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1. Jealous Journalists Take Shots at Integrity of FNC & Brit Hume Admitting he hadn't seen the interview, at about 4:15pm EST Wednesday on CNN's The Situation Room, Jack Cafferty charged that "it didn't exactly represent a profile in courage for the Vice President to wander over there to the F-word network for a sit-down with Brit Hume. I mean, that's a little like Bonnie interviewing Clyde, ain't it?" MSNBC's Keith Olbermann castigated Cheney for choosing the "more malleable cameras of Fox News" in place of a press conference. Over on the broadcast network evening newscasts, NBC's David Gregory, the most aggressive reporter in the White House press briefings, fired back at Hume, suggesting Cheney chose him because of his condemnation of the press corps: "Speaking out for the first time, the Vice President chose to speak with Fox anchor Brit Hume, a former White House correspondent, he has been outspoken in his criticism of the White House press corps' coverage of this story." CBS correspondent Jim Axelrod characterized FNC as a "friendly" venue: "The Vice President chose to make his first public comments on Fox News Channel's Special Report, a broadcast Mr. Cheney sees as friendly, and has turned to before." One doubts reporters presumed Vice President Al Gore was going to friendly media when he sat down with ABC, CBS, NBC or CNN. 2. Katie, Matt, Tim and Kelly Take Potshots at Cheney on NBC's Today It was open season on Vice President Dick Cheney on NBC's Today Wednesday morning as Katie Couric opened the show over a "What's the Wait?" graphic, continuing the media elite's whining that they aren't being spoon-fed information from the White House: "Good morning, shooting itself in the foot? More fallout over Vice President Cheney's hunting accident as the victim suffers a minor heart attack. And once again the Bush administration delays telling the press." 3. ABC's GMA Gives Team Clinton Forum to Lecture Cheney on Honesty Good Morning America's third day covering Vice President Dick Cheney's hunting accident was its biggest to date. On Monday's show, the 7am half hour started with three straight Cheney stories, followed by two more on Tuesday. On Wednesday, GMA devoted its first four items to the hunting accident. At one point, viewers were shown live video of the four reporters as Diane Sawyer informed: "Our reporters, our team standing by to cover all the angles this morning from the medical condition to political and even potential legal fallout." In the third story, Claire Shipman's hot pursuit of Cheney led to bizarre lecturing from Senator Hillary Clinton and Joe Lockhart, former press secretary to President Bill Clinton. Despite their affiliation with a presidency known for its own cover-ups and practice of releasing information on late Friday afternoons, Shipman treated both Clinton and Lockhart as paragons of forthrightness. In one clip, an angry looking Senator Hillary Clinton cautioned, "The refusal of this administration to level with the American people on matters large and small is very disturbing." 4. Gumbel: Lack of Blacks Makes Olympics "Look Like GOP Convention" Bryant Gumbel couldn't resist taking a racial shot at the Republican Party in a pre-Winter Olympic games commentary at the end of the February edition of his Real Sports magazine show on HBO. The former NBC and CBS morning news host concluded by telling viewers that as for the Winter Olympic games, "count me among those who don't like 'em and won't watch 'em." He condescendingly suggested viewers "try not to laugh when someone says these are the world's greatest athletes, despite a paucity of blacks that makes the Winter Games look like a GOP convention." Jealous Journalists Take Shots at Integrity of FNC & Brit Hume Admitting he hadn't seen the interview, at about 4:15pm EST Wednesday on CNN's The Situation Room, Jack Cafferty charged that "it didn't exactly represent a profile in courage for the Vice President to wander over there to the F-word network for a sit-down with Brit Hume. I mean, that's a little like Bonnie interviewing Clyde, ain't it?" Cafferty soon called FNC a "safe haven" for Dick Cheney and predicted "he's not going to get any high hard ones from anybody at the F-word network." CNN colleague Lou Dobbs opened his show by complaining: "Vice President Cheney finally talking about his shooting accident, but to only one news organization. Is that full disclosure or is it blatant news management?" Guest Michael Goodwin of the New York Daily News called it "ridiculous" for Cheney to give "one interview to his favorite network." And later, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann castigated Cheney for choosing the "more malleable cameras of Fox News" in place of a press conference. Over on the broadcast network evening newscasts, NBC's David Gregory, the most aggressive reporter in the White House press briefings, fired back at Hume, suggesting either Hume had an anti-White House press corps axe to grind or at least that Cheney chose him because of that opinion: "Speaking out for the first time, the Vice President chose to speak with Fox anchor Brit Hume, a former White House correspondent, he has been outspoken in his criticism of the White House press corps' coverage of this story." On the CBS Evening News, correspondent Jim Axelrod characterized FNC as a "friendly" venue: "The Vice President chose to make his first public comments on Fox News Channel's Special Report, a broadcast Mr. Cheney sees as friendly, and has turned to before." One doubts reporters presumed Vice President Al Gore was going to friendly media when he sat down with ABC, CBS, NBC or CNN. Axelrod also described Karl Rove as "President Bush's political enforcer" and asserted that "one Republican insider" claimed that in the hunting accident case "secrecy" had come to look "like conspiracy." On ABC's World News Tonight, co-anchor Diane Sawyer revealed what animated the ABC News staff during the day: "You know, Elizabeth, listening to George [Stephanopoulos], I'm thinking of our conversation in the newsroom today about President Bush and his own hunting mishap." [This item was posted Wednesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your views, go to: newsbusters.org ] Hiding FNC: Of the three broadcast network evening newscasts, only the NBC Nightly News showed their Cheney/Hume clips in full frame -- with the bottom left corner FNC logo displayed as well as the text and labeling across the bottom of the screen. Those who watched ABC's World News Tonight or the CBS Evening News saw a zoomed-in blurry version of Cheney so ABC and CBS could eliminate the FNC logo, though both put "Fox News Channel" in small text in the top right of their screens. NBC version to right [online and in NewsBusters posting], ABC and CBS displays below in transcripts of those newscasts. Some partial and full transcripts for the Wednesday afternoon, February 15 coverage of Cheney's decision to sit for an interview, in his office, with FNC's Brit Hume, a session taped at 2pm EST and which aired on the 6pm EST Special Report with Brit Hume. FoxNews.com has posted video and a transcript which show Hume covered every question you could expect a journalist to pose: www.foxnews.com # CNN's The Situation Room at about 4:15pm EST, as caught by the MRC's Megan McCormack:
Wolf Blitzer, in DC: "What did you make of Dick Cheney's interview today?"
