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The 1,656th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
Thursday February 5, 2004 (Vol. Nine; No. 20)

 
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1. CBS Frets GOP May Make Gay Marriage Kerry's "Willie Horton"
Might gay marriage become John Kerry's "Willie Horton?" CBS worries it could. In a Wednesday night CBS Evening News story, Jim Axelrod regurgitated the media's favorite target as he asked: "Remember Willie Horton?" Axelrod then fretted about how Kerry must be concerned that just as nefarious Republican operatives "made 'Michael Dukakis,' 'Massachusetts liberal' and 'out of touch' synonymous" with the ads about furloughs for murderers, they could do the same with Kerry on gay marriage though, in fact, Kerry's opposition to gay marriage and support of civil unions is, Axelrod contended, "the basic position of George W. Bush, who also opposes gay marriages, but supports civil unions."

2. CBS & NBC Push "AWOL" Charge But Skip How Kerry Defended Clinton
"New questions have arisen about President Bush's military service record," Dan Rather declared on Wednesday's CBS Evening News, although the "questions" are not "new" since they were raised and dismissed in 1999 and 2000. CBS and NBC on Wednesday night picked up on DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe's unsubstantiated "AWOL" charge, and how the John Kerry campaign is fueling the allegations, but ignored how in 1992 Kerry himself took to the Senate floor to denounce those critical of Bill Clinton's efforts to avoid military service during the Vietnam era. Matching a theme of many cable news channel segments this week, both networks portrayed the attacks on Bush's personal military record of 30 years ago as a legitimate retort to questions about Kerry's professional policy positions on national security issues.

3. 60 Minutes II Re-Runs Ex-Official's Attack on Powell's UN Case
With a fresh introduction by Scott Pelley, CBS's 60 Minutes II on Wednesday night re-ran its October 15 story which featured disgruntled former State Department official Greg Thielmann who denounced Colin Powell for using discredited claims in his UN presentation.

4. ABC's Shipman Acknowledges How Kerry is Getting Great Press
ABC's Claire Shipman acknowledged on Wednesday morning that John Kerry is getting great press coverage, relaying on Good Morning America how a Kerry campaign operative told her that "racking up wins each week just strengthens his candidacy, plus he added, 'you can't buy this sort of press.'" Liberals don't need to buy it. They get it for free.

5. JAG Takes on U.S. War Crimes, NBC Re-Runs Bush-Bashing Sit-Com
Two prime time TV tips: Friday's episode of JAG on CBS will feature a case in which the Secretary of the Navy is charged by the International Criminal Court with having committed war crimes and on Saturday night, for the third time, NBC will air the episode of Whoopi which makes fun of President Bush.

6. "Top Ten Things Never Before Said by a Presidential Candidate"
As presented by Senator John Edwards, Letterman's "Top Ten Things Never Before Said by a Presidential Candidate"


 

CBS Frets GOP May Make Gay Marriage Kerry's
"Willie Horton"

CBS' Jim Axlerod     Might gay marriage become John Kerry's "Willie Horton?" CBS worries it could. In a Wednesday night CBS Evening News story, Jim Axelrod regurgitated the media's favorite target as he asked: "Remember Willie Horton?" Axelrod then fretted about how Kerry must be concerned that just as nefarious Republican operatives "made 'Michael Dukakis,' 'Massachusetts liberal' and 'out of touch' synonymous" with the ads about furloughs for murderers, they could do the same with Kerry on gay marriage though, in fact, Kerry's opposition to gay marriage and support of civil unions is, Axelrod contended, "the basic position of George W. Bush, who also opposes gay marriages, but supports civil unions."

     The February 4 CBS Evening News opened with how the Massachusetts Supreme Court issued a clarifying ruling about how its decision last year, that refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples violates the state constitution, cannot be remedied with civil unions and so gay couples must be allowed to marry.

