DenisMa wrote:
FishOil wrote:
That's not to compare that to what happened in Boston, but I think they are looking to replicate that ratings success by "owning" the Boston marathon bombing while the other news outlets start to turn to other stories. I was anxious to see who would be hosting CNN weekend AM last Saturday and there they had Poppy Harlow live from Boston repeating the same stuff that we've been hearing.
While I admire them not going away like everybody does when there's a new tragedy or some other big event, I do feel that they are going overboard for now. They can do a week of reports in a month or two or something. Let the healing process begin and the investigation takes its course. Then, maybe not at the time of an anniversary(heaven forbid), go back and do updates on the victims and so on. We do have a 24 hour cycle on the news and it's a shame that stories and people are forgotten but I think this is too much for so many of them to be still there.
I couldn't agree more about the updates. At least CNN went back to Haiti a year or so after the earthquake to find out how the rebuilding was going - the other networks haven't paid it any attention since the wall-to-wall coverage after the event.
On a side note - I'd love for CNN to start to cover Afghanistan again. Afghanistan has become a nothing on cable news and given the fact that we still have our troops engaged in a war over there and I can't find anything on how the effort is going in Afghanistan on any of the big three networks is a disgrace. Sure, they cover the occasional copter going down and I saw that O'Reilly did a segment on Karzai being a gangster (that's old news) but no news on how the war effort (whatever the objective is at this point) is going. CNN could fill this void in a meaningful way.