30-03-2014, 12:04 PM
Paul Rigby Wrote:I confess I find mysterious the purpose of the second of Rather's known televised descriptions. Just why did his handler(s) feel it necessary to broadcast a second version so quickly a mere eight minutes or so - after the first? What motivated this disconcertingly swift and unexplained second go?
I am puzzled because description A (1607hrs, EST) contains an egregious error which is not merely uncorrected, but compounded by the addition of another, in description B (1621hrs, EST):
Quote:A3: "The automobile, the black Lincoln convertible, with the top down..."
Is not merely repeated in the second description, but supplemented by another:
Quote:B2: "The motion picture shows the limousine carrying, in the front seat, two secret service men; in the middle, or jump seat, Governor and Mrs. Connally; and, in the rear seat, President and Mrs. Kennedy; a single secret service man standing on the back bumper; the top of the black Lincoln convertible down."
B4: "After the left turn was completed, the automobile, with only one car in front of it - a secret service car immediately in front..."
Both "errors" A3/B2 and B4 were, it should be noted, corrected (by omission) in description C, which occurred after Altgens 6 had been shown on CBS.
The highlighted area at the end of the above is utter nonsense: Altgens 6 debuted on CBS TV on the evening of November 22. There is no evidence that I have seen that it was shown again on the afternoon or early evening of Monday, November 25.
So absent this external stimulus, the corrections (by omission) in televised description C had another cause, most likely, I continue to suspect, the imminence of the showing of either the full first version of the Z film, or extracts from it, as per the description of the kinescope referenced by John Barbour.
Apologies for the brainfart.
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"
Joseph Fouche
Joseph Fouche