     Anchor Dan Rather set up a second story, looking at the impact on the presidential race, specifically on John Kerry and how Republicans will try to distort the issue to falsely paint Kerry as too liberal: "There's no getting around it. This court opinion, rightly or wrongly, could have an impact on the Kerry presidential campaign, and not just because he's from Massachusetts. As CBS's Jim Axelrod reports, after the latest round of primaries, Kerry is also the widely-viewed front-runner for the Democratic nomination. Senator John Edwards has made a move on him, but the race is now clearly Kerry's to lose."

     Axelrod began, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "You can understand if John Kerry took just a moment to breathe easy last night. [video of Kerry victory speech] The winner in five of seven contests, the leader in delegates. Everything seemed to be moving according to plan. But the test is when things don't follow the plan. For all the time he spends on jobs and the war, the Massachusetts Supreme Court has now put a potentially explosive social issue on his plate."
     John Kerry on Face the Nation the Sunday before the New Hampshire primary: "I'm not personally supportive of gay marriage."
     Axelrod: "Senator Kerry told Bob Schieffer that before the court ruling, downplaying its importance."
     Kerry: "That's not what's dividing America. That's not the major issue in America."
     Axelrod: "Kerry's reaction was predictable. He'd prefer it go away. Most Americans don't support gay marriage or civil unions -- voters Kerry wants. Those who do support them are liberals Kerry needs. There's something else John Kerry must consider -- not just who he is, the front-runner, but where he's from, Massachusetts. Both of those have combined before to gut a run for President. [Over a clip of the 1988 Willie Horton ad, Horton's picture surrounded by blue background] Remember Willie Horton? An issue that made 'Michael Dukakis, Massachusetts liberal,' and 'out of touch' synonymous. Clearly, John Kerry doesn't want another Mr. Bush using a different issue to paint the same picture."
     Bill Carrick, Democratic strategist: "John Kerry is going to say no, I'm not for gay marriage, I support civil unions, I don't support gay marriage."
     Axelrod: "Which is not only, by the way, the position of John Edwards, Wes Clark and Howard Dean, but the basic position of George W. Bush, who also opposes gay marriages, but supports civil unions. On America's heavily polarized political landscape, this race will be won in the middle. Neither side may want to risk alienating voters there if there's not much difference to begin with. Jim Axelrod, CBS News, Boston."

     A warning shot from CBS News to anyone who dares broach the radical idea of portraying a Massachusetts liberal as a Massachusetts liberal.

 

CBS & NBC Push "AWOL" Charge But Skip
How Kerry Defended Clinton

     "New questions have arisen about President Bush's military service record," Dan Rather declared on Wednesday's CBS Evening News, although the "questions" are not "new" since they were raised and dismissed in 1999 and 2000. CBS and NBC on Wednesday night picked up on DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe's unsubstantiated "AWOL" charge, and how the John Kerry campaign is fueling the allegations, but ignored how in 1992 Kerry himself took to the Senate floor to denounce those critical of Bill Clinton's efforts to avoid military service during the Vietnam era.

     Matching a theme of many cable news channel segments this week, both networks portrayed the attacks on Bush's personal military record of 30 years ago as a legitimate retort to questions about Kerry's professional policy positions on national security issues, as if Kerry serving in Vietnam should override his liberal Senate votes over the years against many weapons systems and in favor of cutting intelligence funding. (For Mort Kondracke's list of Kerry's liberal defense votes, see: www.mediaresearch.org)

     CBS's Mark Strassmann asserted: "Democrats want to exploit a contrast with Lieutenant George Bush. They charge the future commander-in-chief was AWOL. Call it a clear warning shot on the debate to come about national security." Over on the NBC Nightly News, Tom Brokaw maintained: "Now that Senator John Kerry is the frontrunner among Democrats, the Democrats are anxious to show they will play hardball when comes to patriotism and national security."

     Strassmann treated Vietnam vets who are working for Kerry as credible sources for criticism of Bush. Strassmann asserted: "Bush's service record cuts deep for this group: veterans campaigning for John Kerry, state by state." Viewers then heard from a man identified on screen as a "Republican Veteran," but who was standing inside a Kerry campaign room, who complained about Bush: "He wasn't there when we needed him."

