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Extra Credit: Cable TV killing political journalism

Taking in the starchy-prim controversy over MSNBC’s indefinite suspension of commentator Mark Halperin for what the New York Times described Friday as “profane disparagement” of President Obama, the first thing that pops to mind is one of the famous scenes from “Casablanca.”

It’s the one where Claude Rains’ Capt. Louis Renault collects his winnings from the croupier of Rick’s Cafe Americain while pronouncing himself “shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here.”

Halperin, Time magazine’s editor at large and its leading political journalist, is also a regular commentator on the MSNBC cable news network. On Thursday’s edition of the “Morning Joe” show, he was prodded by the show’s co-hosts, Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, to offer his impression of Obama’s performance at his Wednesday news conference. After asking whether the show’s seven-second delay switch — which allows for the editing of inappropriate remarks — was on, Halperin smirked and said, “I thought he was kind of a dick yesterday.”

Bedlam ensued as Scarborough realized a producer had not hit the switch and the comment had been broadcast. Abject apologies immediately were offered all around, but immediately after the show, MSNBC called his remark “completely inappropriate and unacceptable,” apologized to the president and suspended Halperin. Time said it had “issued a warning to him that such behavior is unacceptable.”

Putting aside, for the moment, the inalienable right of every American to call any elected official — from the chief executive on down — a chucklehead or worse, we probably can agree that vulgarity of this sort isn’t suitable in a news broadcast. Moreover, by today’s conversational standards, which lamentably are coarse, it’s a fairly mild epithet. Still, it would be nice to think that the rapidity of the official reaction had to do with legitimate disapproval. Actually, it is a reflex quickened by practice because what cable news now calls political journalism is set up to produce just this kind of “television moment” and its attendant swirl of attention-getting faux controversy.

Ever since Roger Ailes created Fox News as a low-budget, ideologically conservative televised version of right-wing talk radio — and swept the ratings table in the process — CNN and MSNBC have been consciously counter-programming their successful rival. One of the casualties of this c



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