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1. Dan Rather Touts "First Husband" Opportunity for Bill Clinton Dan Rather fawned over former President Bill Clinton, and giddily promoted Hillary Clinton's presidential bid, in a new story for the New Year's Day 60 Minutes ostensibly focused on Clinton's effort to get low-priced AIDS medicines into China. Rather pointed out how Clinton couldn't take Air Force One on a trip to China, and wondered: "Do you miss it?" Clinton said he misses the workplace on it. Rather, looking bemused, followed up: "Do you, in some quiet moment, look forward to the time when maybe you fly on it in a different capacity, as First Husband?" Rather then trumpeted Geena Davis' character on ABC's Commander-in-Chief: "We now have on television, we have a woman President of the United States. Is the country ready for a woman President, a real woman President as opposed to one on television?" 2. Newsweek's Meacham Frets Bush Has Ruined Trust in Government Asked by Tim Russert to name the biggest story of 2005, on Sunday's Meet the Press Jon Meacham, Managing Editor of Newsweek, lamented how President Bush's incompetence on Katrina and Iraq has disillusioned the new generation about the great "positive" things government can do. Meacham fretted that the new "generation coming of political consciousness, they're coming to consciousness when there are many, many questions about the competence of the government in Katrina, the competence of the government in terms of intelligence." But, he rued, "there's not the good part which happened in the '60s. There's not a civil rights movement. There's not a race to the moon, where things are, show what government can do in a positive way." Meacham zeroes in on Bush as he bemoaned how Bush's conduct "has raised a lot of questions about fundamental competence of the government, both abroad and at home, whether it's in Baghdad or in New Orleans." A conservative might see that as an unintended positive development. 3. ABC and CBS Revive Fears of Impending "Civil War" in Iraq Interviewing General Peter Pace, from Iraq, on Sunday's This Week, fill-in host Terry Moran pressed the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff: "One of the concerns that people have right now, post-election, is that it's one thing in a democracy to learn how to vote, it's another to learn how to lose. Are you concerned at all, and is the United States prepared, for the potential of a civil war?" Pace assured Moran that is unlikely. Later in the day, on the CBS Evening News, after Kelly Cobiella reported from Iraq on Sunni dissatisfaction with the election results, anchor John Roberts put "civil war" into play: "Are we seeing the very first signs of a potential civil war here?" 4. ABC Skips How Anti-Bush "Constitutional Scholar" on Far-Left Without identifying David Cole as the "legal affairs correspondent" for the far-left magazine The Nation, Friday's World News Tonight on ABC featured his denigration of the probe into who leaked the secret eavesdropping story to the New York Times and his expert declaration that "the President of the United States violated a clear criminal prohibition on warrantless wiretapping." Reporter Pierre Thomas described Cole as a "constitutional scholar" and the on-screen graphic read: "Prof Georgetown Univ Law School." Cole's latest piece for The Nation calls Bush an "Emperor." Thomas did balance Cole with former federal prosecutor David Schertler, but the former homicide prosecutor has no equivalent ties to right-wing politics and did not make a declaration about which side of the dispute is correct. 5. Sheehan Is Clift's "Person of the Year" for Giving Bush "Hell" On the Christmas weekend edition of the McLaughlin Group, which featured the show's annual "Year-End Awards," Newsweek's Eleanor Clift named Cindy Sheehan her "Person of the Year." Clift championed Sheehan's negative impact on President Bush: "I give it to Cindy Sheehan, the Gold Star mother who gave the President a vacation from Hell and brought the war home in a way that it hadn't been before and set the stage for the deceleration in the President's poll ratings." 6. Brokaw and Koppel Push Bush to Move Left and Raise Taxes Tom Brokaw and Ted Koppel demonstrated, during nearly an hour on the Christmas Day Meet the Press, how the old-guard mainstream media live in a world where conservatives are the impediment preventing rational policies. In the pre-taped session with Tim Russert, Brokaw fretted about how "no sacrifice is being asked of anyone at home" during the Iraq war, citing how "the President is not asking us to conserve oil or to ration gasoline or to push hard for alternative sources of energy in this conflict." Koppel chirped up: "Or to pay a nickel more in taxes." Brokaw contended that "unless we can build a coalition in the middle...we're going to be stuck in this place that is a polarized national capital when the rest of the country longs for pragmatic solutions and moving forward." Koppel charged that it is a "scandal" how "most Americans can't" get "the best medical care in the world" and "there are 43 million Americans who aren't getting any medical care at all," as if lack of insurance means no medical care. Brokaw related that is was "stunning" to him that the Bush administration "put as its highest priority the reform of Social Security and not health care in America." 