     Though Democrats and liberals are on the attack, Strassmann managed to suggest it is Bush who is exploiting the issue as he concluded his story by noting how Bush's "re-election campaign has already turned attacks on his service record into a weapon for fundraising among Bush supporters."

     Neither CBS or NBC, nor CNN's NewsNight in a Wednesday night taped piece followed by Aaron Brown interviewing former Navy Secretary James Webb, bothered to note Kerry's hypocrisy on the issue as recounted in an article in Wednesday's Columbus Dispatch. (Webb did, however, note how Kerry "gained a lot of antipathy from people who served in Vietnam because of his role as a spokesman in what was called the winter soldiers or the winter crimes tribunal, which was involved in laying out a long list of allegations against the people that really hurt, stigmatized the people who served.")

     OpinionJournal.com's "Best of the Web" column on Wednesday picked up on the Ohio paper's story, so major media outlets had no excuse for missing it, and FNC's Brit Hume caught that and, on Wednesday night, highlighted Kerry's 1992 comments.

     An excerpt from the February 4 Columbus Dispatch story, "Military criticisms echo '92 attacks: Then, Kerry berated GOP on Clinton; now, his people slam Bush," by Jack Torry:

Sen. John Kerry, the Massachusetts Democrat whose backers have raised questions about President Bush's service in the Texas Air National Guard, once assailed critics of President Clinton's lack of military service, saying, "We do not need to divide America over who served and how."

The Massachusetts senator, a decorated Vietnam veteran, went to the Senate floor in 1992 to defend Clinton, who was being dogged in his presidential campaign by charges that he dodged the draft.

Kerry compared Clinton's critics to "latter-day Spiro Agnews" by playing "to the worst instincts of divisiveness and reaction that still haunt America. Are we now going to create a new scarlet letter in the context of Vietnam?"

"The race for the White House should be about leadership and leadership requires that one help heal the wounds of Vietnam, not reopen them," Kerry said at the time....

     END of Excerpt

     For the story in full: www.dispatch.com

     On National Review's "The Corner" Web log page, Jonah Goldberg posted the text of Kerry's February 27, 1992 comments on the Senate floor. See: www.nationalreview.com

     Best of the Web's James Taranto added: "The Washington Post published Kerry's speech as an op-ed on Feb. 28, 1992; it's not publicly available online, but we found it on Factiva. 'I am saddened by the fact that Vietnam has yet again been inserted into the campaign,' Kerry said. 'What saddens me most is that Democrats, above all those who shared the agonies of that generation, should now be refighting the many conflicts of Vietnam in order to win the current political conflict.'" For Taranto's item, with a link to the op-ed version: www.opinionjournal.com

     Now, a full rundown of the CBS story, some more about the NBC story, a TimesWatch article about a slanted New York Times story and then links to previous CyberAlert items about this subject:

     -- CBS Evening News, February 4. Dan Rather teased the upcoming story: "Coming up next here on the CBS Evening News. New questions have arisen about President Bush's military service record. We'll give you a look at questioned aspects of that record."

     Rather soon introduced the subsequent piece, as transcribed by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth: "Military service could soon become an issue in the presidential race, especially if Senator John Kerry becomes the Democratic nominee. A Bush-Kerry face-off would pit two candidates with very different military service records. CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann has the 'Inside Story.'"

