New Moyers PBS Show; Media-Generated Bush "Pakis" Hype; More Engberg Bias; Al Michaels Hit on
      Begala; ABC: President’s Ranch in Scotland
      
      1) While even MSNBC is hiring a conservative host, PBS
      blithefully continues to program for liberals. Next week PBS will debut a
      new weekly prime time show hosted by Bill Moyers.
      2) The New York Times claimed on Tuesday that President
      Bush "raised some eyebrows by using the term ‘Pakis,’" which
      is "considered an ethnic slur in Britain." But Reuters
      inadvertently divulged it was a controversy self-generated by the
      Washington press corps which kept calling the Pakistani embassy for
      reaction.
      3) Media Reality Check. "Good Riddance to Two-Faced
      Reality Checks: Hailed As ‘Great Journalist’ by Dan Rather, Eric
      Engberg Was Poster Boy for CBS’s Worst Liberal Bias." Quotes that
      weren’t in Monday’s CyberAlert, plus links to fuller recitations of
      Engberg’s bias.
      4) During ABC’s Monday Night Football, Al Micheals
      awarded "a lifetime achievement award" to Clintonista Paul
      Begala for, as Dennis Miller suggested, "the biggest fake of the
      year, Paul Begala's last smile."
      5) Peter Jennings set up a clip last week: "President
      Clinton, of course, is on his ranch in Scotland." Actually, President
      Bush was in a restaurant in Crawford, Texas.
      6) "News media mainstream: clueless?" Another
      column about the MRC’s "Best Notable Quotables of 2001: The
      Fourteenth Annual Awards for the Year’s Worst Reporting." Plus, a
      new page with reprints of other columns and editorials on the awards
      quotes.
      7) Letterman’s "Top Ten Signs Your Neighbor Is
      Hiding Mullah Omar."
      
      
      Correction: The
      January 8 CyberAlert cited an October 5, 1992 story by Eric Engberg about
      Bush campaign ties to the Willie Horton ad. The story actually ran nine
      days later, on October 14, 1992.
      
      1
      
      
In
      reaction to FNC giving a prime time hour to liberal CNN veteran Greta van
      Susteren, MSNBC has hired the conservative Alan Keyes to go up against her
      at 10pm EST. (He’ll start January 21, she in early February.) FNC has
      been quite successful with programming which appeals to conservatives and
      CNN’s chief, Walter Isaacson, last year tried to reach out to learn why
      conservatives distrust CNN.
           But one network continues to ignore
      conservatives as it offers programming only a liberal could like: PBS,
      which will soon launch a new weekly Friday night prime time news show
      hosted by far-left polemicist Bill Moyers.
           At the press tour in Pasadena for TV
      reporters, PBS also announced another Moyers-hosted special set for April
      on PCBs in the Hudson River. Moyers betrayed his personal agenda in
      damning former GE Chairman Jack Welch with faint praise, calling him a
      "dynamic apologist for" GE.
           The new hour-long Moyers show, titled NOW, in
      all caps, will debut on Friday, January 18 on PBS at 9pm EST/PST following
      Wall Street Week. "We believe this will be the best night of public
      affairs television," PBS President and CEO Pat Mitchell gushed to USA
      Today’s Bill Keveney.
           Keveney’s January 8 story described the
      show: "NOW will make use of the resources of NPR News, reflecting the
      public TV system's effort to increase collaboration with public radio. The
      hour-long program will generally consist of a 12- to 15-minute documentary
      report, a one-on-one interview, NPR contributions and news analysis."
           Keveney relayed: "Moyers, however, said
      the analysis would steer clear of the usual-suspect punditry favored by
      talk shows that have ‘made rhetoric more important than argument.’ He
      said he will seek out analysts not often seen on TV, as he did with a
      program on Sept. 11 that featured a minister and a professor who has
      studied the notion of evil."
           Previewing an upcoming special, Keveney noted:
      "In April, the award-winning documentarian will take a literal look
      downstream in America's First River: Bill Moyers on the Hudson, a
      two-night look at the historical, cultural and environmental effects and
      influence of the river.
      
