| Can't Agree on Bradley; Reporter Stumbled into Liberal Admission 1) ABC and NBC reported that Bill Bradley laid off his attacks
  on Al Gore, but CBS's Dan Rather didn't agree. NBC's David Bloom
  contrasted how a "relaxed Bush has been frolicking across New
  Hampshire" while "McCain slogs from one rally to the next." 2) Bradley's attack on Gore's abortion flip-flop forced
  the networks to recite it. Friday night only ABC raised Clinton's
  "liberal" slip of the tongue, but portrayed it as a help to Gore. 3) In an unusual approach, NBC's Tim Russert pressed John
  McCain from the right about supporting rape and incest exceptions on abortion,
  but then devoted twice as much time to hitting him from the left about how he
  wants to return to "back alley abortions." 4) Tom Brokaw acknowledged that with Gore "there's this
  kind of fiction that goes out there and then there's the reality,"
  citing Gore's tobacco hypocrisy and Internet invention claim. But Brokaw has
  failed to tell Nightly News viewers about either. 5) CNN's bad and good sides. The Free Market Project's
  MediaNomics explained how "CNN Earns Dunce Cap for Biased Newsroom
  Report" while meriting kudos for a contrarian take on education spending. 6) Time's Michael Duffy stumbled into a personal admission.
  He endorsed, as making "a lot of sense," a Clinton spending proposal
  he seconds earlier said "liberals had to love." 
      >>> The
  February 1 edition of MagazineWatch, about the February 7 issues of Time,
  Newsweek and U.S. News, is now up on the MRC home page. The subjects addressed
  in this week's edition compiled by the MRC's Mark Drake and Tim Graham:1. U.S. News & World Report White House reporter Kenneth T. Walsh
  incredibly found Bill Clinton's last State of the Union address to be
  "cast in conservative terms" and bought the remarkable spin of
  Democratic Leadership Council President Al From that "Clinton isn't
  proposing the kind of big, bureaucratic government that was anathema in the
  '70s and '80s."
 2. U.S. News owner Mortimer Zuckerman admonished George W. Bush for taking a
  strong pro-life position and dismissed his political philosophy as
  "little more than a gigantic tax cut," while Al Gore was
  "establishing himself as an independent candidate, even as a candidate of
  change."
 3. Time devoted another cover story to thumping the tub for campaign
  "reform" with liberal writers Donald Barlett and Roger Steele:
  "In essence, campaign spending in America has divided all of us into two
  groups: first- and second-class citizens...Call it government for the few at
  the expense of the many."
 4. U.S. News became the first news magazine to devote an article to Newt
  Gingrich's affair with Callista Bisek. Reporter Lynn Rosellini's
  Washington rules could also apply to a certain President.
 5. Newsweek showed how the Gore campaign has tried to get to reporters'
  hearts through their stomachs.
 To read these items, go to where MRC Webmaster Andy Szul
  has posted this edition of MagazineWatch:
 http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/magwatch/mag20000201.html
  <<<
 1  The
  three broadcast network evening news shows all led Monday night with previews
  of the impending New Hampshire primary, at least the ET/CT feeds did before
  news of the Alaska Air crash broke at about 5pm PT. That news consumed the
  entirety of prime time on CNN, FNC and MSNBC from 8pm ET forward, well into
  the early morning hours.
     On the New Hampshire front, while ABC and NBC reported
  that Bill Bradley laid off his attacks on Al Gore, CBS's Dan Rather
  insisted: "Bill Bradley pressed ahead today with his new strategy of
  challenging Al Gore's character and credibility."     Despite polls showing a ten point plus lead for Gore,
  ABC's Peter Jennings characterized the primaries in both parties as
  "very close contests." World News Tonight also featured a segment
  with George Stephanopoulos talking with Jennings about turnout. CBS's Bill
  Whitaker explored the reason's behind McCain's success in the Granite
  State. NBC's David Bloom contrasted how a "relaxed Bush has been
  frolicking across New Hampshire" while "Senator McCain slogs from
  one rally to the next." NBC colleague Lisa Myers checked the validity of
  Bradley's charges against Gore.     Here are some notes and quotes from the January 31
  evening shows to give you a feel for the coverage. All three delighted in
  showing the video of Gary Bauer falling off the stage during a pancake
  flipping appearance. First, the contrast over Bradley's statements and then
  some notes on each show:     -- Bradley backing off or boring in?ABC's Jackie Judd on World News Tonight: "Bill
  Bradley all but abandoned his line of attack against Al Gore today."
