On Friday (October 27, 2006), Illinois Democrat
Sen. Barack Obama was
in Los Angeles for a book signing and a rally for the Democratic Party.
The Los Angeles Times heralded his appearances the next day with
1027 words and two photos in a glowing article entitled,
"A rising star from Illinois makes some noise in L.A." The piece was
displayed prominently on the front page of the 'California' section
(page B1). Writer Carla Hall hailed that Obama spoke before a "rapt
crowd" and that he "was sent off with a crescendo of applause." She
reminded her readers that Obama had "electrified" the 2004 Democratic
National Convention as a speaker.
Yesterday (Saturday, October 28, 2006), comedian Bill Cosby
was in Los Angeles to speak at an education forum organized by local
black leaders. Today, the Times documented the event with 580
words and zero photos in a piece tucked at the bottom of page B3.
The title:
"More straight talk from Cosby" (by Times staffer Deborah Schoch).
(Amid the straightforward reporting that Cosby "chastised" black parents
and "chided" teachers, Schoch was able to relay that Cosby was "greeted
with sustained applause." But, apparently, things didn't quite reach a
"crescendo.")
Unequal coverage? It sure looks like it.
Although Los Angeles is over 1500 miles away from Illinois, the
Los Angeles Times appears to be continuing its love affair with
Obama. In January 2005, when the freshman senator first took office, I
noted in
this piece that the Times trumpeted his entrance into the U.S.
Senate with four flattering photos over two consecutive days.
Even then, the Times was already calling Obama a "rock star." And since
then, Obama has been the subject of a number of flattering pieces in the
Times, like yesterday's and
this one a couple of months ago.
Now you may understand why radio host
Larry Elder refers to the Los
Angeles Times as the "Democratic Times of Los Angeles."