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1. NBC Displays Agenda, Leads with Case for Closing Guantanamo Based upon President Bush's comment on Wednesday about Guantanamo -- "Well, you know, we're exploring all alternatives as to how best to do the main objective, which is to protect America" -- on Thursday night NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams displayed a little wishful thinking as he led with how "President Bush says it may be time to shut down the camp where hundreds of prisoners have been held in the war on terror." Jim Miklaszewski asserted that Guantanamo has "become a symbol of prisoner abuse. And the Bush administration is under increasing political pressure to shut it down. Democratic Senator Joe Biden fears the prison camp has become a powerful recruiting tool for terrorists." Miklaszewski soon highlighted a day-old quote from the media's favorite ex-President who thinks Guantanamo should be closed: "Former President Jimmy Carter says Guantanamo has dealt a serious blow to America's reputation as a champion of human rights." Miklaszewski concluded with how "critics" contend "the solution" is to "close Guantanamo and grant the detainees their day in court." 2. Schieffer Again Compares Guantanamo with North Vietnamese Prisons CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer reiterated Thursday morning, on MSNBC's Imus in the Morning, that he thinks Guantanamo should be closed, comparing it with how the North Vietnamese treated U.S. POWs. Schieffer asserted that the A&E film about John McCain's suffering in a North Vietnamese prison "made me rethink this whole thing about how we treat these prisoners in Guantanamo. And people keep making this point, this is so bad for us in the Arab world, this is giving us such a bad name. My problem with it is what's it doing to us? Do we want our kids to think we're that kind of people, that we participate in things like this? And if you see this film that John McCain, about John McCain and what he went through, it's putting it in reverse." 3. ABC: North Koreans Hate Americans, Offer Great Music/Art for Kids North Koreans are isolated from outside information and fed a steady diet of anti-American propaganda, but that apparently doesn't make the anti-American comments from regime operatives, or citizens with minders standing nearby, unnewsworthy to ABC. "There are large gaps in what the world knows about the North Korean leader and his people," World News Tonight anchor Elizabeth Vargas noted before asserting that "many North Koreans, it seems, have strong opinions about Americans." From Pyongyang, Bob Woodruff went aboard the captured USS Pueblo and relayed how the "officer who gave us a tour today said the ship's an example of American crimes and another reason Koreans don't like Americans." The uniformed woman declared: "They invaded to our territory, and they supplied information, so all Koreans were angry." Woodruff traveled to a collective farm where he found an 11-year-old girl who said of Americans: "They killed Korean people." Finally, Woodruff went to the "Children's Palace" where "5,000 North Korean kids are trained after school in music, art and sports." The video showed healthy kids in colorful uniforms paying instruments, painting and dancing. 4. Three National Journalists Deny Liberal Bias or Proclaim Centrism In the past day or so three national journalists have denied liberal bias or claimed they are really centrists. Asked by the Houston Chronicle if he's "liberal or conservative?", MSNBC's Keith Olbermann admitted that "a lot of my personal world view is unmistakably sympathetic to things in a liberal play book," but he insisted "my point of view is about delivering information and context. It has nothing to do with a political point of view." Newsweek's Jonathan Alter, recalling a conversation with Roger Ailes about joining FNC, related on Huffington Post that "I never pursued it after it was clear he just wanted me on his air as a liberal punching bag. When I told him I was a centrist on many issues and didn't care to be announced as a liberal every time I appeared (his terms of employment), our discussions ended." CBS's Bob Schieffer, on Imus in the Morning on Thursday, conceded "there may be one or two people in journalism" with a political agenda, "but for the most part, most reporters are just trying to find out what happened." NBC Displays Agenda, Leads with Case for Closing Guantanamo Based upon President Bush's comment on Wednesday about Guantanamo -- "Well, you know, we're exploring all alternatives as to how best to do the main objective, which is to protect America" -- on Thursday night NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams displayed a little wishful thinking as he led with how "President Bush says it may be time to shut down the camp where hundreds of prisoners have been held in the war on terror." Jim Miklaszewski asserted that Guantanamo has "become a symbol of prisoner abuse. And the Bush administration is under increasing political pressure to shut it down. Democratic Senator Joe Biden fears the prison camp has become a powerful recruiting tool for