     Claire Shipman on the NBC Nightly News: "After a
  weekend of stinging attacks on Al Gore, Bill Bradley turns down the volume
  today."     But in introducing a CBS Evening News story by Bill
  Whitaker on Democratic fears over the impact of Bradley's attacks on
  Gore's credibility, Dan Rather maintained: "Bill Bradley pressed ahead
  today with his new strategy of challenging Al Gore's character and
  credibility. Republicans love it. So some Democratic leaders are warning
  Bradley he is helping Republicans in the long run."     -- ABC's World News Tonight. Peter Jennings opened the
  show:"You don't normally think of New Hampshire as being
  crowded, but today you did stand a greater chance of being run over by a
  presidential campaign rushing through the state on the very last day of before
  the very first presidential primary. The basics are these: Among Republicans
  and Democrats, the candidates that is, they look to be very close contests.
  New Hampshire may be as important this year as its ever been."
     -- CBS Evening News. Dan Rather described the
  Bush-McCain contest as "too close to call" before Bob Schieffer
  alerted viewers to the obvious: "With one day to go I think it boils down
  to Bill Bradley and John McCain fighting for their political lives."     Rather recited the latest CBS poll, which placed McCain
  at 39 percent, Bush at 35 percent and Forbes at 10 percent, before Bill
  Whitaker looked at McCain's strategy. Whitaker asserted: "He started
  off last summer as Senator Who but in this state with the motto 'Live Free
  or Die,' the image he crafted, a war-tested Harry Truman-like straight
  shooter, found an audience."     -- NBC Nightly News. Tom Brokaw began by citing NBC's
  latest poll which put McCain over Bush by 38 to 32 percent and Gore over
  Bradley by 49 to 37 percent.     Looking at the Republican race, David Bloom portrayed it
  as a battle between a laid back Bush and a hard-working McCain: "For days
  now relaxed Bush has been frolicking across New Hampshire, dancing,
  snowmobiling, a photo-op with mom and dad. Meanwhile, Bush's chief rival,
  Senator McCain, slogs from one rally to the next, increasingly convinced that
  younger, less ideological voters, and the veterans who support him, will
  propel him to victory here."     Claire Shipman examined the Democratic battle and picked
  up on Bradley's theme as she asked Gore on his bus: "Is there a
  tendency on the part of Al Gore to sometimes stretch the truth?"Gore retorted: "I think there's a tendency on the
  part of political opponents in campaigns to make all kinds of charges against
  candidates."
     Shipman didn't contradict that, but soon cautioned:
  "Experts warn the infighting might do permanent damage."     Lisa Myers evaluated the charges against Gore leveled by
  Bradley, using the always grating Kathleen Hall Jamieson, identified on-screen
  as an "independent political analyst," as her expert. Myers and
  Jamieson decided that Bradley was correct on both of his assertions: His claim
  that Gore distorted his disaster relief votes and that Gore once opposed
  abortion. Myers concluded by again raising concerns about how Bradley's
  attacks could benefit Republicans:"Tonight a Gore spokesman dismisses Bradley's
  attacks as an act of desperation. But privately some top Democrats fear Gore
  is wounded, vulnerable to attacks on his truthfulness long after this primary
  is history."
 
 2  Friday
  night, of the broadcast networks, only ABC reminded viewers of Bill
  Clinton's "liberal" slip of the tongue in his State of the Union
  address the night before, and ABC's Mike Von Fremd portrayed it as a boost
  to Al Gore. CBS's Bob Schieffer offered a glowing review of Clinton's
  proposals, but at least did note their expense.
     On Saturday night, both ABC and CBS (NBA basketball
  bumped NBC) picked up on Bradley's charge that Al Gore has not always been
  pro-choice on abortion. CBS's John Roberts marveled at the subject matter on
  the January 29 Evening News: "The one thing voters here never thought
  they'd hear Democrats arguing with each other about is the issue of
  abortion." Indeed, the media fuel the story on the Republican side while
  having long ignored Gore's denial of a flip-flop on abortion. As Roberts
  noted, back in the mid-1980s Gore declared in a letter: "It is my deep
  personal conviction that abortion is wrong."     ABC's Mike Von Fremd concluded a January 28 World News
  Tonight piece, as transcribed by MRC analyst Jessica Anderson:"In their final State of the Union speeches, Ronald
  Reagan never mentioned his Vice President, George Bush, and Dwight Eisenhower
  said nothing about Richard Nixon. But last night, Bill Clinton talked about Al
  Gore six times, and aides say even that slip of the lip helped."
