Robin Gibbs, as BHO's press secretary, is a disgrace. Under his watch, the rare press briefings at the White House have always been amateur hour, aided and abetted by the journalists whose job it is to ask the hard questions, and get REAL answers. Thus far, the WH press corps (corpse?) has been yukking and giggling along with Gibbs as he bobs and weaves, and evades, and avoids giving facts - substantive answers.
It seems that the winds of discontent are beginning to blow through the WH press room:
Via
Family Security Matters come this:
PRESS ROOM LAUGHTER DIES DOWN
By PATRICK GAVIN | 2/10/10 4:08 AM EST
Press secretary Robert Gibbs may be having less fun at his briefings than he used to. | AP photo composite by POLITICO
The White House press room was a jovial place to be in the early days of President Barack Obama's presidency. But times have changed.
Back in May, POLITICO analyzed the press briefings and found that the instances of laughter — as indicated by "(Laughter)" being noted in the official transcript — occurred more than 10 times per day during press secretary Robert Gibbs's briefings.
But the laughter has been reduced by half in recent months: In the first six months of the Obama administration, briefings produced an average of 179 laughs per month. Over the past six months, the average has dropped down to 89.
Chalk it up to the close of any administration's initial honeymoon — and the Obama administration's tough second half of 2009, as it wrestled with health care and saw the late Ted Kennedy's U.S. Senate seat filled by a Republican.
"The tone is one reason for less laughter," says American Urban Radio's April Ryan. "There are lots of serious questions begging for serious answers. Those questions do not meld with laughter and light banter."
But there's also some frustration a-brewing among press corps members.
"There definitely aren't a lot of laughs around the briefing room these days," says Washington Examiner White House correspondent Julie Mason. "Robert's little digs and evasions have lost their power to amuse — particularly since we haven't had a presser since July."...
And there is more here. Could it be that the journalists are now beginning to wake up, and take THEIR responsibility seriously? Let's hope so.
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