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Turner Calls Rival Media Mogul Murdoch
'Warmonger'
Reuters: Fri Apr 25, 2:49 AM ET
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By Duncan Martell
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Ted
Turner said on Thursday too few people owned too many media organizations
and called rival media baron Rupert Murdoch a warmonger for what he said
was Murdoch's promotion of the U.S. war in Iraq.
"He's a warmonger," Turner said in an evening
speech to the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco of Murdoch, whose News
Corp. Ltd. owns the fast-growing Fox News Channel. "He promoted it."
Fox News Channel has been the most popular
U.S. cable news network during the conflict, trumping AOL Time Warner
Inc.'s CNN, which Turner started more than two decades ago and came to
prominence with its blanket coverage of the 1991 Gulf War).
Asked by an audience member for his thoughts
on Fox's larger ratings share than CNN's, Turner said, "Just because your
ratings are bigger doesn't mean you're better."
"It's not how big you are, it's how good
you are that really counts," Turner said, drawing hoots from the audience.
Turner, who has pledged to give $1 billion
to the United Nations and is a vocal
proponent of population control and nuclear-arms elimination, criticized
the concentration of ownership of the vast majority of U.S. television
networks, radio and TV stations and newspapers in a few corporations.
"The media is too concentrated, too few people
own too much," Turner said.
Asked whether he would again try to launch
a new network, Turner, who is the vice chairman of AOL Time Warner and
has been critical of the merger of AOL and TimeWarner, said: "No. I think
the space is filled with the people already there.
FIVE COMPANIES
"There's really five companies that control
90 percent of what we read, see and hear. It's not healthy."
Earlier on Thursday, BBC Director General
Greg Dyke said U.S. broadcasters' coverage of the Iraq war was so unquestioningly
patriotic and so lacking in impartiality that it threatened the credibility
of America's electronic media.
Dyke singled out for criticism Fox News Channel
and Clear Channel Communications Inc., the largest operator of radio stations
in the United States.
"Personally, I was shocked while in the United
States by how unquestioning the broadcast news media was during this war,"
Dyke said in a speech at a University of London conference.
After Turner's initial remarks, the moderator
for the question and answer session noted that Turner would not be able
to comment on the ongoing federal investigations into AOL Time Warner.
The moderator had scarcely finished her statement
when he leaned into the microphone and said: "I can say one thing. As
the largest shareholder and the biggest shareholder (of the company),
it's been brutal."
Turner said he also liked bison.
"I got 35,000 of them," Turner said in response
to a question about bison. "I do eat them. You've got to eat."
The final question of the evening to Turner:
What will be his epitaph.
"I have nothing more to say," Turner said.
"And that's what it is."
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