top
|
1. NBC's Couric Champions "Clarion Call" of "Moderates Are Coming!" The NBC Today crew was giddy Wednesday morning about the success of "moderates" in obstructing conservatives by getting a deal to avoid eliminating the filibuster option for liberals and to expand stem cell research. Katie Couric bubbled: "A lot of people are wondering is there new, a new clarion call on Capitol Hill? 'The moderates are coming, the moderates are coming!' Right?" Matt Lauer agreed: "That's right. Is it hip to be moderate in Washington these days? Some people Say the vote in the Senate on Monday night over judicial nominees and the vote in the House last night over stem cell research signals a sea change in power." Lauer soon proposed to a smiling Tim Russert: "I'm reading words like 'sea change of power,' 'new era,' 'Woodstock,' 'kumbaya,' all those things. Is this for real? Can this last?" Russert joined the celebration, noting how "they're calling themselves 'The Mod Squad.' 14 members, seven Democrats, seven Republicans," before dissuading Lauer of his dream, describing it as "more of a truce than a permanent peace." 2. CBS Skips Poll on Opposition to Expanding Number of Stem Lines CBS on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning touted how a CBS News poll found growing majority support for embryonic stem cell research, but the Evening News and Early Show ignored how the same poll found, that on the question in play in the House, only a static 37 percent, according to the Web-posting of the poll, "support extending federal funding for stem cell research to a larger number of lines." Anchor Bob Schieffer asserted: "For sure, the public wants more research. A new CBS poll found that 58 percent of those surveyed approve using embryonic stem cells in medical research. That's up from 50 percent since just last summer." On Wednesday's Early Show, from the White House lawn, Thalia Assuras highlighted how "a new CBS News poll shows that most Americans, 58 percent, approve of using embryonic stem cells in medical research, an increase from last year. Even among Republicans, there was a jump in support from 37 percent approval last year to 50 percent today." 3. ABC Highlights Amnesty International's Attack on the U.S. On Wednesday's World News Tonight, ABC anchor Charles Gibson gave credibility to Amnesty International's attack on the U.S. by trumpeting how their "report takes aim at the United States for its treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo. Quote, 'When the most powerful country in the world thumbs its nose at human rights,' Amnesty said, 'it grants a license to others to commit abuse with impunity.'" 4. ABC's Gibson "Surprised" to Learn Iraqis Wish Zarqawi Dead Is Charles Gibson watching ABC News too much? On Wednesday's World News Tonight, after Brian Ross noted that "some Arabs" on a "popular Web site said they hoped the news was true" about the serious injury to terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, with messages such as, "Let this criminal Zarqawi go to Hell," Gibson turned to reporter Nick Watt in Baghdad and expressed shock, "I'm surprised by something in Brian's piece: The vehemence of the comments on Arab Web sites in opposition to Zarqawi, because we keep hearing that he has considerable support." Watt confirmed that "many" Iraqis "will be very glad if he does die." 5. CNN's Hemmer & O'Brien Endorse E-Mails Mocking "Culture of Life" CNN American Morning hosts Bill Hemmer and Soledad O'Brien endorsed the liberal views of e-mail writers who mocked the "culture of life" perspective, read Wednesday by Jack Cafferty, on whether embryonic stem cell research should be a priority for Congress. The comments included, "It might be a good idea if they are so concerned about protecting the sanctity of life that they focus on ending the mounting loss of life in Iraq," "This government only deals with the not yet living, like embryos, or the already dead, like Terry Schiavo" and "As the mother of a juvenile diabetic, I would love to see Congress approve embryonic stem cell research funding. However, it will not help my daughter, who has no medical insurance....Apparently the culture of life applies only to embryos." Hemmer piped in: "Excellent thoughts across-the-board." O'Brien expounded: "Yeah, a sad note from that mom. I mean, it's -- you know, and she makes a great point. All these kids, no medical insurance. That should be something else the Congress takes up." 6. Law & Order: CI Tags DeLay as Hero to White Supremacist Murderer The season finale of NBC's Law & Order: Criminal Intent, which aired Wednesday night, portrayed House Majority Leader Tom DeLay as a hero to white supremacist gun nuts suspected of murdering two judges, one of them black, and who had expressed the view that the white woman judge who was murdered was a "race traitor" who raised her family in the "Zionist enclave of Riverdale." When the ballistics on the bullet which killed the black judge showed it was fired by the same rifle which was used to kill the white judge, New York City Police Department "Detective Alexandra Eames" suggested to her fellow detectives and an Assistant District Attorney: "Maybe we should put out and APB for somebody in a Tom DeLay T-shirt." Another detective then presented evidence the shooter came from the West, prompting Eames to point out: "Home of a lot of white supremacist groups." NBC's Couric Champions "Clarion Call" of "Moderates Are Coming!" The NBC Today crew was giddy Wednesday morning about the success of "moderates" in obstructing conservatives by getting a deal to avoid eliminating the filibuster option for liberals and to expand stem cell research. Katie Couric bubbled: "A lot of people are wondering is there new, a new clarion call on Capitol Hill? 'The moderates are coming, the moderates are coming!' Right?" Matt Lauer agreed: "That's right. Is it hip to be moderate in Washington these days? Some people Say the vote in the Senate on Monday night over judicial nominees and the vote in the House last night over stem cell research signals a sea change in power." Lauer soon proposed to a smiling Tim Russert: "I'm reading words like 'sea change of power,' 'new era,' 'Woodstock,' 'kumbaya,' all those things. Is this for real? Can this last?" Russert joined the celebration, noting how "they're calling themselves 'The Mod Squad.' 14 members, seven Democrats, seven Republicans," before dissuading Lauer of his dream, describing it as "more of a truce than a permanent peace."
