I just don't think Rather is as innocent as portrayed. They were all competing for big bucks, ratings and prestige by the choice of the stories they portrayed. They all were serving themselves more than the greater good.
When he had the world stage, Rather didn't spend much time explaining the corporatization of the news business because it placed his world at risk.
What about the print news, what does the massive financial hollowing out of the newspaper business mean for the have-nots seeing the real world. Could Rather image the negative transformation of the newspaper industry since 2004?
And people are still dying by the millions through tobacco?
Humm, Rather as a whistleblower. Did he ever cover the whistleblower issue adequately in his TV career? There is still a open corporatized war on whistleblowers and the bad guys are winning more today than 2004.
***Actually in the big picture, it's the corporatizing of all souls and spirits in the USA...it is the corporatizing and cheapening of everyone's reality worldwide. You know the media people think everything is only about them...reality and existence was invented as a toy for them to play with.
"A film called 'Truth' should be accurate," the iconic CBS news
anchor said of director James Vanderbilt’s movie about his 2006 exit and the
events leading to it.
Iconic CBS
news anchor Dan Rather on Saturday praised the Robert Redford-starring
Rathergate movie Truth for its accuracy and performances ahead of its
world premiere at the Toronto Film Festival.
"Naturally
I was pleased, and pleasantly surprised. This film is very accurate. A film
called Truth should be accurate," Rather told the Hollywood
Reporter during a pre-screening party. James Vanderbilt's movie centers on Rather's 2006
exit from CBS after a 60 Minutes investigation two years earlier into
U.S. President George W. Bush’s alleged draft-dodging during the Vietnam
war.
Rather praised the performances of Redford as the famed
CBS newsman and Cate Blanchett
as his CBS 60 Minutes
producer Mary Mapes.
"The acting is superior. I think it's an emotional film. Of course people
will say I found it emotional because it's about me. But I say that as
objectively as I can," he said.
The movie, which played to a standing ovation at the
Winter Garden Theater, paints a highly sympathetic picture of Rather's role in
the scandal that cost him his job at CBS. After the screening, Rather appeared
on stage with director Vanderbilt and actors Elizabeth Moss and Topher Grace (Redford did not attend).
Rather choked up when asked by an audience member if he
would have done anything differently in his career. "Journalism is not an
exact science," he said, adding that there were "plenty of things I
would do over."
Since his exit from CBS, Rather said he had
"spent a lot of time practicing humility ... and tremendous
gratitude." In the film, Rather and producer Mapes are depicted as
crusading journalists whose story is attacked by critics with a political
agenda. CBS News chief Andy Heyward
is depicted particularly negatively.
The clear suggestion in the movie is that Rather and
Mapes were fired to appease the Bush White House and to protect the CBS
financial bottom line. Before the screening, Rather looked beyond his exit from
CBS to stress Truth was
less about him, Mapes and President Bush and more about the broader
corporatization of the news business.
"In recent years, lobbyists, very large
corporate executives and political operatives have begun to influence the news
people get far more than people realize. In my years in journalism, this is the
biggest development -- the corporatization, the politicization and the
Hollywoodization of news," he said.
Director Vanderbilt said he didn't know much about CBS'
Dan Rather scandal in 2004 before he boarded the project, and now welcomed
giving ordinary people a revealing window into how they receive their news, or
don't. "I was really excited to make a movie where you learn how the
sausage is made," he said.
Vanderbilt also pointed to the deep relationship between
Rather and Mapes at CBS as a story-driver for Truth. "I was surprised to see how much they
respected each other and cared for each other, and that's where I was able to
hook into what I wanted the movie to be about," he explained.
Of course, the 2004 media firestorm over the 60 Minutes report into President Bush
during Vietnam cost the legendary newsman and his producer dearly. Some of the
documents on which the report by Rather and Mapes was based were suspected of
being forgeries.
After their report on Bush aired, it became the subject of harsh criticism, and an internal investigation was launched. Rather's reputation was seriously damaged and Mapes, an award-winning journalist, was forced to resign.
Truth is based on Mapes' book about the incident, Truth and Duty: The Press, the President, and the Privilege of Power. Elisabeth Moss, Dennis Quaid and Topher Grace co-star. Truth producer Brad Fischer told The Hollywood Reporter that, aside from the 2004 controversy, his movie is likely to spur a conversation about today's news business having long departed from a former role of providing a public service for its use of the airwaves.
"Over the years, people suddenly realized that
corporations that own and control the news can really make a profit, and things
started to change," he argued. "Around 2004, when this happened, it was
a tipping point, and now we're seeing an escalation of that today,"
Fischer added.
Rather, who saw his lawsuit against CBS Corp.
thrown out in 2009, said he's made peace with the events of a decade ago around
his newsmagazine report on President Bush's military record. Instead, Rather
said Truth will help answer
the public's growing interest in, and fears over the trivialization of media
news, and how it happened.
"This is the best film I've seen on the big screen
that takes you inside the craft of journalism, and demonstrates how it works,
as opposed to how people feel journalism works," he said. Rather also
remains unrepentant about his original 60
Minutes report into President Bush, and the controversial scandal
it left himself and Mapes embroiled in.
"We reported a true story. And there has
never been any doubt the story was true," he said. Rather instead
criticizes CBS News' corporate bosses for caving into White House pressure.
"The combination of political operatives, lobbyists
working in concert with the White House and powerful political groups
overwhelmed the truth," he argued. "Because it was true, those who
wanted to attack it had to find the weakest point, and they attacked the
(newsmaking) process," Rather added.
Vanderbilt, the screenwriter behind The Amazing Spider-Man and White House Down, is making his
directorial debut with Truth,
which Mythology Entertainment is producing. Fischer, William Sherak, Vanderbilt and Mikkel Bondesen are producing
alongside Brett Ratner, Doug
Mankoff and Andy
Spaulding.
RatPac's James
Packer is executive-producing alongside Steven Silver and Neil Tabatznik of Blue Lake, the
financing arm of Echo Lake. Sony Pictures Classic is releasing Truth domestically.
Matthew Belloni contributed to this report.
Updated Sept. 12, 8:10 p.m. Details of the world
premiere of Truth have been added, with post-screening Q&A comments by Dan
Rather.