     "Moyers
      interviewed former General Electric CEO Jack Welch for the documentary,
      which looks at PCB pollution of the river and what responsibility GE has
      for cleaning it up. Moyers described the highly regarded executive as ‘a
      vigorous, dynamic apologist for’ GE."
           For Keveney’s story in full, go to:
      http://www.usatoday.com/life/enter/tv/2002/2002-01-08-pbs.htm
       
      2
      
The New
      York Times claimed on Tuesday that President Bush "raised some
      eyebrows by using the term ‘Pakis.’ It is considered an ethnic slur in
      Britain, which has a large Pakistani immigrant population." But as
      James Taranto noted in his "Best of the Web" column, a Reuters
      dispatch inadvertently divulged it was a controversy self-generated by the
      Washington press corps.
           An excerpt from Taranto’s January 8 column:
      Yesterday at the White House, President Bush discussed the
      Indian-Pakistani conflict: "I don't believe the situation is defused
      yet," he said, "but I do believe there is a way to do so, and we
      are working hard to convince both the Indians and the Pakis there's a way
      to deal with their problems without going to war."
      The New York Times reports that "Mr. Bush raised some eyebrows by
      using the term ‘Pakis.’ It is considered an ethnic slur in Britain,
      which has a large Pakistani immigrant population."
      Well, whose eyebrows exactly did Bush raise? The Times doesn't say. A
      clue, however, can be found in this Reuters dispatch:
      "Asad Hayauddin, spokesman at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington,
      said he did not consider what Bush said to be an insult. ‘I would give
      him the benefit of the doubt and say it was said in passing. In all
      fairness, I would say it's not a racial slur,’ he said.
      "He did, however, receive a number of phone calls from reporters
      seeking the embassy's reaction."
      The whole "controversy," in other words, seems to have been
      an invention of the White House press corps.
           END of Excerpt
           To read the New York Times story by Todd
      Purdum, also known as "Mr. Dee Dee Myers," go to: http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/08/international/asia/08INDI.html
           For Taranto’s daily "Best of the
      Web" columns:
 http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/
       
      3
      
A
      special Web-links enhanced version of a Media Reality Check by the MRC’s
      Rich Noyes, which was distributed by fax on Tuesday afternoon. The title,
      "Good Riddance to Two-Faced Reality Checks: Hailed As ‘Great
      Journalist’ by Dan Rather, Eric Engberg Was Poster Boy for CBS’s Worst
      Liberal Bias."
           Virtually all of this will be fresh material
      to CyberAlert readers since the Media Reality Check cites historical
      examples of Engberg’s bias, all but one of which did not appear in the
      January 7 or 8 CyberAlerts.
           To access the Adobe Acrobat PDF version, go
      to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/realitycheck/2002/pdf/fax0108.pdf
           Below is the text of the Media Reality Check,
      enhanced with links to previous CyberAlerts and MediaWatch articles which
      provide lengthier quotations of Engberg’s reporting. The January 8
      CyberAlert:
      CBS News has been championing its retiring "Reality Check"
      correspondent Eric Engberg as the very model of fair reporting. "We
      will miss his professionalism, his humor, his style, his friendship and
      his great journalism," mourned anchor Dan Rather on Friday’s
      Evening News. "Engberg’s reporting and his approach to journalism
      reflect many of the virtues of broadcast journalism at its best,"
      gushed CBSNews.com editor Dick Meyer, Engberg’s former producer, in an
      online tribute.
           [For excerpts from Myer’s CBSNews.com
      article:
      http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20020108.asp#2]
      As Engberg would scream in his regular Evening News hit jobs on
      conservatives, "Time out!" The idea that such a thoroughly
      biased reporter symbolized "journalistic virtues" is a cruel
      joke on objective scribes everywhere. It was one of Engberg’s
      outrageously slanted stories -- a mid-campaign slam on conservative Steve
      Forbes’s flat tax plan in ‘96 -- that so disgusted his CBS colleague
      Bernard Goldberg that he cited it in a Wall Street Journal op-ed as proof
      that the argument about "liberal bias is so blatantly true that
      it’s hardly worth discussing anymore."
           [For a transcript and RealPlayer video of
      Engberg’s flat tax story:
      http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2001/cyb20011205.asp#7]
           [For a summary of Goldberg’s 1996 Wall
      Street Journal op-ed on the Engberg piece, go to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/mediawatch/1996/mw19960201p1.asp]
      But it’s more than just one skewed story which makes Engberg the
      poster boy for liberal bias. Engberg used his CBS pulpit to rant against
      perceived conservative misbehavior while condemning critics of unethical
      liberals:
      -- Before Bill Clinton, there was nothing worse than a President who
      lied. On the May 4, 1989 CBS Evening News, at the end of the criminal
      trials stemming from the Iran-contra scandal, Engberg lectured that
      "secrecy leads to deception...Deception leads to lies. Lies tear
      apart the rule of law...Could it happen again? Scholars say yes, until
      Presidents accept the need to compromise with Congress."
      -- Covering Clinton’s scandals, there was nothing more frightening
      than a subpoena. "It is now the one invitation in Washington no one
      wants, a call to testify before Ken Starr’s grand jury. It left some
      near emotional collapse, others raging about police state tactics,"
      he darkly declared on the March 2, 1998 Evening News. "Nearly all of
      the witnesses, it is safe to say, felt the ominous chill that comes with
      the arrival of a grand jury subpoena."
           [For more on this 1998 story, go to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/1998/cyb19980303.asp]
      -- According to his friend Dick Meyer, Engberg was "obsessed"
      with a 1988 TV ad about Michael Dukakis’s weekend furlough for murderer
      Willie Horton, who then went on a crime spree. Four years later -- and
      less than a month before the next election -- on the Oct. 14, 1992 Evening
      News, Engberg resurrected his grudge against the ad he claimed
      "raised questions about racism and dirty politics that still haunt
      the electoral process like a ghost," adding that, "federal laws
      may have been violated" if the GOP had coordinated with the ad’s
      independent producer.
           [For more on this 1992 diatribe, go to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/mediawatch/1992/mw19921101jca.asp]
      -- When it came to Clinton’s dirty campaign dealings -- including
      proof the President personally reviewed scripts for supposedly
      "independent" ads -- Engberg chose to beat up on the
      investigators. He scolded the Senate’s oversight committee, declaring on
      the October 9, 1997 Evening News that "when it comes to sniffing out
      the breakdown of a system created to police money in politics, this
      committee...could easily start by setting up a great big mirror."
           [For more on this 1997 report, go to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/1997/cyb19971010.asp#1]
      -- After the bipartisan Cox commission determined in 1999 that the
      Chinese had been stealing nuclear secrets right out from under Clinton’s
      nose, Engberg seemed to suggest on the May 27 Evening News that a few
      H-bombs were nothing to get excited about. "There is a bottom
      line," he snorted. "Unlike many of the things in the Cox report,
      there’s no argument here. Number of strategic nuclear weapons? U.S.,
      6,000; China, less than two dozen."
           [For more on this 1999 story, refer to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/1999/cyb19990528.asp#3
      