7. CBS's Roberts Picks Up Democrat's Defense of Bush's "Spying" Though Bob Schieffer introduced the December 21 CBS Evening News by using loaded language as he pointed out how, "to protest the President's decision to continue spying on American citizens, a federal judge took the unprecedented step of resigning from the court that issues warrants in such cases," an event also highlighted by ABC and NBC, unlike those networks, CBS White House correspondent John Roberts informed viewers how "the President got support today from an unusual quarter: Democrat Jane Harman, a key figure on the House Intelligence Committee." He highlighted how she asserted that "I believe the program is essential to U.S. national security" and, in a slam at the leaker and the New York Times, that the "disclosure has damaged critical intelligence capabilities." Schieffer, however, remained most interested in the resignation. After Roberts wrapped up his story, Schieffer marveled to him: "I want to go back to this federal judge resigning. I must say in all my years in the news business, I've never heard of a federal judge resigning in protest over anything." 8. New York Post Devotes Editorial to MRC's "Best of NQ" Awards The New York Post on Saturday devoted its entire editorial space to the editorial staff's favorite quotes from the MRC's "Best Notable Quotables of 2005: The Eighteenth Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting." 9. "Top Ten George W. Bush New Year's Resolutions" Letterman's "Top Ten George W. Bush New Year's Resolutions." Dan Rather Touts "First Husband" Opportunity for Bill Clinton Dan Rather fawned over former President Bill Clinton, and giddily promoted Hillary Clinton's presidential bid, in a new story for the New Year's Day 60 Minutes ostensibly focused on Clinton's effort to get low-priced AIDS medicines into China. Rather pointed out how Clinton couldn't take Air Force One on a trip to China, and wondered: "Do you miss it?" Clinton said he misses the workplace on it. Rather, looking bemused, followed up: "Do you, in some quiet moment, look forward to the time when maybe you fly on it in a different capacity, as First Husband?" Rather then trumpeted Geena Davis' character on ABC's Commander-in-Chief: "We now have on television, we have a woman President of the United States. Is the country ready for a woman President, a real woman President as opposed to one on television?"
CBSNews.com posted a semi-transcript of the story, but by providing summaries of Rather's inquiries, instead of a word-for-word transcript, the sycophantic nature of Rather's exchange is obscured. See: www.cbsnews.com Earlier in the story, Rather hit Clinton from the left on the prices charged by pharmaceutical companies: "Too strong, or not strong enough, to say there's price-gouging on these AIDS medicines?" Clinton pointed out: "Their view is they're protecting their intellectual property." Rather wasn't convinced: "Can you argue with anybody who says, 'well I think it's price gouging'?" Clinton came around: "Well, in my mind, I think they could sell them for a lot less without losing money. I do think that." Rather's piece was the second story aired on the January 1 60 Minutes. A transcript I did, picking up after the first two-thirds of the story in which Rather followed Clinton around in China. This exchange, however, took place at Clinton's Harlem office:
Dan Rather: "Mr President, when we traveled with you in China, you weren't aboard Air Force One. Do you miss it?"
Clinton: "I don't know. My gut is, yes, that if a woman came across as strong and seasoned and well prepared, if you said the right things in the right way and you had a good record to back it up, my gut is, yes. But the hard truth is we won't know until it happens."
Newsweek's Meacham Frets Bush Has Ruined Trust in Government Asked by Tim Russert to name the biggest story of 2005, on Sunday's Meet the Press Jon Meacham, Managing Editor of Newsweek, lamented how President Bush's incompetence on Katrina and Iraq has disillusioned the new generation about the great "positive" things government can do. Meacham fretted that the new "generation coming of political consciousness, they're coming to consciousness when there are many, many questions about the competence of the government in Katrina, the competence of the government in terms of intelligence." But, he rued, "there's not the good part which happened in the '60s. There's not a civil rights movement. There's not a race to the moon, where things are, show what government can do in a positive way." Meacham zeroes in on Bush as he bemoaned how Bush's conduct "has raised a lot of questions about fundamental competence of the government, both abroad and at home, whether it's in Baghdad or in New Orleans." A conservative might see that as an unintended positive development. Meacham was joined on the roundtable by New York Times columnist William Safire, Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson and NBC's favorite historian, the left-wing Doris Kearns Goodwin, who chafed over how President George W. Bush has "taken the negative parts of his father about raising no taxes." [This item was posted Monday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To offer your views, go to: newsbusters.org ] (Meacham won the "Madness of King George Award for Bush Bashing" in the MRC's "Best Notable Quotables of 2005: The Eighteenth Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting," for this shot on Imus in the Morning following Bush's criticism of Roosevelt's Yalta deal with Stalin on post-war Europe: "It's like he [President Bush] stuck a broomstick in his [FDR's] wheelchair wheels." See: www.mrc.org )
Back to Meet the Press: Jon Meacham, on what he considers the biggest story of 2005:
Much later in the show, Doris Kearns Goodwin, on what books people should read in 2006: I have no idea what she meant by "not using the political capital," but that's what she said.
