Media Matters for America

Update: Disney/ABC decided to air flawed partisan miniseries on 9/11 anniversary

September 12, 2006 4:29 pm ET

On Sunday and Monday nights, Disney subsidiary ABC aired The Path to 9/11, a fabricated, inaccurate, and misleading portrayal of the events leading up to 9-11. Written by a conservative activist, the film joins the cause of right-wing conservatives in blaming former President Bill Clinton for the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks while simultaneously letting President Bush off the hook.

Disney and ABC knew beforehand that this miniseries was not fit for television: There had been a maelstorm of complaints about the movie, including letters from President Clinton, Madelaine Albright and Samuel Berger. Thousands of people wrote to Disney, asking them to hold off airing such a grossly partisan film, especially on the anniversary of 9/11.

Instead of fixing these problems and airing a more honest portrayal at a later date, ABC and Disney decided to put forth a so-called "docudrama" that fundamentally misrepresented the history behind the most serious attack on American soil in 50 years. Shame on them.

There is a bit of good news:

It is good to see that pressure from regular people can help highlight conservative misinformation by companies like ABC and Disney, and then play a role in fixing it. Thank you for sending emails and adding your voice. It certainly made a difference. But as anyone who saw the film knows, we still have a long way to go in eradicating the rampant conservative misinformation which pervades every aspect of our mainstream media.

Media Matters is going to continue to reach out to ABC/Disney and encourage them to refrain from using the public's airwaves to promote the radical right wing agenda again in the future. You can help by clicking here to write to Disney and express your disappointment that they would air such partisan propaganda, and urge them to do better in the future.


Additional Resources:


&mdash

Copyright © 2009 Media Matters for America. All rights reserved.