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1. Mapes: Liberal & Conservative, Unaware If Registered as Democrat Asked by Bill O'Reilly Thursday night on FNC whether she's a liberal, Mary Mapes, the CBS News producer fired in January for her role in the forged National Guard memos and representations she made to her colleagues, first put up the usual avoidance device of a liberal -- "I'm not sure what a liberal is" -- before insisting that "like a lot of Americans, I'm all over the map." In the taped interview, O'Reilly then pressed her: "Are you registered Democrat?" Mapes seriously responded: "I don't know." O'Reilly scoffed: "You don't know?" Mapes claimed: "I don't know if I'm independent or Democrat. I know I'm not -- in Texas, I'm not sure how I'm registered." (But apparently she's quite sure she's no Republican.) O'Reilly returned to his original interest: "So you would describe yourself politically as?" She maintained: "Oh, my goodness. I'm liberal on some things, I'm conservative on some things." 2. Olbermann Portrays Alito's Judicial Ethics as "Throat-Cutters" On his Countdown show Thursday night, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann led by hyping "new questions now concerning the judicial ethics of Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito" because of alleged conflicts of interest, including the judge's participation in cases involving Vanguard and Smith Barney, companies through which Alito owned mutual funds and stocks. Olbermann expressed his view that "it would seem to me these are throat cutters" and that "he shouldn't be on a federal court after this anymore." Although Olbermann did note that in the case involving Smith Barney, Alito had sided against the company, he did not present a balanced look at the situation as he merely interviewed George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley, whom Olbermann credited as "the first to raise questions about Judge Alito's personal conflict...even before he was officially nominated." 3. CNN's Morton Insists McCain's Stands Not What Endear Him to Media CNN's Bruce Morton denied, in a Thursday story on a speech by John McCain about the Iraq war, that reporters like McCain because of his policy stands. "Some conservatives mistrust McCain," Morton observed on The Situation Room, "partly because reporters like him, and they think that makes him a liberal." Morton rejected that theory: "We like him because he answers our questions, not because of where he stands on issues." Morton contended that "he is, in fact, conservative -- anti-abortion, for a strong defense. He's a fiscal conservative against big spending and big deficits, though that's not a position, critics say, this President takes." Unmentioned by Morton: How McCain is also a champion of many liberal causes, such as campaign finance "reform," smaller tax cuts and greater environmental regulation. 4. FNC to Air One-Sided Liberal Case for Human-Fueled Global Warming This Sunday the Fox News Channel will air a one-hour special, The Heat is On: The Case of Global Warming, which promises to not provide a "fair and balanced" look at the subject, but I bet the usual left-wing critics of FNC won't mind. The MRC's CNSNews.com on Wednesday reported that the special "provides only the liberal take on the controversial issue and was approved after environmentalist Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. reportedly 'dragged' Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes to a lecture by former Vice President Al Gore, 'kicking and screaming.'" The producer of the show conceded the imbalance: "'Often on Fox News Channel, we present both sides, according to our 'fair and balanced' motto, but this is the global warming story,'[Clay] Rawson said. 'We do make it clear that this is one side of the issue through inclusion of a disclaimer,' he added. The documentary is said to ignore scientific skeptics who believe that human activity is not responsible for catastrophic climate change." A promo FNC is running is full of hype: "Massive flooding, torrential rain storms, coastal communities wiped off the map. Global warming: It's happening right now. This isn't science fiction. Some say it's our future." 5. "Top Ten Good Things About Being an 18-Year-Old Mayor" Letterman's "Top Ten Good Things About Being an 18-Year-Old Mayor." Mapes: Liberal & Conservative, Unaware If Registered as Democrat Asked by Bill O'Reilly Thursday night on FNC whether she's a liberal, Mary Mapes, the CBS News producer fired in January for her role in the forged National Guard memos and representations she made to her colleagues, first put up the usual avoidance device of a liberal -- "I'm not sure what a liberal is" -- before insisting that "like a lot of Americans, I'm all over the map." In the taped interview, O'Reilly then pressed her: "Are you registered Democrat?" Mapes seriously responded: "I don't know." O'Reilly scoffed: "You don't know?" Mapes claimed: "I don't know if I'm independent or Democrat. I know I'm not -- in Texas, I'm not sure how I'm registered." (But apparently she's quite sure she's no Republican.) O'Reilly returned to his original interest: "So you would describe yourself politically as?" She maintained: "Oh, my goodness. I'm liberal on some things, I'm conservative on some things." Wednesday night on CNN's Larry King Live, when asked if she had an agenda against President Bush, an indignant Mapes fired back: "Oh my God no, no of course not." See: www.mediaresearch.org For video, check this NewsBusters.org posting: newsbusters.org
Check this CyberAlert article for a defense, on ABC's Good Morning America, of the accuracy of the original story: www.mediaresearch.org [This item was posted Thursday night, with video, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your thoughts, or to watch a video clip, in either RealPlayer or Windows Media formats, go to: newsbusters.org ]
Mapes made her in-studio guest appearance on The O'Reilly Factor as part of her book tour for Truth and Duty: The Press, the President, and the Privilege of Power: www.amazon.com
Bill O'Reilly: "Now the right wing thinks you're a raving liberal, you and Rather contrived to put Bush in the worst possible light. That's what the right, far right, right believes."