     And: http://archive.mrc.org/realitycheck/1999/19990602.asp]
      Now that Engberg’s finally gone, CBS viewers will be spared such
      tendentious factoids. The airwaves feel less biased already.
           END Reprint of Media Reality Check
       
      4
      
Another
      hint of conservatism from Al Michaels of ABC Sports. During the last
      Monday Night Football game of the season, Micheals awarded "a
      lifetime achievement award" to Clintonista Paul Begala for, as
      Michael’s colleague in the booth, Dennis Miller, suggested, "the
      biggest fake of the year, Paul Begala's last smile."
           This is the third pro-conservative or
      anti-liberal political comment from Michaels which the MRC has caught in
      the last two NFL seasons. In November of 2000 Michaels let slip that he
      considered Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris to be an
      "American heroine." The week before, Miller had recommended
      Peggy Noonan for President, leading Michaels to concede her writing gives
      him "goose bumps."
           For details about his Harris comment, plus a
      RealPlayer video clip of it, go to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2000/cyb20001129.asp#8
           For more about the Noonan exchange, go to:
      http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2000/cyb20001124.asp#8
           This past Monday, January 7, the MRC’s Tim
      Jones, who inexplicably decided to watch Monday Night Football instead of
      a 43rd showing of MSNBC Investigates, noticed the hit on Begala. MRC
      analyst Jessica Anderson tracked down the exchange which took place just
      after the beginning of the second quarter of the Minnesota Vikings vs.
      Baltimore Ravens game in Baltimore. Over matching video clips of pass
      fakes from the season, this exchange occurred:
      
     Michaels:
      "Last game of the year. Denny, it's a good time to do some, I think,
      awards. It's been a wild year, some crazy stuff's happened this
      season."
           Miller:
      "Yeah, we got the Oscar nods coming up, Al. We have our nominees for
      the best fake. Let's watch Kordell [Stewart, Pittsburgh Steelers] here.
      He's really good at it, I thought; Kordell sold that. Kurt Warner [St.
      Louis Rams], not quite as good, but I think he's a Christian and he's
      afraid to fake people like that. And then we have the [Miami] Dolphins.
      Lamar Smith, one of the few guys in the league who can actually receive a
      fake like that and still get less than three yards in the carry. But the
      biggest fake of the year, Paul Begala's last smile, as always is the case,
      Al."
           Over a picture
      on screen of a smiling Begala, Michaels endorsed Miller’s sentiment:
      "Unanimous, a lifetime achievement award, I think."
           Miller:
      "Maybe Paul's here tonight. We're down in his neck of the
      woods."
           Michaels:
      "There's a television camera -- he might be here."
       