terrorists." Miklaszewski soon highlighted a day-old quote from the media's favorite ex-President who thinks Guantanamo should be closed: "Former President Jimmy Carter says Guantanamo has dealt a serious blow to America's reputation as a champion of human rights." Miklaszewski concluded with how "critics" contend "the solution" is to "close Guantanamo and grant the detainees their day in court." NBC was on its own with its lead story choice and neither ABC's World News Tonight, which led with Alan Greenspan's warning about a housing bubble, or the CBS Evening News, which naturally began with Hurricane Arlene, cobbled together day-old quotes to make a case for closing Guantanamo. Williams teased the June 9 NBC Nightly News: "Guantanamo Bay: President Bush says it may be time to shut down the camp where hundreds of prisoners have been held in the war on terror. What happens now?" Williams led, over video of the "Camp Delta" sign: "Good evening. Some find it strange in this day and age that as an outgrowth of the Spanish-American War, the U.S. still owns a huge chunk of otherwise communist Cuba just 90 miles south of Florida. On that property is the U.S. Naval Base Guantanamo Bay, and part of that is a prison housing al-Qaeda prisoners. The prison has become symbolic, and it's considered a problem for the U.S. Very few know what goes on inside the place they call Gitmo. There have been allegations of torture and abuse of the holy Koran, and prisoners who have been there for years face an unclear future. Tonight there is real talk now of closing it, including indications from the Commander-in-Chief. And we begin with NBC's Jim Miklaszewski."
Miklaszewski began, as taken down by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth: "Opened in January 2002 to hold al-Qaeda and Taliban prisoners from the war in Afghanistan, Guantanamo has since become a symbol of prisoner abuse. And the Bush administration is under increasing political pressure to shut it down. Democratic Senator Joe Biden fears the prison camp has become a powerful recruiting tool for terrorists." NBC next went to Pete Williams for a look at the legal plight of the detainees.
Schieffer Again Compares Guantanamo with North Vietnamese Prisons CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer reiterated Thursday morning, on MSNBC's Imus in the Morning, that he thinks Guantanamo should be closed, comparing it with how the North Vietnamese treated U.S. POWs. Schieffer asserted that the A&E film about John McCain's suffering in a North Vietnamese prison "made me rethink this whole thing about how we treat these prisoners in Guantanamo. And people keep making this point, this is so bad for us in the Arab world, this is giving us such a bad name. My problem with it is what's it doing to us? Do we want our kids to think we're that kind of people, that we participate in things like this? And if you see this film that John McCain, about John McCain and what he went through, it's putting it in reverse."
Schieffer made the same claims on the May 29 Face the Nation, as recounted in the May 31 CyberAlert: For more, and an MP3 audio clip of Schieffer: www.mrc.org
The MRC's Jessica Barnes caught how Don Imus asked Schieffer, in the 7:20am EDT half hour on the June 9 program: Imus: "Apparently the President told Neil Cavuto on Fox yesterday that he didn't reject out of hand closing Guantanamo, that Tom Friedman and Sen. Joe Biden and others have -- well, Biden didn't suggest they close it, but they get it straightened out down there. But that's kind of interesting, isn't it?"
ABC: North Koreans Hate Americans, Offer Great Music/Art for Kids North Koreans are isolated from outside information and fed a steady diet of anti-American propaganda, but that apparently doesn't make the anti-American comments from regime operatives, or citizens with minders standing nearby, unnewsworthy to ABC. "There are large gaps in what the world knows about the North Korean leader and his people," World News Tonight anchor Elizabeth Vargas noted before asserting that "many North Koreans, it seems, have strong opinions about Americans." From Pyongyang, Bob Woodruff went aboard the captured USS Pueblo and relayed how the "officer who gave us a tour today said the ship's an example of American crimes and another reason Koreans don't like Americans." The uniformed woman declared: "They invaded to our territory, and they supplied information, so all Koreans were angry." Woodruff traveled to a collective farm where found an 11-year-old girl who said of Americans: "They killed Korean people." Finally, Woodruff went to the "Children's Palace" where "5,000 North Korean kids are trained after school in music, art and sports." The video showed healthy kids in colorful uniforms paying instruments, painting and dancing. All week, World News Tonight, and on some mornings GMA too, have been carrying Woodruff's "exclusive" reports from inside North Korea. An earlier segment showed a nearly empty capital city, since many were shipped out to work in the fields, with traffic lights turned off and no cars, yet still people at each intersection to direct the non-existent traffic.
