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The 2,204th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
11:45am EDT, Thursday May 25, 2006 (Vol. Eleven; No. 90)

 
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1. NBC Brings Out Tom Brokaw to Tout Al Gore's "Compelling" Movie
Network Gore Promotion, Part 1 of 3. NBC brought Tom Brokaw back onto the NBC Nightly News on Wednesday to trumpet Al Gore's "stylish and compelling movie" which "graphically describes the realities and consequences of global warming." Sitting at the anchor desk with Brian Williams, Brokaw gushed: "Brian, the Vice President's film tonight, which is called An Inconvenient Truth, is a stylish and compelling video version of an argument that he's been making for a long time, that global warming is real and it's getting worse." Brokaw presumed Gore's claims are accurate as he touted how "the man who lost the presidency in the U.S. Supreme Court is suddenly everywhere again, the leading man in a new documentary that graphically describes the realities and consequences of global warming." Gore sat down with Brokaw for an interview and Brokaw pressed him about running again for President after heralding how "Gore's high-profile involvement in this film and in other public appearances these days is causing a political buzz."

2. Katie Couric Giddy for Gore, All Smiles in "Exclusive" Interview
Network Gore Promotion, Part 2 of 3. The morning after ABC's Good Morning America paid tribute to Al Gore as "the Comeback Kid," NBC's Today on Wednesday aired an "exclusive" interview with Gore during which a giddy Katie Couric was all smiles as she promoted his new hysterical movie and pressed him about running for President again. "A once defeated Al Gore is now basking in the limelight soaking up standing ovations and stellar reviews," Couric gushed. Couric touted his movie as a "documentary that shows the catastrophic effects global warming could have down the road if the world doesn't take action now" and she oozed to Gore as the two sat in Central Park: "I think in this movie at different turns you're funny, vulnerable, disarming, self-effacing and someone said after watching it, quote, 'if only he was like this before maybe things would've turned out differently in 2000.'" She cued him up to spout his claims about how much of Florida and Manhattan will soon be under water: "As succinctly as possible can you explain the crisis?" And she only provided token acknowledgment of any other view: "Where there is disagreement among scientists it is not if but when we may see drastic environmental changes across the globe. Al Gore says the clock is ticking."

3. CNN's Schneider: Gore Could Follow Nixon's Path Back to President
Network Gore Promotion, Part 3 of 3. On CNN's The Situation Room on Wednesday, political analyst Bill Schneider joined the media's enthusiasm for Al Gore's return to the public spotlight as he not only promoted Gore's new global warming documentary, An Inconvenient Truth, but touted Nixon as a model for a Gore presidential run. Schneider gushed during the program's 4pm EDT hour: "The new Al Gore movie opens today. Is it a star is born or could it be a political star is reborn? Could this be Al Gore's moment?" Schneider applauded the timing of the documentary's release and claimed Truth is "not overtly partisan," before using clips from the film to slam President Bush over one of his "greatest failures" and then pointing to Richard Nixon's comeback win for the White House in 1968, Schneider suggested history could repeat in Gore's favor: "The film is coming out at the perfect moment. Millions of Americans are angry at President Bush and worried about energy. The film is not overtly partisan, but who can miss the visual cue here of one of Bush's greatest failures? Hurricane Katrina. Would Americans really elect a President who served eight years as Vice President, then ran for President and failed, then was out of power for eight years? Well, you know, it worked for Richard Nixon because the moment was right."

4. NY Times Embraces Gore's Vision of Apocalypse: "A Necessary Film"
As his environmental apocalypse "documentary" makes its debut in New York and Los Angeles, there's nothing "inconvenient" standing in the way of Al Gore's crusade in the New York Times. From the Cannes Film Festival, chief movie critic A.O. Scott reviewed An Inconvenient Truth for Page 1 of Wednesday's Arts page. Scott, the same critic who called left-wing "documentary"-maker Michael Moore "a credit to the republic," predictably found Al Gore's view of environmental apocalypse to be "chilling" and "necessary."


 

NBC Brings Out Tom Brokaw to Tout Al
Gore's "Compelling" Movie

     Network Gore Promotion, Part 1 of 3. NBC brought Tom Brokaw back onto the NBC Nightly News on Wednesday to trumpet Al Gore's "stylish and compelling movie" which "graphically describes the realities and consequences of global warming."

