top
|
1. To Totenberg's Indignation, Thomas Accuses NPR of Liberal Bias Your news outlet is liberal, no your's is. Newsweek Assistant Managing Editor Evan Thomas wondered, on Inside Washington over the weekend, whether the effort in the U.S. House to reduce funding for PBS and NPR through the CPB would "make NPR a little less liberal?" An indignant Nina Totenberg of NPR retorted: "I don't think we're liberal to begin with and I think if you would listen, Evan, you would know that." Thomas countered that "I do listen to you and you're not that liberal, but you're a little bit liberal." Totenberg insisted, "I don't think that's a fair criticism...any more than you would say that Newsweek is liberal." To which Thomas conceded: "I think Newsweek is a little liberal." 2. Olbermann Conflates Cruise & Rove, Suggests Intervention for Rove MSNBC's Countdown, which didn't touch Senator Dick Durbin's allegation until a night after his apology, but on Thursday immediately jumped on Karl Rove's criticism of how liberals reacted to the 9/11 attacks, delivered another round of invective on Friday night. Alison Stewart had filled in on Thursday for Keith Olbermann, but he was back Friday and brought aboard a psychiatrist to discuss actor Tom Cruise's attack on the profession. He snidely asked: "Any idea if Tom Cruise or Karl Rove might be hoping that they say something so outrageous about therapy that somebody who cares about them might try an intervention to force them into therapy?" Olbermann also worried: "Lastly, could Mr. Rove's references have been more damaging even than the Cruise interview because he essentially associated therapy with weakness?" Olbermann later brought aboard a 9/11 widow to denounce Rove as Olbermann castigated him for his "smugness" and ruminated: "I was living in the United States of America on 9/11 and the months of bipartisanship that followed it. Where in the heck do you suppose Karl Rove was at that time?" 3. Fox News Sunday Relays MRC Tracking of Durbin vs. Rove Coverage You Read It Here First I. For the "Stories you won't find on any other Sunday show" segment, Fox News Sunday anchor Chris Wallace recited MRC CyberAlert tracking of how the broadcast networks "jumped on" the controversy over comments by White House Deputy Chief-of-Staff Karl Rove after having a "very different reaction" to an allegation made by Democratic Senator Dick Durbin over prisoner treatment at Guantanamo. 4. McCullough Point on Deleterious Media: CyberAlert to Rumsfeld? You Read It Here First II. From Tim Russert on CNBC to Tim Russert on NBC, via Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, but all thanks to CyberAlert? On Sunday's Meet the Press, when pressed about how the war in Iraq is going badly, Rumsfeld related how historian David McCullough "the other day" said about the Revolutionary War, 'If we had covered it the way we're covering this war, we would have been in the soup, and that would have been it.' There wouldn't have been a successful revolution." McCullough made that point on the June 18 Tim Russert show on CNBC, as recounted in the June 20 CyberAlert which Washington Times "Inside Politics" columnist Greg Pierce highlighted on June 21. Then on June 23, Rumsfeld relayed the anecdote in his testimony before both the Senate and House Armed Services Committee. 5. Sarcastic Brown: "I Don't Think" Bush Will Be "In a Flight Suit" Aaron Brown's sarcastic quip of the night. Leading off his "Tomorrow's Papers Tonight" segment on Friday night, Brown noted how President Bush plans a national television address on Tuesday night from Fort Bragg in North Carolina "to talk about Iraq." Brown then added: "I don't think he'll be coming there in a flight suit this time. No 'Mission Accomplished' sign. I think this will be a more sober talk." 6. Retired General Tours Guantanamo, Tells CNN Media Portrayal Wrong Retired Major General Donald Shepperd toured the Guantanamo Bay detention facility on Friday and found that reality did not match the media's portrayal, he recounted in a phone interview from Cuba on CNN just before 3pm EDT on Friday. Shepperd asserted: "The impressions that you're getting from the media and from the various pronouncements being made by people who have not been here, in my opinion, are totally false." Shepperd contended that "what we're seeing is a modern prison system with dedicated people, interrogators and analysts that know what they are doing. And people being very, very well-treated." But when Shepperd reported that he had observed an interrogation, anchor Betty Nguyen inquired: "Kind of explain to us how that played out. And were there any instances of abuse or possible abuse?" Shepperd responded: "Absolutely not." 7. Pew Poll: View of Media's Patriotism, Bias & Fairness at New Lows A new poll commissioned by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, which was released on Sunday, found that "attitudes toward the performance of the news media are at or near their low points in Pew trends dating back to the mid-1980s. This is especially the case in opinions regarding the press's patriotism, bias, and fairness." Pew's summary of it findings detailed how "just 42 percent say news organizations generally 'stand up for America'" and 'six-in-ten see news organizations as politically biased, up from 53 percent two years ago. More than seven-in-ten (72 percent) say news organizations tend to favor one side, rather than treat all sides fairly; that is the largest number ever expressing that view." To Totenberg's Indignation, Thomas Accuses NPR of Liberal Bias Your news outlet is liberal, no your's is. Newsweek Assistant Managing Editor Evan Thomas wondered, on Inside Washington over the weekend, whether the effort in the U.S. House to reduce funding for PBS and NPR through the CPB would "make NPR a little less liberal?" An indignant Nina Totenberg of NPR retorted: "I don't think we're liberal to begin with and I think if you would listen, Evan, you would know that." Thomas countered that "I do listen to you and you're not that liberal, but you're a little bit liberal." Totenberg insisted, "I don't think that's a fair criticism...any more than you would say that Newsweek is liberal." To which Thomas conceded: "I think Newsweek is a little liberal." On Inside Washington, a weekend show carried Saturday nights at 7pm by NewsChannel 8, a Washington, DC area all-news channel owned by the ABC affiliate, and Sunday mornings at 10am by that affiliate, WJLA-TV, host Gordon Peterson raised the issue of how House Republicans in committee cut funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting but were rebuffed Thursday by the full House.
