Submitted by Sheldon Rampton on
The "war on terrorism" has made life easier for President Bush's image handlers, reports Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz, who describes the way journalists have come to "rely on Bush's inner circle for behind-the-scenes color about the tense atmosphere" inside the White House. Bush advisors are feeding reporters "morsels about the president's words, attire and demeanor in an attempt to build a narrative -- one that inevitably rests on a foundation paved by White House loyalists." According to magazine writer David Carr, "There's been a collective decision to re-image the president, and the media is fully cooperating. Journalists are very anxious to help him construct a wartime presidency, because we may be at war and he's the only president we have. When you have people with agendas serving as your eyes and ears, I just don't think you're necessarily getting the truth. It's just a more patriotic version of spin."