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1. Schieffer on Sheehan: "I Wonder Why" Bush "Doesn't Meet with Her?" The CBS Evening News on Wednesday devoted a second segment to promoting the vigil of Bush-hater Cindy Sheehan. Bill Plante noted the obvious as he provided more publicity: "She's gotten a lot of media attention by camping out on the road that leads to the President's ranch." He pointed out that she "understands that it's very difficult for the White House to dismiss anyone in her position" and touted how "she also knows she's not alone. One recent poll shows that one out of three people now say it's time to bring all the troops home." Anchor Bob Schieffer ridiculously asked: "I wonder why the President doesn't meet with her." Plante replied that "you'd think it would be an easy thing to do," but noted that would lead to him having to "meet with a lot of people." Plante did point out that Sheehan did meet Bush last year, but "she says that wasn't a satisfying meeting." Plante didn't note her praise then for Bush. 2. Approaches from Right on Anti-Roberts Ad, "Un-Reaganesque" Pork Two unusual approaches from the right on ABC and NBC on Wednesday night. ABC's Jake Tapper looked at a TV ad produced by the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) which "accuses Judge Roberts of supporting violent anti-abortion criminals." Tapper challenged NARAL's President: "Don't you think it's misleading, though, to talk about clinic bombings when the case didn't have anything to do with bombings?" He concluded by calling it a "misleading ad." All the stories on the gargantuan transportation bill signed by President Bush focused on its pork, but NBC's Chip Reid contrasted President Bush's embrace of such spending with how President Reagan rejected it: "In southern California, landscaping on the Ronald Reagan Freeway, a very un-Reaganesque $2.3 million. Ironically, it was Ronald Reagan who vetoed a highway bill in 1987. 'Too much lard,' he said. That bill had 152 pet projects, cost to taxpayers, $1.4 billion. But the bill President Bush signed today has 6,371 congressional projects; grand total: more than $24 billion." 3. Limbaugh Cites NewsBusters Blog, FNC Highlights Totenberg Quotes You read it here first. Two items: First, Rush Limbaugh on Tuesday alerted his listeners to how the MRC has "put up a new blog. They've got their own blog called the NewsBusters and they've got an RSS feed so I subscribed to it last night. And it's cool." Second, on FNC on Monday, anchor David Asman highlighted how "the Media Research Center looked at NPR's legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg's many efforts to tag Judge Roberts as a died-in-the-wool conservative." 4. "Top Ten Strategies of Saddam Hussein's Attorneys" Letterman's "Top Ten Strategies of Saddam Hussein's Attorneys." Schieffer on Sheehan: "I Wonder Why" Bush "Doesn't Meet with Her?" The CBS Evening News on Wednesday devoted a second segment to promoting the vigil of Bush-hater Cindy Sheehan. Bill Plante noted the obvious as he provided more publicity: "She's gotten a lot of media attention by camping out on the road that leads to the President's ranch." He pointed out that she "understands that it's very difficult for the White House to dismiss anyone in her position" and touted how "she also knows she's not alone. One recent poll shows that one out of three people now say it's time to bring all the troops home." Anchor Bob Schieffer ridiculously asked: "I wonder why the President doesn't meet with her." Plante replied that "you'd think it would be an easy thing to do," but noted that would lead to him having to "meet with a lot of people." Plante did point out that Sheehan did meet Bush last year, but "she says that wasn't a satisfying meeting." Plante didn't note her praise then for Bush. As recounted in the August 10 CyberAlert, on June 24, 2004 The Reporter newspaper in Vacaville, California quoted Sheehan after a meeting with President Bush: "I now know he's sincere about wanting freedom for the Iraqis...I know he's sorry and feels some pain for our loss. And I know he's a man of faith." For more on that see the link inside the August 10 CyberAlert which is linked below. The August 9 CyberAlert, see paragraph below, reported how Saturday's CBS Evening News dedicated a story to Sheehan's protest. Two previous CyberAlert items on how the networks have trumpeted Sheehan's cause:
# August 9 CyberAlert: The broadcast networks and CNN on Monday morning trumpeted the vigil outside of President Bush's Texas ranch by a virulent Bush-hater, but didn't really fully convey her hatred. NBC's Katie Couric showcased her at the top of Today: "And a mother's vigil. Her son died in Iraq. Now this woman is camping outside the Bushes' Texas ranch and demanding a meeting with the President today, Monday, August 8th, 2005." On CBS's Early Show, news reader Julie Chen snidely played off of Bush's vacation: "President Bush may be on vacation in Crawford, Texas, but one mom wants to make sure he doesn't forget there's a war going on in Iraq." On Saturday, CBS anchor Thalia Assuras had noted how "while President Bush has heralded the sacrifice of the fallen, his words were met with anger today." That story featured Cindy Sheehan's accusation: "I'm never going to be able to enjoy another vacation because he killed my oldest son." See: www.mediaresearch.org
Plante checked in from Crawford: "I don't think so, Bob. I think what you're likely to see is more of a coping strategy session. With the President's ratings continuing to drop, as the casualties in Iraq continue to rise, some of the President's closest allies outside the administration are grumbling very publicly about Defense Secretary Rumsfeld wondering whether he has an actual plan for getting out of Iraq. The insurgency continues, Iraqis are facing a deadline of Monday to write a new constitution, and U.S. officials tell me that they think that's going to slip at least by a little bit. Bob?" To comment on this CyberAlert article, go to the MRC's new blog, NewsBusters, where I'll soon post it so you can submit a "comment" about it. Go to: www.newsbusters.org
Approaches from Right on Anti-Roberts Ad, "Un-Reaganesque" Pork Two unusual approaches from the right on ABC and NBC on Wednesday night. ABC's Jake Tapper looked at a TV ad produced by the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) which "accuses Judge Roberts of supporting violent anti-abortion criminals." Tapper challenged NARAL's President: "Don't you think it's misleading, though, to talk about clinic bombings when the case didn't have anything to do with bombings?" He concluded by calling it a "misleading ad." All the stories on the gargantuan transportation bill signed by President Bush focused on its pork, but NBC's Chip Reid contrasted President Bush's embrace of such spending with how President Reagan rejected it: "In southern California, landscaping on the Ronald Reagan Freeway, a very un-Reaganesque $2.3 million. Ironically, it was Ronald Reagan who vetoed a highway bill in 1987. 'Too much lard,' he said. That bill had 152 pet projects, cost to taxpayers, $1.4 billion. But the bill President Bush signed today has 6,371 congressional projects; grand total: more than $24 billion." The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed captioning against the video for the two August 10 stories: # ABC's World News Tonight. Anchor Elizabeth Vargas intoned: "Here at home, the war of words over John Roberts' nomination to the Supreme Court escalated today. Less than a month before his confirmation hearings are scheduled to begin, both sides started running television ads. But as ABC's Jake Tapper reports, there are serious questions about the accuracy of one of those ads."