      5
      
President
      Clinton’s ranch in Scotland? Catching up on an item from last week, the
      MRC’s Brad Wilmouth located an incident several CyberAlert readers have
      e-mailed me about: Peter Jennings setting up a clip of President George W.
      Bush in Crawford as if it were a clip of President Clinton in Scotland.
           About 18 minutes into the special ABC 2002
      broadcast on December 31, at about 6:48pm EST when ABC was providing a
      mini World News Tonight-like summary of the day’s news, Jennings
      announced:
      
     "President
      Clinton, of course, is on his ranch in Scotland, and he talked a little
      bit about the situation in Afghanistan today, and here’s an excerpt from
      what he had to say."
           ABC then played video of George W. Bush
      shaking hands in a restaurant in Crawford, Texas with patrons in a line
      waiting to place or pick up an order. Viewers heard Bush saying such
      things as, "happy new year to you all" and "welcome to
      Crawford."
           Jennings, apparently correcting for how ABC
      failed to show the correct clip of Bush commenting on Afghanistan, but
      without correcting his own goof, soon broke in: "He basically said
      what he’s said many times before, is that they’re not sure exactly
      where Osama bin Laden is but they’re going to get him and they don’t
      know exactly where Mohammad Omar is, but they’re going to try to get him
      as well. The President still at his ranch. He’ll return to Washington,
      of course, after the new year."
           After he makes the trans-Atlantic flight from
      Clinton’s ranch in Scotland?
           [Web Update: On January 14 Jennings ended
      ABC's World News Tonight by acknowledging his goof:
           "Just one other thing before we go. As you
      probably know, some of us do trip over our tongues on occasion without
      even knowing about it. On New Year's Eve, on a broadcast, I referred to
      'President Clinton's ranch in Scotland.' I don't even know where that came
      from."]
       
      6
      
Another
      column about the MRC’s "Best Notable Quotables of 2001: The
      Fourteenth Annual Awards for the Year’s Worst Reporting."
 Saturday’s
      Daily Oklahoman carried a second column on the quotes by Patrick B.
      McGuigan, editorial page editor for the Oklahoma City newspaper and one of
      the 41 judges for the MRC awards issue.
           Under the headline, "News media
      mainstream: clueless?", McGuigan began his January 5 column:
      
     "For nine
      years of my life -- every January from 1993 through 2001 -- I pondered the
      gap between William Jefferson Clinton of Hope (the image manufactured for
      his 1992 paid media campaign) and Boy Clinton of Hot Springs (the lad from
      the most ‘wide open’ town west of the Mississippi and east of Reno).
      With Clinton's presidency now a fading nightmare, visits to ‘Hope and
      Hot Springs’ end.
           "I retain
      annual visits to rarefied climes of liberal bias through the Media
      Research Center's ‘Notable Quotables’ -- a competition ‘honoring’
      outrageous examples of mainstream news and commentary...."
           To read the rest of the column, go to:
      http://www.newsok.com/cgi-bin/show_article?ID=805734&pic=none&TP=getopinion
           For reprints of other columns and editorials
      about the awards quotes, including pieces in Investor’s Business Daily,
      the Denver Rocky Mountain News, Columbus Dispatch and Chattanooga Times
      Free Press, go to a new page set up by the MRC’s Mez Djouadi:
      http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/nq/2001/best2001/nq2001press.html
       
      7
      
From the
      January 8 Late Show with David Letterman, the
 "Top
      Ten Signs Your Neighbor Is Hiding Mullah Omar." Copyright 2002 by
      Worldwide Pants, Inc.
      10. In his garage are a 1997 Mazda Protege and a camel
      9. His last name is Schmidt -- the mailbox reads "Schmidt/Omar"
      8. You turn on CNN and see your house in green night vision
      7. Has bumper sticker "Al Qaeda members do it in caves"
      6. The place reeks of goat
      5. Comes over and asks to borrow a cup of sand
      4. Driveway sign reads "Don't even think about parking here" in
      Pashtu
      3. Claims the bearded, turbaned guy you saw is a Swedish exchange student
      2. He declared a Jihad against crabgrass
      1. His kitty is wearing a burqa
           > One more, nearly last, plug for the
      MRC’s "Dishonor Awards" dinner in Washington, DC on Thursday,
      January 17. For tickets, at $150 per seat, call Sue Engle at (703)
      683-9733 ext. 163. Online:
      https://secure.mediaresearch.org/Donation/Order/MediaResearch25-27/mck-cgi
      /CyberTickets.asp