Peterson asked: "Is public broadcasting out of hot water now that the House has voted to restore the $100 million?" This isn't the first time that Thomas has recognized bias. The July 12, 2004 CyberAlert recounted: The media "wants Kerry to win" and so "they're going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and dynamic and optimistic," Evan Thomas, the Assistant Managing Editor of Newsweek, admitted on Inside Washington over the weekend. He should know. His magazine this week sports a smiling Kerry and Edwards on its cover with the yearning headline, "The Sunshine Boys?" Inside, an article carrying Thomas' byline contrasted how "Dick Cheney projects the bleakness of a Wyoming winter, while John Edwards always appears to be strolling in the Carolina sunshine." The cover story touted how Kerry and Edwards "became a buddy-buddy act, hugging and whispering like Starsky and Hutch after consuming the evidence." The July of 2004 assertion from Thomas in full: "There's one other base here: the media. Let's talk a little media bias here. The media, I think, wants Kerry to win. And I think they're going to portray Kerry and Edwards -- I'm talking about the establishment media, not Fox, but -- they're going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and dynamic and optimistic and all, there's going to be this glow about them that some, is going to be worth, collectively, the two of them, that's going to be worth maybe 15 points."
For a RealPlayer clip of Thomas: www.mediaresearch.org
Olbermann Conflates Cruise & Rove, Suggests Intervention for Rove MSNBC's Countdown, which didn't touch Senator Dick Durbin's allegation until a night after his apology, but on Thursday immediately jumped on Karl Rove's criticism of how liberals reacted to the 9/11 attacks, delivered another round of invective on Friday night. Alison Stewart had filled in on Thursday for Keith Olbermann, but he was back Friday and brought aboard a psychiatrist to discuss actor Tom Cruise's attack on the profession. He snidely asked: "Any idea if Tom Cruise or Karl Rove might be hoping that they say something so outrageous about therapy that somebody who cares about them might try an intervention to force them into therapy?" Olbermann also worried: "Lastly, could Mr. Rove's references have been more damaging even than the Cruise interview because he essentially associated therapy with weakness?" Olbermann later brought aboard a 9/11 widow to denounce Rove as Olbermann castigated him for his "smugness" and ruminated: "I was living in the United States of America on 9/11 and the months of bipartisanship that followed it. Where in the heck do you suppose Karl Rove was at that time?"
Olbermann teased at the top of the June 24 Countdown: "Karl Rove on liberals on 9/11: Day three. The latest claim, he only meant MoveOn.org. The latest defense may not have done him much good." Olbermann, the MRC's Brad Wilmouth observed, opened the show: "It was only Wednesday that presidential advisor Karl Rove had dragged psychiatry and psychology into the retroactive political name-calling about 9/11 when he said that after the attacks, liberals wanted to, quote, 'offer therapy and understanding for our attackers.' But that was just a passing swipe. Tom Cruise went off on Matt Lauer this morning..." Discussing psychiatry with Dr. Catherine Birndorf, after showing a clip of the Tom Cruise interview in which he went off on Matt Lauer on the Today show: "Any studies on how often people who publicly would slime an entire group or a medical practice or whatever are actually subconsciously screaming out, 'Hey, I'm part of this group'? I mean, any idea if Tom Cruise or Karl Rove might be hoping that they say something so outrageous about therapy that somebody who cares about them might try an intervention to force them into therapy?" Olbermann also proposed: "Lastly, could Mr. Rove's references have been more damaging even than the Cruise interview because he essentially associated therapy with weakness?" Olbermann soon plugged an upcoming segment: "The Karl Rove fallout continues. Today, the White House tries to explain away his divisive comments about September 11th. The man called 'Bush's brain' opens the mouth instead. Will there be an apology forthcoming as well? Stand by."