     Sitting at the anchor desk with Brian Williams, Brokaw gushed: "Brian, the Vice President's film tonight, which is called An Inconvenient Truth, is a stylish and compelling video version of an argument that he's been making for a long time, that global warming is real and it's getting worse." Brokaw presumed Gore's claims are accurate as he touted how "the man who lost the presidency in the U.S. Supreme Court is suddenly everywhere again, the leading man in a new documentary that graphically describes the realities and consequences of global warming." Gore sat down with Brokaw for an interview and Brokaw pressed him about running again for President after heralding how "Gore's high-profile involvement in this film and in other public appearances these days is causing a political buzz." Back at the anchor desk, Williams asked if Gore's movie offers any solutions. Brokaw offered up a plug for Gore's hysterical Web site before noting a shortcoming: "Well, they direct you to a Web site called ClimateCrisis.Com. They don't deal with nuclear power which many people believe is one of the solutions that will have to be examined."

     [This item was posted Wednesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video for the May 24 NBC Nightly News story. Brian Williams set it up: "This evening a documentary film is in the news because of its star, former Vice President Al Gore, and its subject matter: global warming. Tom Brokaw is with us tonight with a look at the meaning here and the subtext. Tom?"

     Tom Brokaw, at the anchor desk with Williams: "Brian, the Vice President's film tonight, which is called An Inconvenient Truth, is a stylish and compelling video version of an argument that he's been making for a long time, that global warming is real and it's getting worse. But to many of his former political allies, this is a film about more than global warming. What is Al Gore up to?"
     Al Gore, on Saturday Night Live: "Live from New York, it's Saturday night!"
     Brokaw: "From the small screen to the big screen."
     Gore, in his movie: "Is it possible that we should prepare against other threats besides terrorists?"
     Brokaw: "The man who lost the presidency in the U.S. Supreme Court is suddenly everywhere again, the leading man in a new documentary that graphically describes the realities and consequences of global warming."
     Gore, in movie pointing to aerial view of a glacier: "If this were to go, sea level worldwide would go up 20 feet."
     Brokaw: "It's a long-time favorite Gore subject with a new urgency. So far it's played mostly to the choir, people who go into the theater inclined to want to believe it."
     Brokaw to Gore as the two sat outdoors: "How do you think it's going to do in primetime, so to speak?"
     Gore: "We've actually had some screenings in areas where the audiences were predominantly Republican, skeptical. And they came out with the same exact reaction. But more and more people, without regard to political party, are now saying 'Yeah, I get it.'"
     Brokaw: "Gore's involvement with the environment goes back to his earliest days in Congress. As Vice President, he helped negotiate the Kyoto climate treaty, but the Clinton administration couldn't get it ratified, and President Bush pulled out altogether."
     Gore to Brokaw: "Will there be a successor treaty? Yes, there will be. But the current administration is not even participating in that process. So I think the most crucial question is to try to convince the current administration within their remaining two-and-a-half years to change on this issue."
     Brokaw gave a perfunctory sentence to a contrary view: "But James Inhofe, the Oklahoma Republican who's chair of the Senate Environmental and Public Works Committee, calls global warming a great hoax. For his part, President Bush says he won't see the film starring his old adversary."
     Gore, before an audience: "I am Al Gore. I used to be the next President of the United States of America."
     Brokaw: "Gore's high-profile involvement in this film and in other public appearances these days is causing a political buzz."
     Brokaw to Gore: "Already your friends and admirers are saying to me, after seeing the film, he's running again."
     Gore: "I have no intention of being a candidate again."
     Brokaw: "No intention or a firm commitment?"
     Gore: "Well, no intention, no plans. And I am involved in a kind of campaign, but it's not for a candidacy, Tom. It's a campaign to change the minds of the American people."

     Brokaw, back on the NBC Nightly News set: "Change the minds of the American people about global warming and maybe, just maybe, about Al Gore. Brian, this film, which had a showing in Cannes, is going to be in big theaters. It's very long on describing the problem, but pretty short on actual specific solutions."
     Williams: "And that's what I was going to ask. The film is over, you get the message, but what is there about the choices that face all of us on this?"
     Brokaw: "Well, they direct you to a Web site called ClimateCrisis.Com. They don't deal with nuclear power which many people believe is one of the solutions that will have to be examined. The Vice President said he doesn't think so, it's too fraught with perils. What do you with the waste? Also the possibility of terrorists getting access to nuclear power. So this issue has been engaged now, and this film will accelerate all of that."