 Clinton: "Last year the Vice President launched a new
  effort to make communities more liberal, ah livable."
 Von Fremd: "In the Democratic primaries, there's
  nothing wrong with being liberal."
     But you won't ever catch a reporter on his own
  referring to Gore as liberal.     On the CBS Evening News the same night, as transcribed
  by he MRC's Brian Boyd, Bob Schieffer painted a glowing picture of
  Clinton's proposals: "It was classic Clinton. Even his enemies call him
  one of the most adroit politicians ever, and he was on his game. As always he
  brought Congress a package of programs to solve most every problem. From HMO
  reform to prescription drugs for seniors, to stiff new gun controls, and help
  for education. All of it mixed with a passel of tax breaks including a
  proposal to end the marriage tax penalty."     Schieffer did later acknowledge: "Since the
  government prints only about $600 million worth of new money a day,
  Republicans joke that if all the President's programs pass, he'd literally be
  spending money faster than the government can print it." 
 3  In
  a refreshing and unusual approach for a major media figure, on Sunday's Meet
  the Press moderator Tim Russert hit John McCain from the right on abortion,
  but then he undercut his potential for a balanced presentation by spending
  twice as much time haranguing McCain on the issue with the standard arguments
  from the left.
     During the January 30 show, Russert asked McCain:"Let me turn to the issue of abortion, which is a
  difficult one for all candidates. The Right to Life Committee had this to say
  about John McCain, and I'll put it on the screen for you and your viewers.
  They say, 'Senator McCain's positions have been conflicting, and we do not
  think he warrants the support of pro-life voters.' You have said that you
  believe life begins at conception."
 McCain: "Yes."
 Russert: "And, yet, you want exceptions for rape and
  incest."
 McCain: "And the life of the mother, yes."
 Russert: "That would be the taking of a human
  life."
 McCain: "Yes."
 Russert: "How is that consistent morally?"
 McCain: "Because I think that these are careful
  balances that you have to make...."
     This exchange and McCain's complete answer consumed
  1:50. Russert then took nearly four minutes to press McCain with the usual
  liberal arguments relayed so often by reporters:     Russert: "A constitutional amendment to ban all
  abortions?"McCain: "Yes sir."
 Russert: "You're for that?"
 McCain: "Yes sir."
 Russert: "If, in fact, all abortions were banned in
  America under President McCain let's look at our country. What would happen
  to a woman who had an abortion?"
 McCain: "Obviously, it would be illegal, but I would
  not prosecute a woman who did that...."
     After McCain's lengthy answer, Russert countered:Russert: "But, Senator, women across the country would
  say, 'Senator McCain, prior to Roe v. Wade, hundreds of thousands of women a
  year went to the back alleys to have abortions.'"
 McCain: "I understand that."
 Russert: "Many died."
 McCain: "I understand that."
 Russert: "And here you are, want to bring that back.
  Would you prosecute a doctor who broke the law?"
 McCain: "If a doctor violated the law, I believe that
  he would be prosecuted. But the fact is that if Roe v. Wade were repealed,
  then it would then be up to the states in the United States of America to make
  those decisions. It would not immediately outlaw abortion. It would mean that
  each state would make the decisions on that issue among the states."
 Russert: "But if it's a moral issue, you would not
  want to have any state allow abortion either."
 McCain: "I would not, but your thesis that a repeal of
  Roe v. Wade would immediately outlaw abortion isn't true. What would happen,
  it would then return those decisions to the states."
 Russert: "But you would hope all the states would
  outlaw abortion, too."
 McCain: "Yes, I would. Yes, I would."
 Russert: "And so a doctor would be criminally
  liable."
 McCain: "Would be liable."
 Russert: "Not criminally."
 McCain: "No."
 Russert: "A woman would be an accomplice."
 McCain: "Tim, look. This is..."
 Russert: "This is reality."
 McCain: "I know."
