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Bad Company III
For American Businessmen in the News,
the Defense Never Rests

Page 2


‘Oh, How the Mighty Have Fallen’ – and We Covered It 105 Times

     "If ever there was a story that starts with ‘Oh, how the mighty have fallen,’ this has to be it," said CBS’s Bob Schieffer on the May 25 "Evening News."

     Two guilty verdicts in the Enron trials – Jeff Skilling and Ken Lay – had entered the historical record, and CBS was clear about what that meant for business.

     "Lay and former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling are now the official poster boys for corporate greed and scandal …" declared reporter Lee Cowan.

     Over on ABC the same night, Chris Cuomo agreed.

     "Enron has become the poster child for corporate greed and deception," Cuomo said. "The question was whether the system could hold those at the top accountable. And today, the jury sent a clear message: Justice can reach her hand into the boardrooms of the rich and powerful."

     He added: "The stakes for the prosecution went way beyond the defendants at trial. If, after four years of investigating, they couldn’t win this case, which had become the symbol for corporate greed, it would seem as if CEOs were beyond the reach of the law."

     The public drama and symbolism of "corporate greed" wasn’t lost on the American people, as Alan Murray noted in his book "Revolt in the Boardroom: The New Rules of Power in Corporate America" (2007). He wrote about a change in how people viewed business leadership.

     Iconic, invincible CEOs went the way of the dodo bird, Murray wrote, "as the new century witnessed a string of calamitous events – the collapse of the stock market bubble, the terror attacks of September 11 and the corporate scandals of Enron, WorldCom, Adelphia, Tyco. Suddenly, the public perception of CEOs plummeted. Regulators, legislators and attorneys general swung into action."

     The media swung into action, too – the public perception didn’t change on its own. In 2006, businessmen tied to Enron were mentioned 64 times on the evening news shows. Enron’s ranks alone were almost equal to the number of philanthropists who showed up across all five networks.

     Business crime does happen – but ABC proved just because something is in the news, you don’t have to cover it to death. "World News" had six mentions of Enron-related businessmen – by far the fewest of the broadcast networks. NBC had 12, while CBS had 24 – four times as many as ABC.

     Overall, the number of criminal portrayals in 2006 surpassed businessmen who were donating money and resources for good causes. In fact, businessmen showed up as criminals 1½ times more often than they did as philanthropists.

     That meant viewers were hearing about "another corporate crook heading to the slammer" or "the last of the corporate fat cats to go down with Enron" more often than they heard about businessmen using their success for the good of others. At 105 portrayals across the five shows, that averages out to almost two per week for the year.

     CNN was the worst in this category with a 7-to-1 criminal-to-philanthropist ratio. "Lou Dobbs Tonight" had an overall lack of businessmen, which made those appearances stand out.

     CBS and Fox both had a more than 2-to-1 ratio of criminals to philanthropists. In contrast, both other broadcast networks (ABC and NBC) did more charity portrayals than criminal ones.

     Was the criminal-heavy coverage realistic? Not at all, said Jeff Sonnenfeld of the Yale School of Management on the October 23 "Your World with Neil Cavuto." He recalled the media frenzy that started with the breaking of the Enron story.

     "Five years ago you would have thought the sky was falling and every company was led by rogue CEOs, when it turns out 97 percent of them are brilliantly led and certainly honestly led," Sonnenfeld said.

     The business world didn’t deserve exaggerated treatment of its criminals any more than any other field, as economist Walter Williams pointed out.

     "Dishonest Enron and WorldCom CEOs are rare among corporate executives," Williams wrote. "As such, all CEOs shouldn't be tarnished for the misdeeds of a few any more than we'd tarnish all newspaper reporters because a few among their ranks were liars like the Boston Globe's Patricia Smith and Mike Barnicle, Jayson Blair of The New York Times, and The Washington Post's Janet Cooke."


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