Olbermann Portrays Alito's Judicial Ethics as "Throat-Cutters" On his Countdown show Thursday night, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann led by hyping "new questions now concerning the judicial ethics of Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito" because of alleged conflicts of interest, including the judge's participation in cases involving Vanguard and Smith Barney, companies through which Alito owned mutual funds and stocks. Olbermann expressed his view that "it would seem to me these are throat cutters" and that "he shouldn't be on a federal court after this anymore." Although Olbermann did note that in the case involving Smith Barney, Alito had sided against the company, he did not present a balanced look at the situation as he merely interviewed George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley, whom Olbermann credited as "the first to raise questions about Judge Alito's personal conflict...even before he was officially nominated." Turley criticized Alito because "a judge is supposed to recuse himself when there's an appearance of a conflict," while he also conceded that "it's not that Judge Alito doesn't have an argument here. It's a technical one." [This item, by Brad Wilmouth, was posted Thursday night on the MRC's NewsBusters.org blog: newsbusters.org ] A complete transcript of Olbermann's interview with Turley from the November 10 Countdown show follows: Keith Olbermann, in his opening teaser: "Which of these stories will you be talking about tomorrow? Trouble with the Supreme Court nominee -- again. Judge Alito ruled in favor of the Vanguard mutual fund company. Unfortunately, Judge Alito had $400,000 in Vanguard mutual fund funds at the time, after he had written to the Senate saying he would disqualify himself from any case involving Vanguard mutual funds. Oops!"
After covering other subjects in the teaser, Olbermann opened the show: "Good evening. It's either yet another case of the borking of a judicial nominee, derail a nomination, in this case for the Supreme Court, one drip at a time. Or instead, it's a legitimate troubling stop along the paper trail of a jurist's life work. Our fifth story on the Countdown, either way, new questions now concerning the judicial ethics of Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito. As Judge Alito made the rounds on Capitol Hill today, new questions concerning when a judge has to fulfill a promise to recuse himself to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest, and when he does not.
CNN's Morton Insists McCain's Stands Not What Endear Him to Media CNN's Bruce Morton denied, in a Thursday story on a speech by John McCain about the Iraq war, that reporters like McCain because of his policy stands. "Some conservatives mistrust McCain," Morton observed on The Situation Room, "partly because reporters like him, and they think that makes him a liberal." Morton rejected that theory: "We like him because he answers our questions, not because of where he stands on issues." Morton contended that "he is, in fact, conservative -- anti-abortion, for a strong defense. He's a fiscal conservative against big spending and big deficits, though that's not a position, critics say, this President takes." Unmentioned by Morton: How McCain is also a champion of many liberal causes, such as campaign finance "reform," smaller tax cuts and greater environmental regulation.
The MRC's Megan McCormack caught Morton's spin on the 4pm EST hour of the November 10 Situation Room:
FNC to Air One-Sided Liberal Case for Human-Fueled Global Warming This Sunday the Fox News Channel will air a one-hour special, The Heat is On: The Case of Global Warming, which promises to not provide a "fair and balanced" look at the subject, but I bet the usual left-wing critics of FNC won't mind. The MRC's CNSNews.com on Wednesday reported that the special "provides only the liberal take on the controversial issue and was approved after environmentalist Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. reportedly 'dragged' Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes to a lecture by former Vice President Al Gore, 'kicking and screaming.'" The producer of the show conceded the imbalance: "'Often on Fox News Channel, we present both sides, according to our 'fair and balanced' motto, but this is the global warming story,' [Clay] Rawson said. 'We do make it clear that this is one side of the issue through inclusion of a disclaimer,' he added. The documentary is said to ignore scientific skeptics who believe that human activity is not responsible for catastrophic climate change." A promo FNC is running is full of hype: "Massive flooding, torrential rain storms, coastal communities wiped off the map. Global warming: It's happening right now. This isn't science fiction. Some say it's our future." That promo included a graphic with dots on a map with these claims on screen: "Massive Flooding," "Torrential Rainstorms" and "Coastal Communities Wiped Out."