     Strassmann began: "There's a swagger now to John Kerry, a confidence born in a pattern of victory. He's just so eager to share part of his battle plan in what he clearly believes is his fight to come."
     John Kerry at a rally: "If George Bush wants to make national security the centerpiece in this campaign, we have three words for him that we know he understands: 'Bring it on.'"
     Strassmann: "No line in Kerry's victory speech got more applause because this [video of Bush on aircraft carrier] is the image that still wrangles Democrats -- what it said about the war in Iraq, the Commander-in-Chief, and America's place in the world. The Democrats typically have a tougher time making voters feel safe in the world [video of Dukakis in tank]. Lieutenant John Kerry's campaign ads showcase a former war hero with a chest full of medals. Now that he's the front-runner, Democrats want to exploit a contrast with Lieutenant George Bush. They charge the future commander-in-chief was AWOL. Call it a clear warning shot on the debate to come about national security."
     Terry McAuliffe, DNC Chairman: "There are legitimate questions about the President's, when he supposedly was supposed to be in the Alabama National Guard and didn't show up for it."
     Strassmann: "Lieutenant Bush's records are sketchy but suggest spotty attendance. One unit's commander reported Bush never showed up. Others say he fulfilled his duty and was an excellent pilot. Those records show he was honorably discharged. And Republicans call the attack slanderous."
     Scott McClellan: "I think it is sad to see some stoop to this level, especially so early in an election year."
     Strassmann: "Kerry's view:"
     Kerry: "But I think it's up to the President and the military to answer those questions."
     Strassmann: "Heartland Republicans say Democrats must be desperate."
     Katon Dawson, South Carolina Republican Party Chair: "I think it's reckless, irresponsible and false. And in South Carolina, it will be, it will be the double-edged sword that will slit their wrist."
     Strassmann: "But Bush's service record cuts deep for this group: veterans campaigning for John Kerry, state by state."
     David Mitchell, identified on screen as a "Republican Veteran," with Kerry signs on wall behind him: "He wasn't there when we needed him."
     Strassmann concluded: "President Bush is coming here to South Carolina tomorrow to talk about national security, and his re-election campaign has already turned attacks on his service record into a weapon for fundraising among Bush supporters. Mark Strassmann, CBS News, Columbia, South Carolina."

     -- NBC Nightly News. Tom Brokaw set up NBC's take: "If there was any doubt that the presidential election is well under way, it was shattered this week with harsh attacks and counter-attacks between Democrats and Republicans over President Bush's military service record during the Vietnam War. Now that Senator John Kerry is the frontrunner among Democrats, the Democrats are anxious to show they will play hardball when comes to patriotism and national security."

     David Gregory proceeded to run through the charges made by McAuliffe, but pointed out how "Mr. Bush was never formally accused by the National Guard of being AWOL -- or absent without leave -- but the questions about his service date back to 1968..." Gregory recounted Bush's supposed absence from duty for a year in 1972-73 in Alabama, noting how the Alabama commander, William Turnipseed said in 2000 that he didn't recall seeing Bush, but he's "now hedging. He admitted to NBC News today quote, 'I don't know if he showed up. I don't know if he didn't.'"

     -- From the MRC's TimesWatch.org site, dedicated to documenting the liberal political agenda of the New York Times, a reprint of an article by Clay Waters about a February 4 New York Times story:

Striking Contrasts" Between Bush and Kerry

As Sen. John Kerry piles up Democratic primary victories, Wednesday's piece by Elisabeth Bumiller and David Halbfinger, "Military Service Becomes Issue in Bush-Kerry Race," framed the potential Kerry-Bush race to Kerry's advantage.

The story opened: "The contrast could not be more striking. In March 1969, John Kerry, a 25-year-old Navy lieutenant, reached down from the boat he was piloting in Vietnam's treacherous Bay Hap River and in a spray of enemy fire pulled a soldier out of the water to safety. For his valor, Mr. Kerry won the Bronze Star with a combat 'V' and his third Purple Heart. That very same month, George W. Bush was on far-safer ground in Valdosta, Ga., learning to fly fighter planes for the Texas National Guard, a coveted post that greatly reduced any risk that he would be sent to Vietnam -- and one that he might not have obtained had his father not been a member of Congress."

The Times saw the reemerging controversy over Bush's National Guard service (put back on the agenda by radical filmmaker Michael Moore) as an example of Kerry being as "brutal" as Bush: "Mr. Kerry's campaign advisers say the dispute, and the intense Republican response, keeps Mr. Kerry's military record as a central focus of the campaign and allows him to show he can engage in the same kind of brutal political warfare as the Bush White House....Mr. Kerry is showing no signs so far of backing off. In recent days, he has been assisted by former Senator Max Cleland of Georgia, a triple-amputee from his service in Vietnam who has been virtually sainted in Democratic eyes after being defeated in 2002 when Republicans questioned his patriotism."