 

Katie Couric Giddy for Gore, All Smiles
in "Exclusive" Interview

     Network Gore Promotion, Part 2 of 3. The morning after ABC's Good Morning America paid tribute to Al Gore as "the Comeback Kid," NBC's Today on Wednesday aired an "exclusive" interview with Gore during which a giddy Katie Couric was all smiles as she promoted his new hysterical movie and pressed him about running for President again. "A once defeated Al Gore is now basking in the limelight soaking up standing ovations and stellar reviews," Couric gushed. Couric touted his movie as a "documentary that shows the catastrophic effects global warming could have down the road if the world doesn't take action now" and she oozed to Gore as the two sat in Central Park: "I think in this movie at different turns you're funny, vulnerable, disarming, self-effacing and someone said after watching it, quote, 'if only he was like this before maybe things would've turned out differently in 2000.'" She cued him up to spout his claims about how much of Florida and Manhattan will soon be under water: "As succinctly as possible can you explain the crisis?" And she only provided token acknowledgment of any other view: "Where there is disagreement among scientists it is not if but when we may see drastic environmental changes across the globe. Al Gore says the clock is ticking."

     The May 24 CyberAlert recounted: With "The Comeback Kid? Al Gore Takes on the World," as the on-screen moniker, ABC's Good Morning America on Tuesday championed Al Gore's comeback, through his hysterical global warming movie, An Inconvenient Truth, which ABC took quite seriously as Claire Shipman touted a potential Gore presidential run. Shipman enthused: "The guy that George Bush Senior derisively dubbed 'Ozone Man' may have hit his stride after five years in hibernation by promoting his longtime passion." Shipman trumpeted: "Here's Al being celebrated in Cannes, doing the celebrity thing at an LA opening, power-walking a green carpet in Washington as rumors of another presidential run swirl." Without scolding Gore for fear-mongering, Shipman calmly relayed how Gore's "environmental message is blunt: humanity is sitting on a time bomb and has about ten years left to deal with it. It's the messenger, though, this almost President turned dynamic professor who's making most of the waves, dominating the blog-chatter." Letting a hopeful Arianna Huffington answer, Shipman cued her up: "Is he going to go for the Oval again?" Shipman concluded by gushing: "What does Al Gore say about the possibility of another run? We asked him the other night....He gave a hearty laugh but didn't say no." See: www.mediaresearch.org

     The MRC's Geoff Dickens tracked the lengthy 7:30am half hour segment on the May 24 Today, starting with the earlier plugs:

     At the top of the show, Couric previewed: "NBC News exclusive. Al Gore on global warming and whether he'll make another run for the Oval Office."

     A little later: "And then that exclusive interview with Al Gore. He's on a new campaign to fight global warming, clearly a subject he is very passionate about. But is he also using it to kick start another run for the presidency? We'll talk with him about that as well."

     At the end of the 7am half hour: "Still to come this morning on Today former President, Vice President rather, he thought he might be president, Al Gore on the very real threat of global warning, warming and his political future."
     Clip of Couric to Gore: "All this positive response has led to a lot of speculation that you're gonna run for President. Let's just put it out there."
     Couric: "We'll have his answer coming up-"
     Lauer: "What did he say?"
     Couric: "-in an exclusive interview in our next half hour. That's why we call it a tease, Matt."
     Lauer: "You cut him off just at the good part."

     Shortly after 7:30am, Couric, over clip from Gore documentary: "Also coming up in this half hour a very interesting conversation with former Vice President Al Gore. He's off on a new campaign these days with a documentary that shows the catastrophic effects global warming could have down the road if the world doesn't take action now. We'll talk about that and he'll tell us right here whether he plans to run for President again."

     And Matt Lauer before the first ad break of the half hour: "Coming up later on Today Halle Berry will blow into our studio to tell us about playing Storm again in the new X-Men movie. But up next a more unlikely movie star, Al Gore. He'll talk about his new documentary on global warming and ask him, we'll ask him will he make another run for the White House? His answer, after this."

