CNN pundit’s firm bought anti-health reform ad time

By Daniel Tencer
Thursday, October 15th, 2009 -- 8:25 pm
Share on Facebook Stumble This!

alexcastellanos CNN pundits firm bought anti health reform ad timeAfter stinging criticism from media watchdogs, cable news network CNN says in the future it will mention the fact that one of its contributors, Alex Castellanos, works for a firm that buys ad time for AHIP, the organization currently running a massive ad campaign against health care reform.

But the network "did not explain why it had not done so in the past," notes the New York Times. The network had generally described Castellanos as a Republican strategist. AHIP's ads are running on CNN.

The controversy erupted on Wednesday when media watchdog MediaMatters reported it had obtained evidence that the company Castellanos works for, National Media, is the ad buyer for AHIP, short for America's Health Insurance Plans, an umbrella group of insurers who are working to prevent health care reform from passing Congress.

MediaMatters wrote:

According to the detailed ad buy information obtained by Media Matters, Castellanos is responsible for placing, beginning October 11, more than $1 million of AHIP advertising in five states. Castellanos last appeared on CNN September 30; during a debate with Rep. Alan Grayson (D-FL) on The Situation Room, Castellanos defended Republican health care proposals.

Story continues below...

If Castellanos returns to CNN's airwaves to discuss health care, it shouldn't be as a Republican strategist and CNN contributor, but as what he is - an industry spokesman.

On Thursday, blogger Greg Sargent at The Plum Line pointed out that Castellanos "is best known for producing the racially-charged 'Hands' ad" for the 1990 North Carolina Senate campaign, when incumbent Jesse Helms was trailing his Democratic challenger.

The ad featured a pair of hands crumpling up a letter as the narrator stated, "You needed that job, but they had to give it to a minority."

Helms won the election, and some observers say the ad helped push Helms over the top.

CNN is now defending itself against claims the network has blurred the line between news and advertising -- long considered a cardinal sin among journalists.

“Alex Castellanos has not been on CNN since AHIP began its recent advertising campaign, this week, which is when CNN learned of Alex’s relationship with AHIP,” the Times quoted CNN as stating. “When Alex Castellanos returns from his vacation and next appears on CNN, we will clearly disclose to our viewers relevant information including his firm’s relationship with AHIP.”

As CNN itself reported, the health care industry has spent $263 million this year on ad campaigns relating to health care reform. According to blogger Jim White's calculations at FireDogLake, that amount of money would be enough to purchase individual health care plans for 55,000 uninsured individuals.

AHIP was also the organization behind this week's health care study that asserted premiums would rise 40 percent over four years if the health care plan being debated in the Senate were to pass. As a talking point against health care reform, that study is widely seen as having backfired. Democrats on the Hill say it only proves the need for a public health care option.

"It’s unclear how much dust this will kick up," Sargent wrote of the Castellanos controversy Thursday. "As black eyes go, it’s nowhere near as bad as AHIP’s 'study' on the reform proposals — but it does provide Dems with a convenient attack line linking the industry and the Republican Party."

Share this article:
  • Print
  • email
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Story comments are below...

  • An internet site Media Matters breaking a story and holding the old corrupt TV media CNN accountable!!!
  • Dionysis
    It's interesting that this article on the CNN anti-health care reform and Republican shill Castellano is surrounded by ads (five large ones) from BCBS of North Carolina opposing reform (this from a 'non-profit' that pays its CEO four million). I assume that there are targeted ads that appear to readers based upon their origin.
    I took the time to click on their link, to see the smirking, rotund CEO himself. Yes, any reform may "disrupt" something (their coverage of 160 million in NC they claim, underscoring their virtual monopoly), although in fact the disruption would be to their obscene profiteering and general abhorrent practices. Their links direct you to a send a pre-filled anti-reform email to Sen. Kay Hagan.
    Inspired, I went directly to her website and demanded (in a civil, constituent kind of way) that she strongly support a public option and now allow industry largess to deter her obligation to the people of the state and country.
    Evidently, RW plays progressive until enough money is thrown at them and they'll fold like so many politicians. Greed and hypocrisy seems to rule the world.
  • TomDegan
    My younger brother Jeff is the shame of the Degan family. He not only lives in France, he actually likes it there. He has a French wife and two gorgeous little French daughters. Honestly I think the guy is a closet commie. Back in August, in a letter to his fellow countrymen and women regarding health care - or "Hell Care" as he called it (What a card!) - he ended it by saying:

    "In short, in the US, you pay more, get less, and die younger than we do in Europe. What part of that don't you understand?"

    Well, hey there! That's a danged good question! What part of that don't we understand? Why is it that so many of us have to be dragged, kicking and screaming like half-witted little preschoolers, into the brave new world of change? What the hell is the matter with us anyway? How can it be that such a huge number of Americans cheerfully join movements of mass stupidity and salivate on cue to the sound of Dr. Glenn "Pavlov" Beck's bell? It kind of makes you wonder, huh?

    http://www.tomdegan.blogspot.com

    Tom Degan
    Goshen, NY
  • murphyj87
    The same is true in Canada, we pay less in taxes than Americans pay for taxes+health insurance+copays and we have better quality, better outcomes, longer lives, we're not burdened by bankruptcy and worry because of health care bills, when compared to the average American.

    Health care in Canada costs about half as much per capita than the inferior health care in the US costs and results in longer, happier lives.
blog comments powered by Disqus