But did questions of Cleland's patriotism really lead to his defeat? As the MRC's Brent Baker put it upon Cleland's defeat in his 2002 Senate race: "His decision to put protecting unionized federal workers from any performance or competence scrutiny ahead of national security is what gave his Republican opponent an opening to attack him." And the Veterans of Foreign Wars, which might have been expected to line up behind a Vietnam War veteran, endorsed Cleland's opponent, Republican Rep. Saxby Chambliss.

     END of Reprint of TimesWatch story.

     For the rest of the Bumiller/Halbfinger article: www.nytimes.com

     For the latest TimesWatch.org postings: www.timeswatch.org

     -- Previous CyberAlert items:

     # February 3: George W. Bush "AWOL" or a "deserter"? Michael Moore put the subject into play when, at a Wesley Clark rally, he previewed a Clark versus Bush race as pitting "the General versus the Deserter." At the January 22 presidential debate Peter Jennings raised the incident with Clark, describing it as "a reckless charge." On Friday night's Real Time with Bill Maher on HBO, Moore lashed back: "For Peter Jennings to say that it was 'a reckless charge,' it's reckless for Peter Jennings and ABC not to investigate this." Moore's wish became ABC's command as both ABC on Sunday, following DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe on This Week maintaining that he's looking forward to a debate in which "John Kerry, a war hero with a chest full of medals, is standing next to George Bush, a man who was AWOL in the Alabama National Guard," and CNN on Monday, looked into the charge and found it baseless. www.mediaresearch.org

     # February 4: At the January 22 Democratic presidential debate, Peter Jennings described Michael Moore's allegation that George W. Bush was a "deserter" as "a reckless charge not supported by the facts." But in setting up a World News Tonight story on Tuesday night, Jennings didn't refrain from passing along, without any caveats, how "a number of Democrats have accused Mr. Bush of going AWOL during his National Guard service." www.mediaresearch.org

 

60 Minutes II Re-Runs Ex-Official's Attack
on Powell's UN Case

     With a fresh introduction by Scott Pelley, CBS's 60 Minutes II on Wednesday night re-ran its October 15 story which featured disgruntled former State Department official Greg Thielmann who denounced Colin Powell for using discredited claims in his UN presentation.

     As the October 16, 2003 CyberAlert summarized: CBS hyped as "new questions tonight," allegations it played at the top of Wednesday's 60 Minutes II, from former State Department intelligence bureau official Greg Thielmann, that Secretary of State Colin Powell's February 5 presentation to the UN Security Council contained inaccurate and unsupportable claims about Iraq's pursuit of nuclear weapons. But CBS was playing loose with the facts in putting self-promotional marketing ahead of accuracy since CBS itself featured the same basic charge from Thielmann back on July 9 and he leveled his allegations, against Powell and other Bush officials, during PBS's June 13 Now with Bill Moyers.

     An excerpt from the CyberAlert:

Scott Pelley opened the broadcast in front of a "The Man Who Knew" graphic sign: "In the run-up to the war in Iraq, one moment seemed to be a turning point: the day Secretary of State Colin Powell went to the United Nations to make the case for the invasion. Millions of us watched as he laid out the evidence and reached a damning conclusion -- that Saddam Hussein was in possession of weapons of mass destruction.
"But the man you will hear from tonight says that key evidence in that speech was misrepresented and the public was deceived. Greg Thielmann should know. He had been Powell's own chief of intelligence when it came to Iraqi weapons of mass destruction."

Pelley to Thielmann: "When you saw Secretary of State Powell make his presentation to the United Nations, what did you think?"
Thielmann: "I had a couple of initial reactions. Then I had a more mature reaction. I think my conclusion now is that it's probably one of the low points in his long, distinguished service to the nation."
Pelley: "At the end of the speech, the United Nations and the American people had been misinformed, in your opinion?" Thielmann: "I think so."

