Couric Lobs 11 Softballs for Feminist Reporter on Blog Interview

Photo of Ken Shepherd.

Writing at her "Couric & Co." blog this morning, CBS's Katie Couric gave journalist/feminist polemicist Susan Faludi a platform to flesh out her theory that the mainstream media have harnessed fears of terrorism post-9/11 to socially repress women and resurrect myths of the Old West. Here, for example, is Faludi's response to Couric's question about why Faludi penned her latest book:

After 9/11, as the weeks and months and then a year passed, it was as if we’d fallen into this fever dream where political leaders were spouting all this vigilante cowboy rhetoric. “Shoot ‘em between the eyes.” “Smoke ‘em out of their holes.” It was a return to this John Wayne masculinity, to our Indian wars.

And then on the feminine side of the equation, there were all these trend stories, that 9/11 would bring on a marriage boom, a baby boom, even that feminism had come to be deep-sixed.

So I set out to try and understand why, when symbols of our military and commercial establishments had been attacked, why was there all this focus on home and hearth?

Rather than take the occasion to ask her subject if she's reading too much into inventive media storylines or if her book may be a cynical way of profiting from 9/11, Couric's entire interview was marked by softball open-ended questions that Faludi promptly slammed out of the park to plug her book.

What's more, introducing her interview subject, Couric began noting Faludi's accolades, which of course only bolster the case that she's far from a centrist or balanced journalist:

Susan Faludi, the Pulitzer Prize winning journalist who burst on the scene in 1991 with her thoughtful and provocative “Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women,” has a new book out: “The Terror Dream: Fear and Fantasy in Post 9/11 America.”

It examines America’s psychological response to the attacks and finds lots of answers in our Wild West frontier myths. So we caught up with her by phone last week, and posed our 10 (well, OK, 11) Questions to her

Below are the agenda of questions. For Faludi's answers, check out the full interview:

  1. You open “The Terror Dream” with a dream, a nightmare, you had the morning of 9/11…
  2. What prompted you to write this book?
  3. And what did you find?
  4. The title of your book comes from a novel about the frontier...
  5. And this isn't always the way our country has reacted?
  6. What happened instead, what went wrong?
  7. Which was?
  8. You write in your book about a phone call you received from a reporter the morning of the attack: “After a couple of vague questions about what this tragedy would ‘mean to our social fabric,’ he answered his own question with, given the morning’s events, a bizarrely gleeful tone: ‘Well, this sure pushes feminism off the map.’” How did you react to that? And six years later, what did 9/11 do to feminism?
  9. You have one chapter titled “Precious Little Jessi,” about Jessica Lynch, the 19-year-old soldier whose company was ambushed in April 2003. Eleven in her company died, five were taken hostage, and Lynch was injured and spent nine days in an Iraqi hospital. A dramatic midnight rescue by American troops followed, a scenario straight out of Hollywood. Later it turned out the details were different. You devote a whole chapter to her story, and she comes up frequently elsewhere in “Terror Dream.” Why?
  10. You write that we live at a moment of great possibility. What is it? What should we do?
  11. Speaking of elections, we wanted to ask you about Hillary Clinton’s candidacy…

For vintage Faludi bias, check out this MRC CyberAlert item from 1999:

"Contributing editor" Susan Faludi told Newsweek readers that psycho killers like Atlanta's Mark Barton are just products of a "computerized, consumerized, celebritized" capitalist culture that lets men down. The subheadline read: "Only a few deranged men go on shooting sprees, but many feel cheated that 'the system' has let them down. And, in some powerful ways, it has."

In 1991, former Wall Street Journal reporter Faludi wrote Backlash, a feminist tract that complained "the increasingly reinforced fortress of an antifeminist culture daunted women more than it galvanized them." Now, apparently, Faludi has decided it's men's turn to be victimized by the culture. Faludi quoted from Barton's suicide note, and declared: "More and more, the American community fails to offer its postwar sons and grandsons what it used to offer all men: a chance to ground their manhood on utility, dedication and loyalty, whether as a GI serving a nation and caring for his fellow grunts or as a civilian plying a craft essential to his society. For all the grim aspects of industrial labor and World War II-era sacrifice, men could at least feel they belonged to a meaningful brotherhood and provided a utility beyond mere earning power."

She continued: "But the heirs of the GI generation increasingly find themselves stranded in a different world: computerized, consumerized, celebritized. In an ornamental culture where worth is measured by bicep and SUV size, by image and celebrity, men feel severed from fellowship and a tangible craft, valued only for their stock-market portfolios. In that way, Mark Barton was the garish distillation of the modern male predicament -- a Dockers-and-polo-shirted figure seated alone in his suburban home, wired to the Internet so many hours a day that no one else could make a phone call. Meanwhile, his ignored children roamed the streets. Even as men have been freed (thanks largely to the women's movement) to be more involved fathers, their progress is undermined by a sweepstakes culture where only the biggest winner is valued."