At the top of the May 25 Today, the MRC's Geoff Dickens observed, Lauer previewed the program as he sat beside Couric at the desk: "Presidential veto. Two words we could be hearing in the not too distant future."
Russert soon came aboard from Washington, DC, and in setting him up Lauer could hardly contain his excitement over the victories for moderates: "On Close Up this morning, are moderates ruling the day on Capitol Hill? Some are wondering if this week's stem cell and judicial deals are the sign of a new era of bipartisanship. Tim Russert is NBC's Washington bureau chief and moderator of Meet the Press. Hey, Tim, good morning to you."
CBS Skips Poll on Opposition to Expanding Number of Stem Lines CBS on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning touted how a CBS News poll found growing majority support for embryonic stem cell research, but the Evening News and Early Show ignored how the same poll found, that on the question in play in the House, only a static 37 percent, according to the Web-posting of the poll, "support extending federal funding for stem cell research to a larger number of lines." Anchor Bob Schieffer asserted: "For sure, the public wants more research. A new CBS poll found that 58 percent of those surveyed approve using embryonic stem cells in medical research. That's up from 50 percent since just last summer." On Wednesday's Early Show, from the White House lawn, Thalia Assuras highlighted how "a new CBS News poll shows that most Americans, 58 percent, approve of using embryonic stem cells in medical research, an increase from last year. Even among Republicans, there was a jump in support from 37 percent approval last year to 50 percent today." Both the May 24 CBS Evening News and May 25 Early Show displayed a graphic with the 50 percent number from August of 2004 jumping to 58 percent now favoring "embryonic stem cell research."
While that was one finding in the survey, the online posting of the poll, the MRC's Tim Graham noticed after seeing the Assuras statement caught by the MRC's Ken Shepherd, also relayed a more on point finding directly related to the topic being decided in the House:
For the online posting of the poll results: www.cbsnews.com
ABC Highlights Amnesty International's Attack on the U.S. On Wednesday's World News Tonight, ABC anchor Charles Gibson gave credibility to Amnesty International's attack on the U.S. by trumpeting how their "report takes aim at the United States for its treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo. Quote, 'When the most powerful country in the world thumbs its nose at human rights,' Amnesty said, 'it grants a license to others to commit abuse with impunity.'"
Gibson's full item on the report which, the MRC's Brad Wilmouth noticed, he made some time for on the May 25 World News Tonight:
ABC's Gibson "Surprised" to Learn Iraqis Wish Zarqawi Dead Is Charles Gibson watching ABC News too much? On Wednesday's World News Tonight, after Brian Ross noted that "some Arabs" on a "popular Web site said they hoped the news was true" about the serious injury to terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, with messages such as, "Let this criminal Zarqawi go to Hell," Gibson turned to reporter Nick Watt in Baghdad and expressed shock, "I'm surprised by something in Brian's piece: The vehemence of the comments on Arab Web sites in opposition to Zarqawi, because we keep hearing that he has considerable support." Watt confirmed that "many" Iraqis "will be very glad if he does die."
In the lead story on the may 25 World News Tonight, Brian Ross reported, over video of a computer screen: "Some Arabs on this popular Web site said they hoped the news was true. 'Let this criminal Zarqawi go to Hell,' wrote one. 'God curse him alive or dead to Hell,' wrote another.'"
Following Ross, Gibson went to Nick Watt in Baghdad: "Nick, I'm surprised by something in Brian's piece. The vehemence of the comments on Arab Web sites in opposition to Zarqawi because we keep hearing that he has considerable support."