Olbermann set up the subsequent segment devoted to Rove: "Fabled among devotees of the old TV series 'The Twilight Zone' is one 1960 episode called 'The Monsters are Due on Maple Street.' In it, someone or something starts screwing around with the electricity on an ordinary suburban street. Within minutes, the residents there have concluded that aliens from outer space have invaded. Soon the neighbors are accusing each other of collusion with the invaders. Eventually, one of them starts shooting. The director pulls back to a nearby hill where sit to real aliens, one of whom sagely reminds the other that there's no need to ever actually attack any of these stupid humans, you can just scare them a little bit and then wait for them to tear themselves apart. Our fourth story in the Countdown, Karl Rove on Maple Street: Day three. The White House and the Republican Party continue to defend Rove's assertion that conservatives saw the savagery of 9/11 and prepared for war while liberals saw the savagery of 9/11 and wanted to prepare indictments and offer therapy and understanding for our attackers. Not all of the defenses came across as especially hearty. Tom DeLay at the College Republicans convention today in Arlington, Virginia:"
Fox News Sunday Relays MRC Tracking of Durbin vs. Rove Coverage You Read It Here First I. For the "Stories you won't find on any other Sunday show" segment, Fox News Sunday anchor Chris Wallace recited MRC CyberAlert tracking of how the broadcast networks "jumped on" the controversy over comments by White House Deputy Chief-of-Staff Karl Rove after having a "very different reaction" to an allegation made by Democratic Senator Dick Durbin over prisoner treatment at Guantanamo.
Over graphics showing network logos with text summarizing coverage of the two controversial remarks, Wallace relayed on the June 26 Fox News Sunday: As Wallace recited the coverage, viewers saw two graphics. First: "Covering Rove Controversy: (ABC and NBC logos) Thursday PM, Friday AM" Second: "Covering Durbin Controversy (ABC and NBC logos) Waited seven days (CBS logo) No Coverage A clarification: The CBS Evening News has completely avoided both Durbin and Rove, but Friday's Early Show did bring up Rove. While it is accurate that ABC's World News Tonight and Good Morning America, as well as NBC's Today, "waited seven days, ignoring the entire controversy until Durbin apologized on the Senate floor," the NBC Nightly News, which immediately devoted a full story to Rove, did air a brief, anchor-read item on Durbin on June 16, the night after controversy broke out over his June 14 remarks. See the June 17 CyberAlert, which is summarized below, for details. Previous CyberAlerts which recounted media avoidance of Durbin followed by how the networks pounced on Rove:
# June 17: ABC and CBS led Thursday night with how four backbench Members of Congress held a press conference to publicize their resolution calling for a draw down of troops in Iraq by October of 2006, but neither network uttered a word about Democratic Senator Dick Durbin's outlandish comparison of the treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo to "Nazis, Soviets in their gulags" or Pol Pot. Only NBC reported Durbin's comparison, but that brief item aired only after Kelly O'Donnell touted the vision of "North Carolina Republican Walter Jones, who today alongside two Democrats and a fellow Republican, proposed what many Americans, weary of the violence in Iraq, appear increasingly eager to see, a withdrawal date for U.S. troops." On ABC, anchor Elizabeth Vargas announced: "We start tonight with the Bush administration and the growing discontent over the war in Iraq. On Capitol Hill today, a resolution was introduced that would require U.S. troops to begin pulling out of Iraq a year from this fall. The resolution was sponsored by a small, bipartisan group of Congressmen, but it is a first." See: www.mediaresearch.org
McCullough Point on Deleterious Media: CyberAlert to Rumsfeld? You Read It Here First II. From Tim Russert on CNBC to Tim Russert on NBC, via Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, but all thanks to CyberAlert? On Sunday's Meet the Press, when pressed about how the war in Iraq is going badly, Rumsfeld related how historian David McCullough "the other day" said about the Revolutionary War, 'If we had covered it the way we're covering this war, we would have been in the soup, and that would have been it.' There wouldn't have been a successful revolution." McCullough made that point on the June 18 Tim Russert show on CNBC, as recounted in the June 20 CyberAlert which Washington Times "Inside Politics" columnist Greg Pierce highlighted on June 21. Then on June 23, Rumsfeld relayed the anecdote in his testimony before both the Senate and House Armed Services Committee. A Nexis check for "McCullough" over the past week, within 100 words of "media," generated only the above-cited House and Senate committee hearing transcripts, the Washington Times item and a June 22 Chattanooga Times Free Press editorial which clearly got its material from CyberAlert, "Would there be an America?" So here's my guess as to the path of McCullough's quote. First, he's interviewed by Russert and the interview plays sometime later (June 18) on CNBC.
