The reports were on CNN, quoting the NTSB findings from the tapes.
Re. a 'tail' stall, several problems with that.
a) The stick shaker/pusher is activated by an AOA (angle of attack) probe predicated on wing AOA.
b) With the exception of the F-16 in supersonic flight (it's essentially neutral to positive subsonic), all conventional aircraft have positive stability, where the center of gravity (CG) lies ahead of the center of lift, pulling the nose 'down. This 'nose down' bias is countered by the 'tail down' force of the horiz. stab., keeping everything in balance and giving the pilot pitch (and AOA) control. If the stab. stalled (not sure I've ever heard of this happening), it would 'help' to unstall/unload the wing by lowering the nose (same thing the stick pusher is trying to do).
c) The autopilot 'would' dis-engage at some point.
d) The response is "firewall the throttles" and never mind EPR limits (auto EEC/DEEC systems will not allow you to blow it up). If you're falling out of the sky/stalling, you want all the power you can get to break the stall (reduce AOA) and get all the flying speed you can. My earlier reference to FAA checkride responses was that they grade you on 'minimum altitude loss' during recovery. My approach to this crisis is the grading should be not to hit the ground. In a simulator, with zero viz., that's all the objective criteria they can obtain, since you could argue altimeter error and whether you actually hit the ground, I guess. Personally, I would use all the altitude I had available to ensure I broke the stall.
A stall, by the way, is caused by exceeding the max AOA, not airspeed. We talk speed because we assume 1 g flight. If the AOA is below max, you're not stalled, regardless of airspeed.
Say you have 100 knot "stall speed", 1 g level flight. You could pull the nose up as in the start of a loop, wait till you approached 100 knots while still very nose high, then begin to unload/reduce g. You could get the airspeed down to small numbers, roll left and right, do anything except increase the g/AOA. The airplane is not stalled, just a little 'ballistic'. You still control pitch, roll and yaw. As you nose over and gain speed, you can increase the g/AOA, and eventually regain 1 g as you reach 100 knots. No magic here.
Sorry, guys, got a little carried away

)