Tapper began: "The ad accuses Judge Roberts of supporting violent anti-abortion criminals." Annenberg's "Fact Check" page assessed the ad as "false." For their detailed analysis: www.factcheck.org
Limbaugh Cites NewsBusters Blog, FNC Highlights Totenberg Quotes You read it here first. Two items: First, Rush Limbaugh on Tuesday alerted his listeners to how the MRC has "put up a new blog. They've got their own blog called the NewsBusters and they've got an RSS feed so I subscribed to it last night. And it's cool." Second, on FNC on Monday, anchor David Asman highlighted how "the Media Research Center looked at NPR's legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg's many efforts to tag Judge Roberts as a died-in-the-wool conservative."
# Rush Limbaugh On Tuesday, at about 1:15pm EDT (the second hour), cited NewsBusters when he introduced his reading of an excerpt from a posting Noel Sheppard, "Economic Disconnect is All in the Reporting," a contributor to the American Thinker blog:
For RushLimbaugh.com's transcript of this portion of his August 10 show (see the fourth paragraph): www.rushlimbaugh.com
With the text of the quotes on screen, Asman then read aloud four quotes from Totenberg: "...there's nobody who knows John Roberts who doesn't think he's a bedrock conservative..." -- Nina Totenberg, NPR, July 19 "...this is a very, very conservative man." -- Nina Totenberg, Good Morning America, July 20 "...one might even say [a] cocky advocate of very, very conservative positions." -- Nina Totenberg, NPR, July 23 "He's got adopted children. I mean, he's a conservative Catholic....a hard-line conservative." -- Nina Totenberg, Inside Washington, July 23 Asman resumed: "Get the message? So if liberals find Judge Roberts too conservative and conservatives are afraid he's too liberal, well does that mean he's mainstream? Stay tuned." CyberAlert items on Totenberg's labeling of Roberts: -- July 21 CyberAlert: There's no doubt in NPR reporter Nina Totenberg's mind that Judge John Roberts is "very conservative," it's just a matter of how "very." On NPR's All Things Considered on Tuesday night, she prefaced "conservative" with three verys, describing him as "a very, very, very conservative man." But in a taped soundbite on the next day's Good Morning America on ABC, she cut back to two modifiers, dubbing him merely "a very, very conservative man." For the quotes in full: www.mrc.org -- July 25 CyberAlert: NPR's Nina Totenberg, who last week tagged Supreme Court nominee John Roberts as "very, very conservative" and "very, very, very conservative," on Inside Washington over the weekend described him as merely "very conservative." But she couldn't resist adding a modifier every time she applied the conservative label, also dubbing him "a really conservative guy," "a hardline conservative" and "a clear conservative." Plus, she emphasized how he's "a conservative Catholic." See: www.mrc.org
-- August 1 CyberAlert: A parody of herself? NPR's Nina Totenberg, who has tagged Supreme Court nominee John Roberts as "very conservative," "very, very conservative" and "very, very, very conservative," as well as "a really conservative guy," "a hardline conservative" and "a clear conservative," to say nothing of being "a conservative Catholic," on Inside Washington over the weekend relayed that after she "spent five hours reviewing all of his documents from when he worked in the Justice Department," she "was actually quite surprised at how, how very, very conservative he was." Apparently, she didn't listen to herself. www.mediaresearch.org
"Top Ten Strategies of Saddam Hussein's Attorneys" From August 9 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Strategies of Saddam Hussein's Attorneys." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com 10. "Play up the "at least he didn't do steroids" angle 9. Pin everything on Saddam's scheming brother, Larry Hussein 8. Answer every question with, "No, you're thinking of Iran." 7. Explain he was driven inane by the intense flavor of new Spicy Nacho Doritos 6. Brand prosecutor's list of 12,000 witnesses as "flimsy" 5. Brighten mood by calling to the stand the always charming Tony Danza 4. Request one of those "confined to your 153-acre estate" punishments like Martha got 3. Give Saddam white suit and turkey leg -- make him hilarious Boss Hogg-like figure 2. Let Saddam Hussein go nuts and execute everyone in the courtroom 1. "If the underpants don't fit, you must acquit."
-- Brent Baker
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