Second, I am one of the relatively few who actually watches Russert's Saturday night show, and write up an item for Monday's (June 20) CyberAlert: Then and now "If the present-day news media were around in the 1770s, the United States of America never could have won the Revolutionary War, author/historian David McCullough charged in a taped interview to plug his new book, '1776,'" the Media Research Center's Brent Baker reports at www.mediaresearch.org. "Appearing on CNBC's 'Tim Russert' aired Saturday night, McCullough asserted that if the Continental Army efforts led by George Washington 'had been covered by the media, and the country had seen how horrible the conditions were, how badly things were being run by the officers, and what a very serious soup we were in, I think that would have been it' for the colonialists and the British would have won."
See: www.washingtontimes.com
For a PDF of Rumsfeld's June 23 prepared remarks before the Senate Armed Services Committee: armed-services.senate.gov The exchange on the June 26 Meet the Press:
Russert: "Let me show you a graphic, which represents how tough it has been since the war began on March 19 of 2003. There have been 1,735 Americans killed; 13,085 wounded and injured; cost is $208 billion; we've been there for 831 days, and still have 135,000 American troops. Does any of that represent, in your mind, misjudgments made by you or the administration about Iraq?"
Sarcastic Brown: "I Don't Think" Bush Will Be "In a Flight Suit" Aaron Brown's sarcastic quip of the night. Leading off his "Tomorrow's Papers Tonight" segment on Friday night, Brown noted how President Bush plans a national television address on Tuesday night from Fort Bragg in North Carolina "to talk about Iraq." Brown then added: "I don't think he'll be coming there in a flight suit this time. No 'Mission Accomplished' sign. I think this will be a more sober talk." As he held up a big velox of the newspaper, on the June 24 NewsNight, Brown asserted: "Chattanooga Times Free Press, 'Bush refuses to set troop pullout date: President not giving up on Iraq mission.' The President goes on national television on Tuesday night from Fort Bragg to talk about Iraq. I don't think he'll be coming there in a flight suit this time. No 'Mission Accomplished' sign. I think this will be a more sober talk."
Retired General Tours Guantanamo, Tells CNN Media Portrayal Wrong Retired Major General Donald Shepperd toured the Guantanamo Bay detention facility on Friday and found that reality did not match the media's portrayal, he recounted in a phone interview from Cuba on CNN just before 3pm EDT on Friday. Shepperd asserted: "The impressions that you're getting from the media and from the various pronouncements being made by people who have not been here, in my opinion, are totally false." Shepperd contended that "what we're seeing is a modern prison system with dedicated people, interrogators and analysts that know what they are doing. And people being very, very well-treated." But when Shepperd reported that he had observed an interrogation, anchor Betty Nguyen inquired: "Kind of explain to us how that played out. And were there any instances of abuse or possible abuse?" Shepperd responded: "Absolutely not." The MRC's Ken Shepherd corrected the CNN transcript against the video for the phone interview which began at 2:51pm EDT on June 24:
Betty Nguyen, anchor: "We have just established a line to Guantanamo Bay, to our military analyst General Don Shepperd. He arrived there as part of a trip put together by the Pentagon in the wake of that human rights report that criticized conditions at the U.S. prison for war detainees. General Shepperd on the phone with us right now. General Shepperd, what do you see so far while being there?" (Late Update: Shepperd appeared live, on-camera, this morning (Monday) during the 9am EDT hour of CNN's American Morning to recount what he observed at Guantanamo.)