World News Tonight anchor Elizabeth Vargas set up the June 9 offering: "We have another exclusive report tonight from the most secretive nation in the world: North Korea. Access to the country is incredibly hard to come by. There are large gaps in what the world knows about the North Korean leader and his people. But many North Koreans, it seems, have strong opinions about Americans. ABC's Bob Woodruff reports again from North Korea." For the online version of Woodruff's story: abcnews.go.com
Three National Journalists Deny Liberal Bias or Proclaim Centrism In the past day or so three national journalists have denied liberal bias or claimed they are really centrists. Asked by the Houston Chronicle if he's "liberal or conservative?", MSNBC's Keith Olbermann admitted that "a lot of my personal world view is unmistakably sympathetic to things in a liberal play book," but he insisted "my point of view is about delivering information and context. It has nothing to do with a political point of view." Newsweek's Jonathan Alter, recalling a conversation with Roger Ailes about joining FNC, related on Huffington Post that "I never pursued it after it was clear he just wanted me on his air as a liberal punching bag. When I told him I was a centrist on many issues and didn't care to be announced as a liberal every time I appeared (his terms of employment), our discussions ended." CBS's Bob Schieffer, on Imus in the Morning on Thursday, conceded "there may be one or two people in journalism" with a political agenda, "but for the most part, most reporters are just trying to find out what happened." -- MSNBC's Keith Olbermann: Romenesko (www.poynter.org on Thursday highlighted a glowing June 9 review, in the Houston Chronicle, of Olbermann's Countdown. Mike McDaniel advised readers: "May I direct you to Countdown With Keith Olbermann, an hour-long MSNBC show that rivals Jon Stewart's Daily Show in entertainment value while also serving up smart takes on the news of the day. Heck, some days it even makes news."
Near the end of his column, McDaniel asked: "Is he liberal or conservative?" He passed along Olbermann's response: "'A lot of my personal world view is unmistakably sympathetic to things in a liberal play book,' he said, 'but honest to God, I have been called a reactionary by some on the far left, a liberal by some on the far right and I'm insulted by both terms. My point of view is about delivering information and context. It has nothing to do with a political point of view.'"
For McDaniel's review in full: www.chron.com
I got a little insight today into how the bullies at Fox News play the game. In this week's Newsweek, I wrote a column under the headline "If Watergate Happened Now." The satirical conceit was that I was writing a column looking back at the successful completion of Nixon's second term. In a light vein, I sideswiped lots of people in today's media culture by way of explaining why the scandal never came out and Nixon survived in office. At one point, I wrote: "Those of us who hoped it would end differently knew we were in trouble when former Nixon media adviser Roger Ailes banned the word 'Watergate' from Fox's coverage and went with the logo 'Assault on the Presidency' instead." Well, it turns out Mr.-Dish-It-Out apparently can't take it. Today I heard that his stooges were out peddling a story to the press that I was guilty of a conflict-of-interest and should have disclosed in my column that I twice unsuccessfully sought employment at Fox News and now do part-time work under contract to NBC News and MSNBC. The facts: Five years ago, I once had a conversation with Ailes in his office about going to Fox but I never pursued it after it was clear he just wanted me on his air as a liberal punching bag. When I told him I was a centrist on many issues and didn't care to be announced as a liberal every time I appeared (his terms of employment), our discussions ended.... END of Excerpt For Alter's posting in full: www.huffingtonpost.com
As for Alter's centrism, the June 7 CyberAlert recounted: Declaring that he's "really ticked off these days about the stem cell research debate," Newsweek's Jonathan Alter, a cancer survivor, admitted on Monday's Imus in the Morning that because of that "personal thing...I don't have a lot of neutrality on it." Indeed, in last week's Newsweek he argued that while "most Americans still don't know" all the "details" about how opponents of federal funding of embryonic stem cell research are distorting the facts, "they're beginning to understand that religious extremists are hijacking the political system and robbing us of our essential national character -- faith in the future." See: www.mediaresearch.org
-- Brent Baker
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