Difference between revisions of "Jonathan Rugman"

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Previously he was C4's Washington correspondent, covering the US elections and Hurricane Katrina.<ref>[http://www.channel4.com/news/authors/jonathan+rugman/106050#bio Biography: Jonathan Rugman], Channel 4 website, accessed 25 Jan 2010</ref>
 
Previously he was C4's Washington correspondent, covering the US elections and Hurricane Katrina.<ref>[http://www.channel4.com/news/authors/jonathan+rugman/106050#bio Biography: Jonathan Rugman], Channel 4 website, accessed 25 Jan 2010</ref>
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==Demonizing Venezuela==
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On 27 March 2006, Jonathan Rugman presented "Hugo to go?" on Channel 4 News, wherein he relentlessly smeared Hugo Chávez, the Venezuelan president, in a piece described by John Pilger as "one of the worst, most distorted pieces of journalism I have ever seen".<ref>John Pilger, Email to Channel 4 News, copied to Media Lens, March 27, 2006, reproduced at [http://www.medialens.org/alerts/06/060405_cartoon_time_channel.php Cartoon Time - Channel 4 Smears Chavez], Media Lens, 5 April 2006, accessed 25 Jan 2010.</ref> Media Lens summarized the piece:
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:Rugman's film [...] showed footage of Ch&aacute;vez with Fidel Castro, Saddam Hussein and Qadaffi. Rugman's voiceover, strident and dramatic, hammered home the point:
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::"He supplies 15 per cent of America's oil, yet America's enemies are his friends. Hugo Ch&aacute;vez, in danger of joining a rogue's gallery of dictators and despots - Washington's latest Latin nightmare".
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:The film repeatedly depicted Ch&aacute;vez as a dictatorial menace, referring to his "personality cult" and to factories run as "Soviet-style collectives". Rugman asked:
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::"Is Ch&aacute;vez on the way to becoming a dictator?"
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:[. . .] Rugman interviewed [[Maria Corina Machado]], describing her as a "civil rights activist". In fact she is a leader of Sumate, an extreme right organisation that was deeply involved in a 2002 coup that temporarily ousted Ch&aacute;vez[...] In a March 23 report Rugman again described Machado as a "civil rights activist", citing her as the source for his claim that "government critics" are "fearing another Zimbabwe here". <ref>Media Lens, ibid.</ref>
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==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 14:40, 25 January 2010

Jonathan Rugman is foreign affairs correspondent for Channel 4 News. The Channel 4 website says, "Jonathan's beat includes foreign policy, terrorism and international development."[1]

Previously he was C4's Washington correspondent, covering the US elections and Hurricane Katrina.[2]

Demonizing Venezuela

On 27 March 2006, Jonathan Rugman presented "Hugo to go?" on Channel 4 News, wherein he relentlessly smeared Hugo Chávez, the Venezuelan president, in a piece described by John Pilger as "one of the worst, most distorted pieces of journalism I have ever seen".[3] Media Lens summarized the piece:

Rugman's film [...] showed footage of Chávez with Fidel Castro, Saddam Hussein and Qadaffi. Rugman's voiceover, strident and dramatic, hammered home the point:
"He supplies 15 per cent of America's oil, yet America's enemies are his friends. Hugo Chávez, in danger of joining a rogue's gallery of dictators and despots - Washington's latest Latin nightmare".
The film repeatedly depicted Chávez as a dictatorial menace, referring to his "personality cult" and to factories run as "Soviet-style collectives". Rugman asked:
"Is Chávez on the way to becoming a dictator?"
[. . .] Rugman interviewed Maria Corina Machado, describing her as a "civil rights activist". In fact she is a leader of Sumate, an extreme right organisation that was deeply involved in a 2002 coup that temporarily ousted Chávez[...] In a March 23 report Rugman again described Machado as a "civil rights activist", citing her as the source for his claim that "government critics" are "fearing another Zimbabwe here". [4]


References

  1. People: Jonathan Rugman, Channel 4 site, accessed 25 Jan 2010
  2. Biography: Jonathan Rugman, Channel 4 website, accessed 25 Jan 2010
  3. John Pilger, Email to Channel 4 News, copied to Media Lens, March 27, 2006, reproduced at Cartoon Time - Channel 4 Smears Chavez, Media Lens, 5 April 2006, accessed 25 Jan 2010.
  4. Media Lens, ibid.