Pew Poll: View of Media's Patriotism, Bias & Fairness at New Lows A new poll commissioned by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, which was released on Sunday, found that "attitudes toward the performance of the news media are at or near their low points in Pew trends dating back to the mid-1980s. This is especially the case in opinions regarding the press's patriotism, bias, and fairness." Pew's summary of it findings detailed how "just 42 percent say news organizations generally 'stand up for America'" and 'six-in-ten see news organizations as politically biased, up from 53 percent two years ago. More than seven-in-ten (72 percent) say news organizations tend to favor one side, rather than treat all sides fairly; that is the largest number ever expressing that view." An excerpt from Pew's summary report, "Public More Critical of Press, But Goodwill Persists: Online Newspaper Readership Countering Print Losses," for the survey conducted June 8-12 by Princeton Survey Research Associates International among a nationwide sample of 1,464 adults, 18 years of age or older: ....In many cases, attitudes toward the performance of the news media are at or near their low points in Pew trends dating back to the mid-1980s. This is especially the case in opinions regarding the press's patriotism, bias, and fairness. Just 42% say news organizations generally "stand up for America;" about as many (40%) believe that news organizations are "too critical of America." That represents a significant shift since July 2003, when a narrow majority (51%) said that news organizations stand up for America, while 33% said they were too critical.... Other measures assessing the basic values of the press also have become more negative. Six-in-ten see news organizations as politically biased, up from 53% two years ago. More than seven-in-ten (72%) say news organizations tend to favor one side, rather than treat all sides fairly; that is the largest number ever expressing that view.... Partisanship has long been a major factor in these attitudes. Even so, there has been a startling rise in the politicization of opinions on several measures -- especially the question of whether the news media stands up for America, or is too critical of America. The partisan gap on this issue has grown dramatically, as Republicans increasingly express the view that the press is excessively critical of the U.S. (67% now vs. 42% in 2002). Over the same period, Democratic opinions on this have remained fairly stable (24% now vs. 26% in 2002). Republicans are now closely divided as to whether the press protects or hurts democracy; 40% say it protects democracy, while 43% believe it hurts democracy. Two years ago, by a fairly sizable margin (44%-31%) more Republicans felt that the press helped democracy. Democratic opinion on this measure has been more stable. In the current survey, 56% say the press protects democracy while just 27% say it hurts democracy. Views on whether the press is politically biased have been more consistent over the years. More than seven-in-ten Republicans (73%) say the press is biased, compared with 53% of Democrats. Perceptions of political bias have increased modestly among members of both parties over the past two years. Generally, Democrats are much more positive in their assessments of press values and performance than are Republicans. But increasingly, Democrats are showing dissatisfaction with press coverage of the Bush administration. A majority of Democrats (54%) say that press coverage of the Bush administration has not been critical enough; that represents a sizable increase from May 2004 (39%).... In past surveys on the press, criticisms of the news media were accompanied by a widespread perception that the power of news organizations was expanding. But that has changed, largely owing to a major shift in perceptions among Republicans. Overall, more Americans still believe the influence of the press is increasing rather than decreasing (by 49%-36%), but the margin has narrowed. Two years ago, 55% said news organizations were growing in influence, while just 29% felt their influence was declining. In the past, Republicans by wide margins said that news organizations were growing in influence. But in the current survey, as many say the press is losing influence as say it is expanding in influence (45% vs. 43%). Attitudes among Democrats and independents have been much more stable. While there are deep differences about the press's power and performance, most Americans agree that news organizations, when deciding what stories to report, care more about attracting the biggest audience rather than about keeping the public informed. Majorities in every demographic and political group express this opinion, but it is especially prevalent among conservative Republicans (90%).... And 85% of those who cite the internet as a main source believe that news organizations are mostly motivated by a desire to expand their audience, rather than to inform the public. Beyond the rising criticism of press performance and patriotism, there also has been significant erosion in support for the news media's watchdog role over the military. Nearly half (47%) say that by criticizing the military, news organizations are weakening the nation's defenses; 44% say such criticism keeps the nation militarily prepared. The percentage saying press criticism weakens American defenses has been increasing in recent years and now stands at its highest point in surveys dating to 1985. By contrast, public support for the news media's role as a political watchdog has endured and even increased a bit. Six-in-ten Americans say that by criticizing political leaders, news organizations keep political leaders from doing things that should not be done; just 28% feel such criticism keeps political leaders from doing their jobs. Two years ago, 54% endorsed the press's role as a political watchdog. The long-term growth in the view that press criticism weakens the military has mostly come among Republicans. From the mid-1980s through the end of the Persian Gulf War in March 1991, minorities of Republicans felt that such criticism weakened the military. Currently, two-thirds of Republicans (67%) express that opinion. Attitudes among Democrats and independents have been far more stable. While the public has been more consistently supportive of the press's adversarial role in politics, there has been some partisan movement reflecting the changing balance of power in Washington. In the late 1990s, during the Clinton administration, Republicans were somewhat more likely than Democrats to say that criticism of political leaders was worth it because it could prevent wrongdoing. Since then, Democrats have become much more supportive of the news media's political watchdog role, and Republicans less so.... END of Excerpt For the June 26 report in full summarizing the poll, as well as for links to more detailed survey information, go to: people-press.org
-- Brent Baker
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts |
|