     Finally, at 7:42am, Couric set up her taped session with Gore:
     "This morning we're beginning a new series called Today's Climate Challenge, Tomorrow's Global Opportunity. With a record setting hurricane season, the warmest April ever and rising ocean temperatures many are saying global warming is in fact to blame. Former Vice President Al Gore is one of them and now he's bringing his message to a theater near you. The last memory many Americans may have of Al Gore is the night of December 13th, 2000 when he withdrew his challenge to the election that put George W. Bush in the White House."
     Al Gore in 2000: "I offer my concession."
     Couric: "But times have changed. Mr. Gore now finds himself the summer's most unlikely movie star promoting his new film, An Inconvenient Truth, which he's described as, 'a nature hike through the book of Revelation.'"
     Al Gore from the movie: "If you look at the ten hottest years ever measured they've all occurred in the last 14 years and the hottest of all was 2005."
     Couric: "In the movie Mr. Gore presents a high-tech slideshow he's been giving for years which contains an avalanche of evidence he says points to one thing, the climate is changing and a crisis is on the horizon. But before delivering the bad news he breaks the ice with a little comedy."
     Gore from the movie: "I am Al Gore. I used to be the next President of the United States of America."
     Couric: "We met in Central Park to talk about the future, the past and his new found stardom."
     Couric, all smiles, to Gore as two sit in Central Park: "I think in this movie at different turns you're funny, vulnerable, disarming, self-effacing and someone said after watching it, quote, 'if only he was like this before maybe things would've turned out differently in 2000.'"
     Gore: "Well I benefit from low-expectations. But I've been through a lot since then and the old cliché is what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. And you know I often joke when I start speeches now by saying put yourself in my position. I flew on Air Force 2 for eight years and now I have to take off my shoes to get on an airplane. But I sometimes do say to the people patting me down. 'I say look I was mad after the election but I wasn't that mad.'" (Couric chuckles)
     Couric narrated: "But he's plenty mad about global warming and he painstakingly lays out the evidence in a movie and a book saying that the phenomenon has already had a major impact."
     Couric to Gore: "Why is it that this is what you wanted to really focus on?"
     Gore: "I think what we're facing is a planetary emergency. It's by far the most dangerous crisis our civilization has ever confronted. And it's a challenge to our moral imagination. How could we be having this kind of catastrophic effect on the, on the Earth's environment. It, it's, it's hard to imagine that we could be but we are." (Couric nods)
     Couric: "As succinctly as possible can you explain the crisis?"
     Gore: "We've quadrupled our population on the Earth in the last 100 years and our technologies are thousands of times more powerful and one consequence of that is that we're now filling up the thin layer of atmosphere that surrounds the Earth with so much pollution that it's trapping much more of the Sun's heat inside the atmosphere and heating up the planet and that messes up the weather, it causes more droughts, ironically more flooding at the same time and more powerful hurricanes. We have to rein in this very dangerous wave of pollution that we're putting up there every single day."
     Couric: "People on the other side of the debate say yes it's getting warmer but the Earth's average temperature has done this before, we may have something to do with it but it hasn't warmed that much and it's not going to have catastrophic consequences any time soon."
     Gore: "There's really not a debate. The, the debate's over. The scientific community has reached as strong a consensus as you'll ever find in science. There are a few oil companies and coal companies that spend a million dollars a year to put these pseudo-scientists out there pretending there is a debate. It's exactly the same thing that the tobacco companies did after the Surgeon General warned us about the linkage between smoking and lung disease." (Couric seen nodding again)
     Couric: "Where there is disagreement among scientists it is not if but when we may see drastic environmental changes across the globe. Al Gore says the clock is ticking."
     Gore from movie: "This is Patagonia 75 years ago and the same glacier today. This is Mt. Kilimanjaro 30 years ago and last year."
     Couric: "What do you see happening in say 15 to 20 years or even 50 years if nothing changes?"
     Gore: "Well what I think is gonna happen is that we're gonna respond to it but if we didn't respond then what you would find is desertification of the mid-continental areas in the U.S., Europe, Asia, Africa." (Couric nods)
     Gore over computer animation of Florida and San Francisco being flooded: "The melting of the polar ice cap and the beginnings of the same thing in Antarctica. Sea-level increases of 20 feet or more worldwide. Of course Florida and Louisiana and Texas are particularly vulnerable. The San Francisco Bay area, Manila. And we have seen the impact of a couple hundred thousand refugees from an environmental crisis."
     [Footage of Hurricane Katrina victims]
     Gore: "Imagine 100 million or 200 million."
     Couric over computer animation of Manhattan being flooded: "Even Manhattan would be in deep water right?"
     Gore: "Yes in fact the World Trade Center Memorial site would be underwater."
     Couric: "Some people might say, 'oh boy there's that tree-huggin' Al Gore. He's at it again.' Some people might dismiss you out of hand."
     Gore: "Ah, look I, I've been trying to tell this story for 30 years and I have a new ally in telling this story. Unfortunately Mother Nature is weighing in very powerfully and very loudly."
     [Footage of flooded New Orleans]
     Gore: "And people are listening. It's not a political issue, it's a moral issue."
     Couric: "A once defeated Al Gore is now basking in the limelight soaking up standing ovations and stellar reviews. He even showed up recently on Saturday Night Live where he played of all things, President Al Gore."
     Gore on Saturday Night Live: "In the last six years we have been able to stop global warming. No one could have predicted the negative results of this. Glaciers that once were melting are now on the attack."
     Couric: "All this, of course, has led to the inevitable question. Needless to say all this positive response led to a lot of speculation that you're gonna run for president. Let's just put it out there."
     Gore: "I don't intend to be a candidate ever again and-"
     Couric pleaded: "Never, never, never?"
     Gore: "Well look, I, I have no plans to be a candidate and no intention of being a candidate. I have said that I'm not at the stage of my life where I'm gonna say never in the rest of my life will I ever think about such a thing."
     Couric: "What does that mean?"
     Gore: "It means that I was in politics for a long time and ran for national office four times and I'm 58-years-old and that used to sound like the oldest age in the world to me now. Now I'm trying to convince myself that 58 is the new something."
     Couric: "That it's the new 38? Yeah."
     Gore: "Yeah, I love that line. I don't quite buy it but look I'm enjoying serving in other ways. I really enjoy my life now. I am involved in a kind of campaign but it's not for a candidacy. It's a campaign to change the minds of the American people about this climate crisis."
     Couric, back on the Today set: "And tomorrow we're gonna take a look at the alternative fuels that may help reduce global warming in the future and Friday what your family can do to cut down on energy consumption from sunup to sundown."