Pelley pumped up Thielmann's credentials: "Greg Thielmann was a foreign service officer for 25 years. His last job at the State Deportment was Acting Director of the Office of Strategic Proliferation and Military Affairs, responsible for analyzing the Iraqi weapons threat for Secretary Powell....Thielmann was admired at the State Department. One high-ranking official called him honorable, knowledgeable, very experienced. Thielmann took a long-planned retirement four months before Powell's big moment at the UN."

Noting how "Greg Thielmann says the nuclear case was filled with half-truths," Pelley ran through how Thielmann and another inspector found no evidence that Iraq sought uranium in Africa and, on the aluminum tubes, that they were definitively not for use in any Iraqi nuclear quest.

Pelley relayed how Thielmann "says the administration took murky information out of the gray area and made it black and white." Thielmann claimed that what Powell said were "decontamination" trucks really were fire trucks.

Pelly asked a UN inspector: "As you watched the speech unfold, what was the reaction among the inspectors?" Inspector: "Various people would laugh at various times because the information he was presenting was just, you know, didn't mean anything, had no meaning."

Pelley summed up in skipping over all that David Kay did find: "An interim report by coalition inspectors says so far, there is no evidence of a uranium enrichment program, no chemical weapons, no biological weapons, and no Scud missiles. The State Department told us that Secretary Powell would not be available for an interview. But earlier this month, he said the jury on Iraq is still out."
Powell: "So I think one has to look at the whole report. Have we found a factory or a plant or a warehouse full of chemical rounds? No, not yet."
Pelley: "As for Greg Thielmann, he told us he's a reluctant witness. He said the says the President's address worried him because he knew the African uranium story was false and he watched Secretary Powell's speech with disappointment because, up until then, he said, he'd seen Powell bringing what he called 'reason' to the administration's inner circle. Today, Thielmann believes the decision to go to war was made -- and the intelligence was interpreted -- to fit that conclusion."
Thielmann: "There's plenty of blame to go around. But the main problem was that the senior administration officials have what I've called faith-based intelligence. They knew what they wanted the intelligence to show. They were really blind and deaf to any kind of countervailing information the intelligence community would produce. So I would assign some blame to the intelligence community, and most of the blame to the senior administration officials."

     END of Excerpt from previous CyberAlert

     For this item in full: www.mediaresearch.org

 

ABC's Shipman Acknowledges How Kerry
is Getting Great Press

     ABC's Claire Shipman acknowledged on Wednesday morning that John Kerry is getting great press coverage, relaying on Good Morning America how a Kerry campaign operative told her that "racking up wins each week just strengthens his candidacy, plus he added, 'you can't buy this sort of press.'"

     Liberals don't need to buy it. They get it for free.

     MRC analyst Jessica Anderson noticed how, from Boston on the February 4 GMA, Shipman trumpeted Kerry's victories of the night before: "And it was a big win: broad, deep and satisfying....Kerry swept demographic groups, appealed to moderates and liberals. Even in the two states he lost he was competitive....Exit polls showed again that voters like Kerry because they think he can beat Bush. Behind the scenes, the Kerry team can't hide its glee at a handful of polls out this week that show Kerry defeating the President in a one-on-one match up. Now, the next immediate focus this weekend, Washington state and Michigan, where they think they can win again, but Kerry is not necessarily eager to have this contest over immediately. As one aide pointed out last night, racking up wins each week just strengthens his candidacy, plus he added, 'you can't buy this sort of press.'"

 

JAG Takes on U.S. War Crimes, NBC Re-Runs
Bush-Bashing Sit-Com

     Two prime time TV tips: Friday's episode of JAG on CBS will feature a case in which the Secretary of the Navy is charged by the International Criminal Court with having committed war crimes and on Saturday night, for the third time, NBC will air the episode of Whoopi which makes fun of President Bush.

     -- The plot for the February 6 JAG, as listed on the CBS Web site: "When the International Criminal Court in The Hague charges the Secretary of the Navy with war crimes, Harm and Mac are assigned to defend him."