CNN's Hemmer & O'Brien Endorse E-Mails Mocking "Culture of Life" CNN American Morning hosts Bill Hemmer and Soledad O'Brien endorsed the liberal views of e-mail writers who mocked the "culture of life" perspective, read Wednesday by Jack Cafferty, on whether embryonic stem cell research should be a priority for Congress. The comments included, "It might be a good idea if they are so concerned about protecting the sanctity of life that they focus on ending the mounting loss of life in Iraq," "This government only deals with the not yet living, like embryos, or the already dead, like Terry Schiavo" and "As the mother of a juvenile diabetic, I would love to see Congress approve embryonic stem cell research funding. However, it will not help my daughter, who has no medical insurance....Apparently the culture of life applies only to embryos." Hemmer piped in: "Excellent thoughts across-the-board." O'Brien expounded: "Yeah, a sad note from that mom. I mean, it's -- you know, and she makes a great point. All these kids, no medical insurance. That should be something else the Congress takes up." Hemmer then added: "There was an excellent report on another network, on another network, that talked about the leading scientist in the U.S., from San Francisco, leaving this country in 2001 to go do his research in Cambridge, in England, because he felt that he could get much more done there than he could here."
That other network would be CBS which, the May 25 CyberAlert recounted, on Tuesday's CBS Evening News went to Elizabeth Kaledin for a piece on how the U.S. is falling behind the world. Kaledin relayed: "Roger Pedersen is what's known as a 'stem cell refugee,' one of hundreds of top American scientists who have left this country to work overseas where embryonic stem cell research is advancing free of politics." Without government funding, Kaledin contented, scientists "admit" that "the race for cures will be hard to win." When Schieffer dared to ask "why can't you use private funding?", Kaledin lamented that "if a private company makes a big breakthrough" they "can charge the public whatever amount of money they want for those health benefits." She insisted that "it's much better to have these breakthroughs in the public domain, and then the government can assure that all Americans will have access to them." For more, and to hear an MP3 audio clip of Kaledin: www.mediaresearch.org
Cafferty read some e-mails: "Rick in New York writes: ‘The politicians should leave science to the scientists. It might be a good idea if they are so concerned about protecting the sanctity of life that they focus on ending the mounting loss of life in Iraq.'
Law & Order: CI Tags DeLay as Hero to White Supremacist Murderer The season finale of NBC's Law & Order: Criminal Intent, which aired Wednesday night, portrayed House Majority Leader Tom DeLay as a hero to white supremacist gun nuts suspected of murdering two judges, one of them black, and who had expressed the view that the white woman judge who was murdered was a "race traitor" who raised her family in the "Zionist enclave of Riverdale." When the ballistics on the bullet which killed the black judge showed it was fired by the same rifle which was used to kill the white judge, New York City Police Department "Detective Alexandra Eames" suggested to her fellow detectives and an Assistant District Attorney: "Maybe we should put out and APB for somebody in a Tom DeLay T-shirt." Another detective then presented evidence the shooter came from the West, prompting Eames to point out: "Home of a lot of white supremacist groups." In the end, it turned out that the detectives of the "Major Case Squad" of the NYPD portrayed in the NBC drama, which usually airs on Sunday night, were off-base. They determined that the murderer was really not any white supremacist with a big gun collection, but a man angry at the judges over child custody rulings. As the show, aired at 10pm EDT/PDT, 9pm CDT/MDT, opened a white supremacist (played by the same actor who was the commanding Marine General on this season's JAG) threatened a judge during a court hearing on illegal possession of guns charges against him and soon after "Judge Barton" and her son are murdered in their home. The detectives go to talk to the man and he denounces Barton as a "race traitor" who raised her family in the "Zionist enclave of Riverdale." Soon, a black judge, "Thibodeaux," is shot dead while paying handball at an outdoor park and "Detective Robert Goren," played by Vincent D'Onofrio, notices some numbers by the shooter's location which tell how to adjust the rifle's aim to compensate for wind conditions.
Then, jumping to the next scene in the police station, about 20 minutes into the episode, Assistant District Attorney "Ron Carver" walks down a hallway talking to Police "Captain James Deakins" and they meet up with Goren and Eames by their desks:
The plot for the episode, as summarized on NBC's Web site: NBC's page for Law & Order: Criminal Intent, created and produced by Dick Wolf: www.nbc.com NBC's list of bios for the show surprisingly does not offer anything on co-star Kathryn Erbe or her "Alexandra Eames" character, but the link above does show a picture of her. For her Internet Movie Database page, which lacks a photo, go to: www.imdb.com The posted version of this CyberAlert item will include a still shot of Erbe/Eames from the moment on Wednesday's show when she took her shot at Tom DeLay. Plus, as part of our new "Hear the Bias" feature, we'll be posting a downloadable MP3 audio clip of the remark.
-- Brent Baker
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts |
|