Lou Dobbs opened: "Tonight, Vice President Cheney finally talking about his shooting accident, but to only one news organization. Is that full disclosure or is it blatant news management?" Dobbs refused to say "Fox News Channel" as he quipped: "Vice President Cheney chose to break his silence, not with the press conference or before the White House press corps, but in a one-on-one interview with a news organization whose location and identity we can't disclose tonight." In a mid-show guest segment, Michael Goodwin, the former Executive Editor of the New York Daily News, who is now a columnist, scolded: "I do think that the Vice President has acted foolishly here. I think that putting it out the way he did. And then acting today even, just giving one interview to his favorite network, I think is ridiculous."
Following the Raddatz piece on the FNC interview and some q&a with George Stephanopoulos about whether Cheney succeeded in capping the story (probably), co-anchor Diane Sawyer revealed what animated the ABC News staff during the day:
Jim Axelrod began: "Well, Bob, CBS News has learned that it was President Bush's political enforcer, Karl Rove, who finally got the Vice President to speak publicly about his hunting accident. And Rove pushed Mr. Cheney hard, worried that the story was moving from distraction to political problem."
Schieffer: "Well, Jim, I know you said that Karl Rove was the one that convinced the Vice President to do this. I sort of go back to the days of Lyndon Johnson, and kind of imagine what he might have done had poor Vice President Humphrey gotten involved in something like this. Is there any evidence that the President himself got into this or talked to the Vice President about it?"
Bob Schieffer: "I want to turn now to Gloria Borger, who broke the story last night of how the way all this was handled has created a real divide between the President's people and the Vice President's staff. Gloria, we heard the Vice President describe this as one of the worst moments in his life. How is he holding up? He, after all, is not in the greatest of health."
Gregory pretty much stuck to relaying what Cheney said in the FNC interview, but he couldn't resist this dig at Hume:
Katie, Matt, Tim and Kelly Take Potshots at Cheney on NBC's Today It was open season on Vice President Dick Cheney on NBC's Today Wednesday morning as Katie Couric opened the show over a "What's the Wait?" graphic, continuing the media elite's whining that they aren't being spoon-fed information from the White House: "Good morning, shooting itself in the foot? More fallout over Vice President Cheney's hunting accident as the victim suffers a minor heart attack. And once again the Bush administration delays telling the press." From Italy, Couric and Matt Lauer teased the upcoming segment with Tim Russert. Couric: "But first off still some rough sledding for the Bush administration over Vice President Cheney's hunting incident, right?" Lauer: "Yeah that's right Katie and we should also tell you that the man Vice President Cheney accidentally shot suffered a minor heart attack while still in the hospital on Tuesday. President Bush's press secretary knew about that before his news conference that same day but he didn't tell anyone. The administration was already under fire because it waited a day to tell the press when the accident happened. So what's going on? And is Vice President Cheney making a bad situation even worse by keeping silent about it? We're gonna have much more on that, Katie, with Tim Russert in just a couple of minutes." [This item, by MRC news analyst Geoff Dickens, was posted Wednesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To post your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] Kelly O'Donnell's setup piece painted a bleak situation for the White House: "As the shooting victim's condition worsened the political consequences and complications for this White House became more difficult as the administration struggles to deal with events both within and beyond their control." O'Donnell raised doubts about the administration's candor: "Although he knew about it before appearing on camera McClellan did not tell reporters about Whittington's heart attack. A fact the hospital announced later. McClellan held that back and made only this reference to Whittington's condition." This led into Russert's segment that was headlined: "Cheney Under Fire, Things Get Worse For VP & Friend." The following is the full exchange between Lauer, in Italy, and Russert in Washington, DC:
Lauer: "Alright Kelly thanks very much. Kelly O'Donnell at the White House this morning. Tim Russert is NBC's Washington bureau chief and moderator of Meet the Press. Tim, good morning to you."
