porous to illegal entry; the expanded security will cost billions of dollars; and the upshot will be the militarization of an entire region.

Last week, all three newscasts reported it as a significant development, when the White House announced that the CIA will start supplying arms to some of the opposition militias fighting in the civil war in Syria. In a brief stand-up from the Pentagon, CBS' David Martin pours a little cold water on that significance: the CIA has been training the rebels in anti-tank and anti-aircraft warfare since the end of last year, Martin reported.

Wednesday, ABC's Rebecca Jarvis offered on update on the real estate housing market: monthly costs are rising, since mortgage interest rates are increasing even as sale prices hold firm. Thursday, NBC's Tom Costello reported on the same phenomenon. Now, CBS' Anthony Mason discovers that mortgage interest rates are rising, even as sale prices remain firm.

Clayton Sandell on ABC earned points on Thursday for deviating from superficial weatherporn coverage of wildfires in western forests by putting them in the context of global warming. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez earns points now, for pointing to the price paid for fiscal austerity. National Forest Service budget cuts mean that the feds are passing the buck for brush clearance to local authorities. As for weatherporn: Neal Karlinsky on ABC still served up a portion, anyway.

It has been five years since that spate of stories from China about adulterated infant formula: melamine in the milk supply; babies afflicted with kidney stones. From Beijing, CBS' Seth Doane updates us that parents of infants are still worried. Formula imports are booming and Hong Kong has been forced to limit its exports to the mainland.

All three networks filed updates on the airlines. Both NBC and CBS commissioned in-house graphic artists to render a computer animation of a midair crash that failed to happen over New York City, as a Delta jumbo jetliner approaching JFK flew close to a Delta commuter jet taking off from LaGuardia: Tom Costello and Terrell Brown narrated the imaginary depictions, both with the help of audio from LiveATC.net. ABC had David Kerley enter the experimental Quiet Room built by Boeing to see if playing handheld electronic videogames messed with a jet's avionics. Kerley could not resist the celebrity angle: had actor Alec Baldwin been a potential saboteur?

ABC is usually the newscast that relies heavily on Virtual View, its in-house computer animation. Not this time: CBS's graphics team was put to work twice, for Terrell Brown's non-existent mid-air plane crash, and for Ben Tracy's leaking radioactive pollution. CBS' Carter Evans told us about the nuclear toxins at the Hanford Reservation in Washington State on Wednesday; now Tracy, from Los Angeles, narrates the animation, imagining how even supposedly-safe double-walled containment tanks are not doing their job.

When photography switched from film to digital, there were tens of thousands of layoffs at Kodak and similar firms. David Muir's Made in America series on ABC has detected a slight revival: the business of incorporating digital images into customized fabricated items such as mugs, cards, and albums. He found a factory that used to be based in Japan that has now hired 500 workers. He did not tell us where it is located -- but he did help its name recognition. Shutterfly.

For the third daredevil basejumper story in a row ABC lavished free publicity on Red Bull. See Nick Watt this time last year. See David Wright last month. Now Alex Perez tells us about a trio that skydived illicitly off the top of the Trump Tower in Chicago. Actually Perez told us very little about them -- so he told us about Luke Aikins instead, the Red Bull basejumper whose Trump Tower leap was licit, a stunt for the Hollywood movie Transformers: Dark of the Moon.

Over the past couple of years, there have been six different features filed on the nightly newscasts profiling individual acts of charity to the homeless population of street people. All six have been aired by CBS; three of those six filed by Steve Hartman. Hartman goes On The Road to Hartford to bring us Joe Cymerys, the kindly barber of Bushnell Park.

NBC's sibling cable channel, USA, owns the broadcast rights to the upscale dog show run by the Westminster Kennel Club. When NBC sent Mike Taibbi to Petaluma for its annual dog show, the network did not have to fork over a dime to find the ugliest of downscale mutts.