     CBS's page for JAG, which airs at 9pm EST/PST, 8pm CST/MST: www.cbs.com

     -- NBC's plot summary for a re-run airing on Saturday night of its sit-com starring Whoopi Goldberg as a former Broadway star who now runs a Manhattan hotel:

THE VAST RIGHT WING CONSPIRACY

WILL MOTORMOUTH MAVIS GO BUSH LEAGUE AFTER ENCOUNTER WITH FRIENDLY PRESIDENT? -- After a chance encounter with President Bush (guest star Steve Bridges) when his motorcade stops at the Lamont Hotel, Mavis (Whoopi Goldberg) cannot mouth off to the Commander in Chief after he recognizes her and pays homage to her singing talents -- but she clashes with Republican Courtney (Wren T. Brown) when Bush graciously invites her for a face-to-face meeting. Later, while out of place at a GOP function, a sassy Mavis drinks, smokes and speaks her mind -- and soon gets up-close-and-personal with the Secret Service.

     This episode will air at 8:30pm EST/PST, 7:30pm CST/MST on Saturday.

     The October 15 CyberAlert recounted some scenes from the sit-com, which NBC aired on both Tuesday, October 14 and again on Thursday, October 16, and what she said about it during an appearance on Today.

     In one scene, while Goldberg's character, "Mavis," is away from the front desk Bush stops by the hotel to use the facilities:
     Mavis, to hotel janitor: "Bush is in my can?"
     Janitor: "That's what, that's what I try to tell you! The President is here in your toilet now!"
     Mavis: "Well go get him out!"
     Janitor: "Oh yeah right. An Iranian immigrant telling the President to go. What? Why don't I just run around the airport and shout, yeah Jihad! Holy war! Holy war!"
     Mavis: "Fine! I will go get him out of there myself. I can't believe he's in there doing to my bathroom what he's done to the economy!"

     Later, Mavis charges: "Black Republicans make about as much sense to me as Jews for Jesus."

     On Today, Goldberg claimed she did the Bush-bashing episode because it was an "opportunity to say some things that people are actually thinking." She also maintained: "We are afraid of people who don't look like us."

     For the October 15 CyberAlert article: www.mediaresearch.org

     NBC's page for Whoopi: www.nbc.com

 

"Top Ten Things Never Before Said by
a Presidential Candidate"

     From the February 4 Late Show with David Letterman, as presented on the Ed Sullivan Theater stage by Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards, the "Top Ten Things Never Before Said by a Presidential Candidate." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com

10. "Vote for me or I'll slash your tires"

9. "Forget universal health care -- I'm buying every American an XBox"

8. "In a crisis I ask myself, 'What would Tony Danza do?'?

7. "I'd give you my plan for economic recovery if I wasn't rip stinkin' drunk"

6. "If your last name begins with 'M' through 'Z,' sorry -- your taxes are doubling"

5. "We're gonna cut the deficit by selling North Dakota to Canada"

4. "I have tons of experience from being president of the Burt Reynolds fan club"

3. "Lady, that is one ugly baby"

2. "When I'm president, I'm putting Regis on Mt. Rushmore"

1. "Read my lips: no new wardrobe malfunctions"

     The Late Show's "Dave TV" page features a RealPlayer excerpt of Edwards reading numbers ten through seven: www.cbs.com

     [Web Update: The Late Show has posted on this page RealPlayer video of Edwards presenting the entire list: www.cbs.com]

     The page also has clips of two previous Top Ten lists from Democratic presidential candidates:

     # From January 12, Dick Gephardt's "Top Ten Signs You've Been on the Campaign Trail Too Long." For the text of the list: www.cbs.com

     # From January 22, the "Top Ten Ways I, Howard Dean, Can Turn Things Around." For the text of the list: www.cbs.com

     Gephardt's out and Dean is barely alive. Doing "Top Ten" lists didn't revive those two faltering campaigns, but Edwards must be hoping a better fate awaits him.

     Some humorous video: Watch Dennis Kucinich attempt some free throws with a basketball, while he has a fake baby stuffed in his suit jacket -- a fake baby whose voice he has just mimicked -- during the "5 Questions" segment Tuesday night on the Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn: www.cbs.com

-- Brent Baker

 


 


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