Katie Couric meets 'regular folks' in Minneapolis
It was a well orchestrated media event that excluded
the media, a private invitation-only meeting in the brand new
Minneapolis public library designed to connect network news's biggest
new deal -- The Katie -- with "regular folks" from Minnesota.
Jon Tevlin And Deborah Caulfield Rybak, Star Tribune
Last update: July 12, 2006 – 2:24 PM
It was a well orchestrated media event that excluded the media,
a private invitation-only meeting in the brand new Minneapolis public
library designed to connect network news's biggest new deal -- The
Katie -- with "regular folks" from Minnesota.
Those
"folks" meeting Katie Couric, newly of CBS news, included former City
Council President Jackie Cherryhomes, public relations guru Jon Austin,
St. Thomas journalism professor Mark Neuzil, and numerous recognizable
faces from government and social service agencies.
Couric's "Eye
on America" road show passed through Minneapolis on Wednesday in a
visit that was part fundraiser, part celebrity peek-a-boo, and part of
the "soft sell" campaign by CBS News to introduce Katie Couric to the
nation.
Couric, the effervescent, wildly popular former co-host
of NBC's Today Show, will become the solo anchor on the CBS Evening
News Sept. 5.
Minneapolis, which Couric said she'd never visited
before, was the third stop on her "listening tour." This week she has
already made appearances in St. Petersburg, Fla., and Dallas. She also
will visit Denver, San Diego and San Francisco.
At each stop,
Couric made appearances for charities, including Ronald McDonald House
here. And she met with citizens in each city to see what viewers want
in their news and to gather story ideas, according to pre-event
publicity.
Library director Kit Hadley said WCCO rented the
Pohlad Hall at the "standard" rate for a meeting outside the library's
standard operating hours. But the meeting was hardly standard.
"Not
with every staff member trying to figure out what part of their job
responsibility would take them to that part of the library and yet
preserve their poise," she said, chuckling.
And Hadley? "I was doing the same thing."
Several
people who attended the event called it "interesting." Questions were
not screened and Couric, who whisked through the Minneapolis Libraryin
a crisp beige suit with a posse in tow, stayed for two hours and posed
for pictures.
"She said she was there to listen," said Austin.
"But it seemed everybody wanted something different and nobody knows
what to do with that. Some want more emotion from the news, some less.
There was no consensus."
There were, however, some critics of the tightly run event.
"It
seems like something the president would pull," said Jane Kirtley,
University of Minnesota ethics professor. "At a time when the news
media is trying to gain the trust through transparency, to have a
meeting closed to the media and the general public is unbelievable."
The "listening" event, which was billed as private and strictly closed to the media, didn't quite turn out that way, however.
Although
WCCO spokeswoman Kiki Rosatti flatly stated that no WCCO news staff
would be attending, anchor Don Shelby was on hand to introduce Couric,
invoking news legends Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite --
comparisons that even had Couric shaking her head.
WCCO news
director Jeff Kiernan said Shelby was there in his "official WCCO news"
capacity to introduce Couric and would not be discussing the event on
the news or on his afternoon radio show.
Pen confiscation
Matt
Bartel, owner of the popular MNSpeak blog also was issued an invitation
by WCCO, although the station apparently didn't recognize the name
Bartel (ubiquitous in Twin Cities publishing circles) or his business,
until the event was about to start.
"They pulled me out of the
auditorium and told me that they'd become aware of the fact that I had
a blog," Bartel said. "They said, 'We don't want you to participate,' "
then offered him a choice: surrender his notebook or leave the event.
"I wasn't going to give them my notebook; I had business stuff in there."
A compromise was reached - the 'CCO staffer confiscated Bartel's pen instead.
Not that there was much to take notes on anyway, Bartel said later.
"No
one said anything all that remarkable. And even with the interesting
things that were said, I can't imagine it would make any difference."
Among
other comments, a gay couple who were against gay marriage talked about
that issue and a Native American woman talked about how local news
portrayed Native Americans.
Bartel said he told Couric and her
executive producer, who was also on hand, that he never watched network
news, nor did he even have a television.
"I asked them why they
were trying to market the news to all these different constituencies,"
he recalled. "I said 'Since you're the so-called experts, why don't you
just pick the stuff you think is important?' "
Couric's producer told him, "Good point, we try to do that," he said.
Bartel never did get his pen back, "although some WCCO guy gave me one that was even better, so that was okay."
Bartel added, "I didn't get anything out of it, which is exactly what the evening news is."
Jon Tevlin • 612-673-1702
Deborah Caulfield Rybak• 612-673-4996