The promo ad in full for The Heat is On: The Case of Global Warming, as taken down by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth from Wednesday's Big Story: An excerpt from the November 9 CNSNews.com story, "Fox News CEO Warms to Climate Change After Heat from Left," by Randy Hall and Marc Morano: A Fox News Channel documentary on "global warming," set to air Sunday night, provides only the liberal take on the controversial issue and was approved after environmentalist Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. reportedly "dragged" Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes to a lecture by former Vice President Al Gore, "kicking and screaming." Clay Rawson, the Fox News Channel producer of the hour-long special titled "The Heat Is On: The Case of Global Warming," told Cybercast News Service Wednesday that the project "was a little bit different for us. "Often on Fox News Channel, we present both sides, according to our 'fair and balanced' motto, but this is the global warming story," Rawson said. "We do make it clear that this is one side of the issue through inclusion of a disclaimer," he added. The documentary is said to ignore scientific skeptics who believe that human activity is not responsible for catastrophic climate change. The Bangor Daily News (Maine) on Sept. 23 reported Kennedy's comments about having "dragged" Ailes to the Gore lecture. The November edition of Outside magazine also features a column by Amanda Griscom Little, in which she asserts that Laurie David, the wife of comic Larry David, managed to persuade Ailes about the need to air the special. According to Griscom Little's column, Ailes telephoned Laurie David to discuss the "one-hour global-warming report that his network will air this fall, thanks in large part to Laurie's badgering." Griscom Little also wrote that "Ailes was charmed by what he calls Laurie's 'impressive passion and dedication'" and that Ailes "considers her one of the country's 'leading authorities' on global warming." Laurie David is a trustee of the Natural Resources Defense Council. Ailes was unavailable for further comment Wednesday night. Fox News Channel reporter Rick Folbaum, in a statement on the news organization's website, explained that "after months of research and interviews with many experts, I've learned this simple fact: The earth is heating up. And it's happening much faster than ever before. No one can argue with this." But Chris Horner, senior fellow with the free market environmental group, Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), is among those arguing about the theory of "global warming." He is also criticizing Fox News Channel, not only for its decision to air the documentary, but for featuring "Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., a prominent agenda-driven environmentalist and registered lobbyist for green causes...as a 'special correspondent' for the show." Despite the disclaimer at the beginning of the program, Horner told Cybercast News Service that "many and possibly most viewers would not even see this disclaimer... "While it is unfathomable that a reputable news network would air so blatantly a one-sided program regardless of any disclaimer, that the 'fair and balanced' network would put itself in the position of suspending its motto is stupefying," Horner said. CEI plans to deliver a letter to Ailes on Thursday morning, complaining about the documentary.... Folbaum asserted in his Fox News website statement that "the vast majority of the scientific community says we're witnessing a unique and troubling kind of climate change, one where changes that used to occur over centuries are now taking place during the course of a single lifetime." The reporter concluded by pleading for website visitors to tune in to Fox News Sunday, Nov. 13 at 8 p.m. "Learn the facts about global warming and decide for your self what needs to be done about these new realities," Folbaum stated.... END of Excerpt
For the article in full: www.cnsnews.com
"Top Ten Good Things About Being an 18-Year-Old Mayor" From the November 10 Late Show with David Letterman, as read on the Ed Sullivan Theater stage by Michael Sessions, the 18-year-old Mayor-elect of Hillsdale, Michigan, the "Top Ten Good Things About Being an 18-Year-Old Mayor." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com 10. "Parents try to tell me what to do, I raise their taxes" 9. "Every night, a different member of the town council does my homework" 8. "It's every teen's dream: The power to regulate zoning laws" 7. "Goodbye, education budget -- Hello, brand new X-box" 6. "I got a call from Demi Moore" 5. "Trying to get the city hall on an episode of 'MTV Cribs'" 4. "I don't have to wait in line at Applebee's anymore" 3. "School bullies now have to deal with the Feds" 2. "Only victory speech featuring the word 'Dude'" 1. "It's flattering when President Bush calls me for advice"
-- Brent Baker
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