 Russert, becoming passionate: "It's easier for
  people to say, 'I'm for banning all abortions' and then when you apply
  it in a real-life situation, circumstances of human beings are involved as
  well as the unborn baby."
     The debate continued on for a bit more before Russert
  turned to the Elian Gonzalez case. 
 4  Later
  on the same Meet the Press Tom Brokaw agreed with Bill Bradley that Al Gore
  has trouble with the truth, but Brokaw has failed to inform viewers of his
  show about two whoppers from Gore that he cited as examples.
     Talking about Bradley's criticisms of Gore for
  distorting his record and denying an obvious flip-flop on abortion, MRC
  analyst Geoffrey Dickens noticed how Brokaw asserted during the January 30
  show's roundtable segment:"I think that he's exposed something in Al Gore that
  could be troublesome for the Vice President, should he get the nomination and
  run in the fall. Al Gore seems to be like those kids who believe everything
  their parents write about them in the Christmas letter. I mean, you know,
  there's this kind of fiction that goes out there, and then there's the
  reality. And, you know, we've talked about this before. You'll remember in
  Chicago when he invoked his dying sister of lung cancer, 'I'm going to
  fight every day for my life. I made that pledge on her deathbed against
  tobacco.' He was taking tobacco money at the time. He was growing tobacco
  himself. He was defending tobacco several years later; the Internet question,
  no controlling legal authority. So I think that Bradley has opened up some
  vulnerabilities for Al Gore here that if he'd done it earlier, he'd
  probably be more competitive."
     Too bad Brokaw didn't bother to tell his viewers about
  either Gore claim at the time he uttered the preposterous assertions. Gore
  made the tobacco claim during the Democratic convention in August of 1996, but
  Brokaw didn't mention the reality that night nor on subsequent editions of
  NBC Nightly News. The Today show didn't alert viewers to Gore's hypocrisy
  until a January 24, 1997 interview with Gore conducted by Katie Couric.     Gore made his claim, "I took the initiative in
  creating the Internet," during a March 9, 1999 interview on CNN's Late
  Edition, but Brokaw didn't mention the outlandish boast on Nightly News
  contemporaneously and I don't believe has at any time since.     To see video clips of Gore's convention comments about
  tobacco and/or his Internet claim, go to:http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/goregaffesvideo.html
 
 5  The
  second edition of the Web-posted MediaNomics report, from the MRC's Free
  Market Project (FMP), is now online. For the January 28 issue, FMP Director
  Rich Noyes filed two stories:
     -- "CNN Earns Dunce Cap for Biased Newsroom Report.
  Two liberal public policy groups, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP)
  and the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), got a lot of attention recently when
  they released a report alleging a sizeable and growing income gap between rich
  and poor workers. Their report received little critical media coverage, but
  perhaps none was as glowing as a pair of reports on CNN's Newsroom, a
  half-hour cable news program produced for use in classrooms all over the
  world....."     -- "Kudos...to CNN's Charles Feldman. All too
  often, it seems, the media fall into the trap of equating dollars with
  progress. But MRC news analyst Paul Smith caught CNN's Charles Feldman
  offering a contrarian position in a report that aired on The World Today on
  January 13...."     To read the entirety of either or both stories, just go
  to:http://www.mediaresearch.org/fmp/medianomics/2000/welcome.html
 
 6  Time's
  Michael Duffy stumbled into admitting that he's a "liberal" as he
  endorsed, as making "a lot of sense," a Clinton proposal which he
  seconds earlier had said "liberals had to love."
     Reviewing Clinton's State of the Union address on
  Friday's Washington Week in Review on PBS, Time reporter Michael Duffy
  asserted that much of it pushed "centrist" ideas. He then contended:"There was stuff in there that liberals had to love. A
  new federally-matched retirement program for working people who don't have
  401(k)s through their employer, that the federal government will give you $500
  if you put in $500. A new federally-funded program to allow people who can't
  afford those college entrance test prep courses, Stanley Kaplan kind of stuff.
  You know, it makes a lot of sense. Why should some people have an advantage
  that way?"
     Let's have spending programs to equalize every
  inequality and let's start with subsidizing the TV careers of all print
  journalists so they have equal air time. After all, why should only some have
  the advantage of a soapbox on PBS from which to spout their opinions? --
      Brent Baker      
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