Newsweek touted Faludi as author of the forthcoming Stiffed: The Betrayal of the American Man, to be published in September.

—Ken Shepherd is Managing Editor of NewsBusters


Comments Policy

All comments are owned by whoever posted them and are subject to our terms of use. They should not be assumed to represent the views of NewsBusters.

Viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Katie

Another indepth, fact finding, problem solving interview by the great one.

JM... So right you

JM...

So right you are....

But wait...her hard-hitting interview will sell so many books for this whiz-bang of a gal....CBS will throw in the shipping and handling too.

I suppose she thinks she will be in line next to Oprah for selling books for authors.

When pigs fly....

Fine point on 9 11's good

Couric or this non egg layer Faludi will never comprehend the good things which came out of 9 11 and Jessica Lynch.

First 9 11 scared the bajesus out of all of these feminist victims (a victim is defined not by an event happening to them, but by the person not fighting back and allowing things to happen to them.) Women on 9 12 woke up and said this feminist bullship is horse whip and went out and bought guns........LOTS OF GUNS.

This is one of the main reasons Democrats have fled gun control as their soccer moms have all become Gun Mom's loaded up with 38 specials and semi auto 32's.

Part 2 of this revealed just how stupid it is to have women in combat the size of puff ball. Jessica Lynch got soldiers killed that day as they were protecting the cowering little rag doll. That was not lost on intelligent women who soon figured out..............Crapper in the wrapper, I can't fight these terrorists.........so I can't fight these thugs on my streets either....the answer again reinforced 9 11.........women went out and bought a shotgun and then loaded it up with buckshot for their homes.

These same women then went out and got lessons on combat survivabilty...........and then went out and taught their children how to be safe gun owners.

Now I know personally Whopper Goldberg has a double barrel shotgun loaded for criminals as I have seen the thing, but these liberals like Couric will never tell other egg layers what is really going on in machine gun Rose O havens.

9 11 transformed a great majority of American women from feminist victims into American women........that is a great virtue and one Faludi will never write on as that means women are finding themselves in Conservative homes and not looking for daddy Clinton to be a surrogate pop.

Good always comes in silver linings in all the worst of situations all glory to God.

 

*HIC IACET ARTORIVS REX QVONDAM REXQVE FVTVRVS

1. You open “The Terror

1. You open “The Terror Dream” with a dream, a nightmare,
you had the morning of 9/11…

 

I was in L.A. and it was very early, dawn or predawn. I had
this strange dream that I was on an airplane and a young man came down the
aisle and shot twice. One bullet went through my throat, the other went through
the woman next to me. In the dream, I was still alive but I couldn’t’ speak.

(too bad he did not shoot your laptop..) (in your dream) 

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

This pushes feminism off the map???????????????

 

8. You write in your book about a phone call you received
from a reporter the morning of the attack: “After a couple of vague questions
about what this tragedy would ‘mean to our social fabric,’ he answered his own
question with, given the morning’s events, a bizarrely gleeful tone: ‘Well,
this sure pushes feminism off the map.’” How did you react to that? And six
years later, what did 9/11 do to feminism?

 

Let me get this right, the morning that 3000 fellow
Americans were killed, some jumping out of 100 story buildings you first
%$*&%$^ thought was: This pushes feminism off the map.

 

You are nothing but a total POS.

Unbelievable

 

I don’t know about any one else but I would be one of
those big strong Neanderthal brutes that would leave your worthless A$$ in the
burning building. 

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

Assumptions

The logic here is no deeper than "aggressive=male," and that responding to being attacked is "aggressive," so our response to 9/11 is "Male."

That's so ... deep ... pass the bong, man ...

What do you bet, if she was

What do you bet, if she was stuck in a fire and someone had
to carry her out and that person was a 100 lb. woman and could not do it, I
wonder if her opinion would change just a little. 

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

“I don’t think

“I don’t think 9/11
brought on all by itself an attack on feminism but accentuated a process long
underway. An important and nefarious phenomenon to come out of 9/11 was an ugly
silencing of feminist women and feminist critics, and all this saber rattling.
Women were called bad mothers, moral idiots, deranged.”

 

Yep that was the first
thing I started doing after that air plane hit the World Trade Center and
watched Americans burn to death  I
started  calling women bad mothers
and moral idiots..

If we get hit again.. I
going to start calling children stupid, little, dumb, and tiny idiots!!

 

What in the hell goes on
in that mind of this woman???