ABC and CBS Revive Fears of Impending "Civil War" in Iraq Interviewing General Peter Pace, from Iraq, on Sunday's This Week, fill-in host Terry Moran pressed the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff: "One of the concerns that people have right now, post-election, is that it's one thing in a democracy to learn how to vote, it's another to learn how to lose. Are you concerned at all, and is the United States prepared, for the potential of a civil war?" Pace assured Moran that is unlikely. Later in the day, on the CBS Evening News, after Kelly Cobiella reported from Iraq on Sunni dissatisfaction with the election results, anchor John Roberts put "civil war" into play: "Are we seeing the very first signs of a potential civil war here?" [This item was posted early Monday morning on the MRC blog, NewsBusters.org. To add your comment, go to: newsbusters.org ]
Kelly Cobiella had concluded her January 1 story:
ABC Skips How Anti-Bush "Constitutional Scholar" on Far-Left Without identifying David Cole as the "legal affairs correspondent" for the far-left magazine The Nation, Friday's World News Tonight on ABC featured his denigration of the probe into who leaked the secret eavesdropping story to the New York Times and his expert declaration that "the President of the United States violated a clear criminal prohibition on warrantless wiretapping." Reporter Pierre Thomas described Cole as a "constitutional scholar" and the on-screen graphic read: "Prof Georgetown Univ Law School." Cole's latest piece for The Nation calls Bush an "Emperor." Thomas did balance Cole with former federal prosecutor David Schertler, but the former homicide prosecutor has no equivalent ties to right-wing politics and did not make a declaration about which side of the dispute is correct. Substitute anchor Claire Shipman set up the story by mis-characterizing the surveillance of international contacts with those linked to terrorists: "Now to the administration's secret eavesdropping program in which the government monitors domestic conversations without a warrant." Thomas highlighted how "some constitutional scholars say the NSA spying is illegal and that the New York Times article disclosing it is a public service. They say this investigation is retribution." Cole argued: "On the face of it, there were two crimes committed here. One, a leak by a government official, something that happens almost every day in Washington. The other, the President of the United States violated a clear criminal prohibition on warrantless wiretapping. Yet which one is being investigated?" [This item was posted Friday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To contribute your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] "The Emperor's Powers" is the headline over Cole's latest piece for The Nation. The summary of the story, which is available online only to subscribers, on the magazine's Web page for him: "The Bush Administration believes it can ignore the rule of law -- in pursuit of torture, Pentagon surveillance of antiwar groups and now, domestic spying. We must continue to insist that in a democracy, the rule of law cannot be ignored." See: www.thenation.com The December 30 World News Tonight story in full, as corrected against the closed-captioning by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth: Claire Shipman: "Now to the administration's secret eavesdropping program in which the government monitors domestic conversations without a warrant. Today, the Justice Department launched a leak investigation to find out who in the government was responsible for leaking details of the program to the New York Times. Here's ABC's Pierre Thomas."
Pierre Thomas: "A visibly angry President Bush has all but campaigned for a leak investigation into who revealed the NSA's secret program to the New York Times."
Sheehan Is Clift's "Person of the Year" for Giving Bush "Hell" On the Christmas weekend edition of the McLaughlin Group, which featured the show's annual "Year-End Awards," Newsweek's Eleanor Clift named Cindy Sheehan her "Person of the Year." Clift championed Sheehan's negative impact on President Bush: "I give it to Cindy Sheehan, the Gold Star mother who gave the President a vacation from Hell and brought the war home in a way that it hadn't been before and set the stage for the deceleration in the President's poll ratings." [This item was posted Friday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To post your take, go to: newsbusters.org ] In other categories, Clift assigned the "Best Spin" to the "shameless spin" from the Bush White House of "allowing the terrorists to kill thousands of Americans in Iraq so that they won't kill thousands of Americans here." For "Fairest Rap," Clift forwarded: "The Bush administration misled us into war. They exaggerated the evidence they believed was true and left out all the caveats." And for "Best Photo-Op," Clift picked "President Bush trying to get out of a locked door. Wonderful metaphor for the trap he's in in Iraq."