 

CNN's Schneider: Gore Could Follow Nixon's
Path Back to President

     Network Gore Promotion, Part 3 of 3. On CNN's The Situation Room on Wednesday, political analyst Bill Schneider joined the media's enthusiasm for Al Gore's return to the public spotlight as he not only promoted Gore's new global warming documentary, An Inconvenient Truth, but touted Nixon as a model for a Gore presidential run. Schneider gushed during the program's 4pm EDT hour: "The new Al Gore movie opens today. Is it a star is born or could it be a political star is reborn? Could this be Al Gore's moment?" Schneider applauded the timing of the documentary's release and claimed Truth is "not overtly partisan," before using clips from the film to slam President Bush over one of his "greatest failures" and then pointing to Richard Nixon's comeback win for the White House in 1968, Schneider suggested history could repeat in Gore's favor:
     "The film is coming out at the perfect moment. Millions of Americans are angry at President Bush and worried about energy. The film is not overtly partisan, but who can miss the visual cue here of one of Bush's greatest failures? Hurricane Katrina. Would Americans really elect a President who served eight years as Vice President, then ran for President and failed, then was out of power for eight years? Well, you know, it worked for Richard Nixon because the moment was right."

     [This item, by the MRC's Megan McCormack, was posted Wednesday afternoon on the MRC's NewsBusters blog: newsbusters.org ]

     The full transcript of Schneider's report with a complete absence of any form of criticism of the former VP:

     Wolf Blitzer: "The former Vice President, Al Gore, is launching a new campaign today. Not for President, but for his documentary on global warming. But is Al Gore sending signals he'd be open to another run for the White House after all? Let's go to our senior political analyst, Bill Schneider. Bill?"