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

USA... What in the hell

USA...

What in the hell goes on
in that mind of this woman???

Who in the hell knows!

Agenda driven drivel to attempt to revive the loss of the power of the NOW groups and all their ilk...not gonna' happen, I waited over 35 years to see them defeated, they are small in numbers now, thank goodness and because of us regular gals out here fighting back.

As a gal it is maddening for me too...and that is putting this BS very politely here, I do not want to get kicked off.

I feel like you or any normal person about this pure tripe. 

The way I feel about it, is

The way I feel about it, is most women want to be protected.
They want to feel safe.

Don’t get me wrong, my wife can handle herself. She and I
have  concealed weapons permits.

We go out walking I feel its my job to look out for her. I
look over my shoulder every once in a while, and scan the road ahead for
problems. That’s not being a cave man, that’s taking care of the one you love.

I read crap like this its hard not to break the keyboard as
I slam the keys.

The sad part is people will buy her book.

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

You and your wife sound

You and your wife sound very happy USA...

She is lucky, sounds like you are too.

People like Faludi and Couric are just pimples on you know what.

As a woman I want a guy to look out for me, it is normal....my gal friends are no different...of course we can take care of ourselves if need be at times, but there is nothing like a man or the comfort and strength of his arms around you knowing you are safe.

These type of women are either liars outwardly (maybe inwardly too) or do not know what they are missing...just unhappy specimens....lol.

I have a niece that is a

I have a niece that is a total feminist. She grad. from
Harvard Law school. Maybe (with the exception of my mother) the smartest person
I know. On top of that she is stunning.

She complains that she can not get more then one date. She
comes across as this hard ass, I told her one time, (totally over stepping my
bounds) men want women, not another guy. She glared at me and said: what in the
hell did I look like? I told her she was stunning, but she comes across as a
very angry woman. You put the combination of an angry feminist and lawyer
together and the average guy will run.

She said: well if a man can’t take me for who I am, then I
don’t want him!

That was almost two years ago.. her mom called me the other
day and said: still no boyfriend..

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

USA... Well maybe with

USA...

Well maybe with time and an attitude adjustment by meeting the right guy (who can handle her...lol) things will change...

Who knows....

I hope the best...

bigtimer,

Yea, maybe. She is a hard nut to crack.

With all that she has done, she is as unhappy as one can be..

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

Strategy isn't male

The need to respond swiftly and surely to an attack is not a function of mindless animality. It isn't an emotional force that sweeps away moral control. Strategy is a deliberate and intellectual response, and sometimes strategy calls for speed and force.

There's nothing genetic or gender in it.

Susan Faludi?!?!?!?!?!

I always get a smirk on my face whenever her name is mentioned. The story is thus: When I was in my early 30's, I dated (I use the word loosely) a woman, I'll call her Angelina,  who happened to be one of the writers for the show "Night Court". I know that show was a sit-com, but Angelina was real short on laughs. Anyway, I guess I mentioned something about how a woman is not like a man. You know obvious stuff. Next thing I know she walks over to her sparsely populated but vast library shelf and pulls down Faludi's book: Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women. She suggests I read it. Well, not knowing who this author was I read a few passages here and there in my reading room (i.e. the toilet). My first impression??? What a total load of bullsh!t. Here's a quick summary: men are evil and the culture, which is controlled by men, has oppressed women. I guess Angelina wanted to realize how oppressed she was by me??? Well needless to say, I didn't see her much anymore. She never got her book back. I finally put it to good use though. It made a lovely firestarter for my fireplace.

The damage to American men

The damage to American men has come almost entirely from the hostile antimale propaganda emanating from Faludi and her coven of angry feminists.

Couric -- what a joke

CBS News should have fired and jailed Couric (the same with Dan "O.J." Rather: "The font didn't fit, so I must quit!") when she beat a male newsroom employee for not telling her how to pronounce "sputum".

I knew what sputum meant 25 years ago, and how to spell and pronounce it, too, and I didn't even have a $65 million contract!

Couric is a complete joke and shows that even a major loser like her can still do well in the America she is trying to destroy.

Cowboy#1 - Golda Meir

Cowboy#1 - Golda Meir “• We have always said that in our
war with the Arabs we had a secret weapon—no alternative.

 

Cowboy#2- Margaret Thatcher “I owe nothing to Women's
Lib”/// “• You may have to fight a battle more than once to win it”

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc.
Ronald Reagan- 40th Anniversary of D-Day

Love this

Love this ...

computerized, consumerized, celebritized

Nothing speaks truth like alliteration.

By the way, didn't I already hear all of this deep insightful commentary about the condition of the modern male in the movie "Fight Club"?