Brokaw and Koppel Push Bush to Move Left and Raise Taxes Tom Brokaw and Ted Koppel demonstrated, during nearly an hour on the Christmas Day Meet the Press, how the old-guard mainstream media live in a world where conservatives are the impediment preventing rational policies. In the pre-taped session with Tim Russert, Brokaw fretted about how "no sacrifice is being asked of anyone at home" during the Iraq war, citing how "the President is not asking us to conserve oil or to ration gasoline or to push hard for alternative sources of energy in this conflict." Koppel chirped up: "Or to pay a nickel more in taxes." Brokaw contended that "unless we can build a coalition in the middle...we're going to be stuck in this place that is a polarized national capital when the rest of the country longs for pragmatic solutions and moving forward." Koppel charged that it is a "scandal" how "most Americans can't" get "the best medical care in the world" and "there are 43 million Americans who aren't getting any medical care at all," as if lack of insurance means no medical care. Brokaw related that is was "stunning" to him that the Bush administration "put as its highest priority the reform of Social Security and not health care in America." Earlier, in an intriguing assertion which would undermine much of the media hostility to Bush, Koppel had maintained that "if 9/11 had happened on Bill Clinton's watch, he would have gone into Iraq." Some excerpts, in time sequence, from the December 25 Meet the Press on NBC: # Clinton too would have invaded Iraq:
Brokaw: "There was not, you know, the French intelligence were sharing the same conclusions with the administration. I thought, I agree with you that I don't think that we pushed hard enough for vigorous debate. I think that on Capitol Hill that the debate was anemic, at best. You had Ted Kennedy and Senator Byrd, really, were the only ones speaking out with any kind of passion in the Senate, the people who-".
Brokaw: "The other thing that I think can happen domestically, Tim, is that, and I completely agree with Ted on this. I think that, and I've been talking about this around the country some -- this disconnect between those people who are in uniform and fighting this war over there and a large portion of our population, because no sacrifice is being asked of anyone at home. The President is not asking us to conserve oil or to ration gasoline or to push hard for alternative sources of energy in this conflict."
Russert: "Is there a story that you think was under-reported this year?" It takes a lot of chutzpah to complain about the size of entitlement liabilities when the national media are a huge impediment to addressing the problem since every time anyone suggests even a minor slowdown in the growth of spending on these programs, never mind any kind of real cut, the media roll out the potential "victims" and tell tales about seniors who will soon be forced to eat dog food. And who led the charge to create another entitlement program, prescription coverage in Medicare? Liberals and the news media.
CBS's Roberts Picks Up Democrat's Defense of Bush's "Spying" Though Bob Schieffer introduced the December 21 CBS Evening News by using loaded language as he pointed out how, "to protest the President's decision to continue spying on American citizens, a federal judge took the unprecedented step of resigning from the court that issues warrants in such cases," an event also highlighted by ABC and NBC, unlike those networks, CBS White House correspondent John Roberts informed viewers how "the President got support today from an unusual quarter: Democrat Jane Harman, a key figure on the House Intelligence Committee." He highlighted how she asserted that "I believe the program is essential to U.S. national security" and, in a slam at the leaker and the New York Times, that the "disclosure has damaged critical intelligence capabilities." Schieffer, however, remained most interested in the resignation. After Roberts wrapped up his story, Schieffer marveled to him: "I want to go back to this federal judge resigning. I must say in all my years in the news business, I've never heard of a federal judge resigning in protest over anything."
Naturally, no one pointed out that President Clinton appointed Judge Robertson. [This item was posted December 21 on the MRC's NewsBusters.org blog. See: newsbusters.org ] Harman's Web site does not have the statement posted (www.house.gov ), nor do the press (http://intelligence.house.gov/Releases.aspx ) or minority pages (http://intelligence.house.gov/Minority/default.aspx ) for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, on which she is the ranking Democrat.
On the December 21 CBS Evening News, over matching text on screen from Harman's statement, Roberts relayed:
Over on ABC's World News Tonight, anchor Elizabeth Vargas announced, over video of Robertson walking on a sidewalk:
In a story on the NBC Nightly News pegged to the debate over the Patriot Act, Kelly O'Donnell interjected:
New York Post Devotes Editorial to MRC's "Best of NQ" Awards The New York Post on Saturday devoted its entire editorial space to the editorial staff's favorite quotes from the MRC's "Best Notable Quotables of 2005: The Eighteenth Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting." To see which quotes the Post highlighted, in the December 31 editorial headlined "Hoist By Their Own Petard," go to: www.nypost.com
As noted in Friday's CyberAlert, the December 30 Rocky Mountain News in Denver featured a column, "Liberals Shine in Media," by one of our judges, Mike Rosen, with his favorite quotes from the "Best of" awards issue: www.rockymountainnews.com
"Top Ten George W. Bush New Year's Resolutions" From the January 2 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten George W. Bush New Year's Resolutions." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com 10. Fewer decisions based on wild, drunken hunches 9. Have N.S.A. find out what really happened between Nick and Jessica 8. Stop using Situation Room monitors to play X-Box 360 7. More C-SPAN, less "Yes, Dear" 6. Team up with leading scientists to make Cheetos even cheesier 5. To capture and bring to justice King Kong 4. Beat the twins at beer pong 3. Respond to reporters questions with, "Bitch, don't go there" 2. Scale back on grueling 12-hour work week 1. "Who needs resolutions? Everything is fine"
-- Brent Baker
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