     Bill Schneider: "Wolf, the new Al Gore movie opens today. Is it a star is born or could it be a political star is reborn? Could this be Al Gore's moment? Since 2000, the former vice president has been traveling the world, delivering more than a thousand lectures on the threat of global warming. Hollywood producers saw Gore's talk and said, this has got to be a movie."
     Lawrence Bender, producer: "We filmed him all around the world, in China, all over the country, and, giving this, this presentation, and it's truly phenomenal. It's going to, it's going to blow your mind."
     Schneider: "A lecture by Al Gore?"
     Former Vice President Al Gore: "They have made it entertaining and enjoyable and funny and really watchable."
     Schneider: "How did they do that? By doing what Hollywood does best: telling an intimate personal story, including his sister's death from lung cancer."
     Gore voice-over from An Inconvenient Truth: "It was so painful on so many levels. My father, he had grown tobacco all his life. He stopped."
     Schneider: "The filmmakers see the pictures' message as unifying."
     Davis Guggenheim, producer: "He frames it now not as a political issue, but as a moral issue, something that we all have to really think about, and, and no matter who we are."
     Schneider: "Okay, does President Bush plan to see it?"
     President George W. Bush: "Doubt it."
     Schneider: "These days some Hollywood liberals have doubts about Hillary Clinton. Is she selling out? Can she be elected? Al Gore is emerging as their dark horse."
     Bender: "He's great on all the issues. He's, he's, and he's passionate. He's funny, and he's grounded."
     Schneider: "Funny?"
     Gore, from his Saturday Night Live appearance: "Gas is down to 19 cents a gallon and the oil companies are hurting. I know that I am partly to blame by insisting that cars run on trash."
     Schneider: "Gore calls himself a recovering politician, but adds, there's a danger of a relapse."
     Gore, from interview on the Today show: "I've said that I'm not at the stage of my life where I'm going to say, 'never in the rest of my life will I ever think about such a thing.'"
     Schneider: "The film is coming out at the perfect moment. Millions of Americans are angry at President Bush and worried about energy. The film is not overtly partisan, but who can miss the visual cue here of one of Bush's greatest failures? Hurricane Katrina. Would Americans really elect a President who served eight years as Vice President, then ran for President and failed, then was out of power for eight years? Well, you know, it worked for Richard Nixon because the moment was right. Wolf?"

 

NY Times Embraces Gore's Vision of Apocalypse:
"A Necessary Film"

     As his environmental apocalypse "documentary" makes its debut in New York and Los Angeles, there's nothing "inconvenient" standing in the way of Al Gore's crusade in the New York Times. From the Cannes Film Festival, chief movie critic A.O. Scott reviewed An Inconvenient Truth for Page 1 of Wednesday's Arts page. Scott, the same critic who called left-wing "documentary"-maker Michael Moore "a credit to the republic," predictably found Al Gore's view of environmental apocalypse to be "chilling" and "necessary."

     [This item, by Clay Waters of the MRC's TimesWatch.org site, was posted Wednesday on TimesWatch.org and the NewsBusters blog. On NewsBusters: newsbusters.org
     And on TimesWatch: www.timeswatch.org ]

     Scott asserted: "'An Inconvenient Truth,' Davis Guggenheim's new documentary about the dangers of climate change, is a film that should never have been made. It is, after all, the job of political leaders and policymakers to protect against possible future calamities, to respond to the findings of science and to persuade the public that action must be taken to protect the common interest.
     "But when this does not happen -- and it is hardly a partisan statement to observe that, in the case of global warming, it hasn't -- others must take up the responsibility: filmmakers, activists, scientists, even retired politicians. That 'An Inconvenient Truth' should not have to exist is a reason to be grateful that it does."

     Scott admitted to being "chilled" by Gore's scary climate charts: "I can't think of another movie in which the display of a graph elicited gasps of horror, but when the red lines showing the increasing rates of carbon-dioxide emissions and the corresponding rise in temperatures come on screen, the effect is jolting and chilling. Photographs of receding ice fields and glaciers -- consequences of climate change that have already taken place -- are as disturbing as speculative maps of submerged coastlines. The news of increased hurricane activity and warming oceans is all the more alarming for being delivered in Mr. Gore's matter-of-fact, scholarly tone."

     Scott concluded: "'An Inconvenient Truth' is a necessary film."

     For Scott's review in full: movies2.nytimes.com

     Just as the paper's main movie critic on Wednesday embraced Al Gore's apocalyptic movie, chief book critic Michiko Kakutani on Tuesday applauded the book tie-in. The left-leaning Kakutani summarized: "...as a user-friendly introduction to global warming and a succinct summary of many of the central arguments laid out in those other volumes, 'An Inconvenient Truth' is lucid, harrowing and bluntly effective."

     After taking all of Gore's dubious data as fact, Kakutani concluded his book "could goad the public into reading more scholarly books on the subject, and it might even push awareness of global warming to a real tipping point -- and beyond."

     For Kakutani's May 23 review: movies2.nytimes.com

     For more on this story and more New York Times bias, visit TimesWatch: www.timeswatch.org

-- Brent Baker

 


 


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