ABC's GMA Gives Team Clinton Forum to Lecture Cheney on Honesty Good Morning America's third day covering Vice President Dick Cheney's hunting accident was its biggest to date. On Monday's show, the 7am half hour started with three straight Cheney stories, followed by two more on Tuesday. On Wednesday, GMA devoted its first four items to the hunting accident. At one point, viewers were shown live video of the four reporters as Diane Sawyer informed: "Our reporters, our team standing by to cover all the angles this morning from the medical condition to political and even potential legal fallout." In the third story, Claire Shipman's hot pursuit of Cheney led to bizarre lecturing from Senator Hillary Clinton and Joe Lockhart, former press secretary to President Bill Clinton. Despite their affiliation with a presidency known for its own cover-ups and practice of releasing information on late Friday afternoons, Shipman treated both Clinton and Lockhart as paragons of forthrightness. In one clip, an angry looking Senator Hillary Clinton cautioned, "The refusal of this administration to level with the American people on matters large and small is very disturbing." Later, Joe Lockhart advised: "When you hold it back, you raise a whole series of issues of why you're holding it back and what else happened and really what else is going on in the government that you're not telling us. It is PR 101 and they failed PR 101 here." [This item, by MRC news analyst Brian Boyd, was posted late Wednesday morning on the MRC blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your take, go to: newsbusters.org ] In the first story in the series, ABC's Mike von Fremd concluded with, "As for Harry Whittington, the District Attorney, who has already said this was an accident and no crime was committed, says that in the unlikely event that Whittington takes a turn for the worse and dies, that would immediately spur a new report that could lead to a grand jury investigation." Hey, a reporter can dream, can't he?
Now, the full transcript of Shipman's February 16 GMA story, in which both Hillary Clinton and Joe Lockhart were treated as authorities on the benefits of full disclosure:
Senator Hillary Clinton: "The refusal of this administration to level with the American people on matters large and small is very disturbing."
Gumbel: Lack of Blacks Makes Olympics "Look Like GOP Convention" Bryant Gumbel couldn't resist taking a racial shot at the Republican Party in a pre-Winter Olympic games commentary at the end of the February edition of his Real Sports magazine show on HBO. The former NBC and CBS morning news host concluded by telling viewers that as for the Winter Olympic games, "count me among those who don't like 'em and won't watch 'em." He condescendingly suggested viewers "try not to laugh when someone says these are the world's greatest athletes, despite a paucity of blacks that makes the Winter Games look like a GOP convention." Gumbel's remarks came at the very end of the February edition of Real Sports, a monthly sports news magazine show which includes Bernard Goldberg amongst its correspondents. It first aired on Tuesday night, February 7, a few days before the Olympics opened in Italy. Wednesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org, Dave Pierre posted an item on Gumbel's blast with credit to some news outlets, a radio talk show host and blogs which had picked up on the slam, probably based on an initial press release from HBO. I was unaware of any of those pre-NewsBusters postings/on-air comments, but was still able to immediately enhance Pierre's item with a still shot of Gumbel as well as a video/audio clip since I was planning to post my own item on it. Thanks to the inclusion of the video, the DrudgeReport.com on Thursday morning highlighted the NewsBusters posting. My brother had called me on Monday to tell me how several kids in New York City, who happen to be black and for whom he's an ice hockey coach, were upset by Gumbel's dismissal of the Winter Games for not having any black athletes. Seeing potential that Gumbel may have said something politically incendiary, on Monday night, February 13, I recorded on DVR an 11:45pm EST re-play of the February 7 Real Sports. On Wednesday I transferred the MPG to a portable drive, brought it into the MRC and watched Gumbel's end of show commentary. When I heard the racial shot, I took a still shot and transcribed the entire commentary in anticipation of posting a blog item and a CyberAlert item when the Cheney matter calmed down. But Pierre beat me to it. So after he posted Wednesday night, I added my still shot to his item, then rendered a 30-second video clip and added that too. For the NewsBusters item, with video of the key sentence in both Real and Windows Media formats, as well as an MP3 audio clip, go to: newsbusters.org
The MRC's Michael Gibbons will, soon after this e-mail is sent and posted, add the video and audio to this posting on mrc.org. HBO's page for Real Sports: www.hbo.com Previewing a 1989 NBC prime-time special, "The Racial Attitudes and Consciousness Exam (RACE)," Gumbel revealed how he presumes conservatives are racists: "This test is not going to tell you whether you're a racist or a liberal." For dozens more videos of Gumbel's liberal advocacy and bashing of conservatives, as well as links to many more MRC articles about Gumbel's bias on NBC's Today and CBS's Early Show, check out our special Web section, "Bryant Gumbel: Liberal Activist Masquerading as Impartial Journalist," at: www.mrc.org
-- Brent Baker
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