Pubdate: Sat, 19 June 1999 Source: Capital Times, The (WI) Copyright: 1999 The Capital Times Contact: http://www.thecapitaltimes.com/ Author: DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer RIVERA DECLARES DRUG WAR LOST David Bauder can be reached at dbauder"at"ap.org NEW YORK (AP) -- It's not hard to find NBC's $5 million man, Geraldo Rivera, on television. You just have to know where to look. Try the "Today" show, where Rivera's action-packed reports on the Kosovo Liberation Army first aired this month. But don't try the "NBC Nightly News," where a Rivera report has never been shown. Try prime time this Sunday, when Rivera's documentary, "Drug Bust, The Longest War," airs at 8 p.m. But don't try "Dateline NBC," where Rivera believes he's not welcome. Better yet, try cable, where MSNBC repeatedly ran the Kosovo reports. A year and a half into his lucrative new contract with NBC, the former syndicated talk-show host still doesn't feel completely accepted at the Peacock Network. He may get more camera time than anyone else in the company, but he yearns for the time he doesn't get. It's a strange dynamic. First, the drug special. It's the third special report to emerge from Rivera's documentary unit, and he reaches the pointed conclusion that the decades-long war on drugs was in large part a waste of money. "We have lost the war on drugs," he said. "It's like Vietnam. At some point we've got to say we have lost and no one has had the courage to do that." Rivera talks to a veteran drug smuggler and a U.S. Customs inspector about efforts to stem the flow of illegal drugs into the country. "Drug Bust" also examines why addicts who want help have an easier time finding drugs than treatment. Since the war on drugs was declared in 1971, it has cost $300 billion of taxpayer money, and drugs remain readily available, Rivera said. "A generation of politicians has been corrupted," Rivera said. "This has been a cancer on the souls of the supplier nations. America is this huge, voracious vacuum cleaner sucking up all the illicit narcotics the world can produce." Unlike news reports, documentaries generally take a clear point of view. "Drug Bust" is particularly provocative. Rivera's eagerness to say how he feels -- also shown in his spirited defense of President Clinton during the impeachment trial -- probably has something to do with the arms-length relationship he has with some of NBC's old guard. Rivera doesn't think his opinionated nature is all that unusual in network news. "If you don't think the reporters at NBC had opinions during the impeachment crisis, the vast majority of them in diametric opposition to mine, then I don't think you were watching," he said. Since signing his NBC deal in November 1997, Rivera has been rankled at not having any reports aired on "NBC Nightly News," the network's flagship show anchored by Tom Brokaw. In December 1997, Brokaw said of Rivera: "He does what he does, and I do what I do. There's very little common ground between us. That doesn't mean he doesn't have the right to do what he does." Brokaw hasn't talked much about his colleague since then. Yet Rivera's feelings were hurt anew by the treatment of his Kosovo reports. He hoped they were good enough for "Nightly" to seek them out. "The writing is on the wall, the sky and the ground," Rivera said. "It's just not going to happen. I don't think it will ever happen. If that piece didn't get on, I don't think they'd use anything. I know that 'Dateline' and 'Nightly' are like the country club in my neighborhood. I'm not allowed in." The network's only comment: "Each NBC News program makes its own editorial decisions," said spokeswoman Alex Constantinople. Privately, NBC executives note that "Dateline NBC" has run Rivera's work in the past. Rivera said frustration with his situation is partly why he's considering a daily radio talk show. "The motivation, honestly, was, 'OK, you don't want me, I know a lot of other people who do,"' he said. If his role at NBC continues to evolve, Rivera said, he'd be much less inclined to seek out the radio job. "I think there's a real need for an aggressive, populist alternative to the Rush Limbaughs and Oliver Norths of the world," he said. "It's time for liberals to stop being embarrassed about their political philosophy. Having said all that, I probably don't have the time to do it." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck