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1. Olbermann: Limbaugh 'Worst' for 'Following Ethics' of bin Laden MSNBC's Keith Olbermann on Tuesday night targeted "comedian" Rush Limbaugh as his "Worst Person in the World" for "suggesting that civilian deaths in Lebanon are necessary to stop terror." Employing a mockingly braggadocios voice to try to impersonate Limbaugh, Olbermann read a sentence from Limbaugh and then asserted that Limbaugh had echoed "something another commentator said nine years ago," namely Osama bin Laden. Olbermann read the bin Laden quote, without any mocking impersonation, and then concluded the August 1 Countdown segment: "Rush Limbaugh, following the logic and ethics of Osama bin Laden, today's Worst Person in the World!" 2. Williams Skips Declining Troop Deaths, Cites Total 'Death Toll' A night after ABC anchor Charles Gibson highlighted some good news on the Iraq front -- how "the U.S. military death toll in Iraq fell in July, for the third-straight month" to "the third-lowest monthly death toll in two years" -- NBC anchor Brian Williams on Tuesday chose to put a downbeat spin on the situation in Iraq as he provided only the total number of U.S. deaths without any mention of whether they are increasing or decreasing. On the August 1 NBC Nightly News, Williams, who on Monday did not report the declining monthly deaths, set up a story from Iraq: "This has also been an especially deadly day in Iraq where dozens of soldiers and civilians were killed and tonight we have an update on the number of American troops killed since the invasion: 2,579. Meantime, attacks and kidnapings are getting worse in the capital city. Our report from there tonight from NBC's Ned Colt..." On screen as Williams spoke, "DEATH TOLL" with this beneath: "2579 TROOPS SINCE THE INVASION." 3. In '59, NY Times Called Castro 'Conservative,' Justified Killings Now that Fidel's reign may have ended, the New York Times Web site included a sidebar "From the Archives," with links to PDF versions of their own coverage of Castro's rise to power in the late 1950s. At least one reflected an incredible pro-Castro bias, with the Times justifying Castro's executions of political opponents, touting his genius and insisting that his new government wasn't communist but "conservative." In the 1959 "Week in Review" article, Herbert Matthews oozed: "Whatever one wants to think, everybody here seems agreed that Dr. Castro is one of the most extraordinary figures ever to appear on the Latin-American scene. He is by any standards a man of destiny. Cubans wish that the United States would realize he is the creature of his race, his history and his traditions, and above all of the horror and tyranny of the seven-year reign of Fulgencio Batista." 4. You Read It Here First: On FNC, Pinkerton Chides CNN on Hezbollah You read it here first. Picking up on some CyberAlert/NewsBusters items by the MRC's Rich Noyes on how CNN covered the Hezbollah terrorist group, on FNC's Fox Newswatch over the weekend Jim Pinkerton recited how CNN's Nic Robertson relayed Hezbollah propaganda and CNN's Anderson Cooper later showed how Hezbollah manipulates the media. Olbermann: Limbaugh 'Worst' for 'Following Ethics' of bin Laden MSNBC's Keith Olbermann on Tuesday night targeted "comedian" Rush Limbaugh as his "Worst Person in the World" for "suggesting that civilian deaths in Lebanon are necessary to stop terror." Employing a mockingly braggadocios voice to try to impersonate Limbaugh, Olbermann read a sentence from Limbaugh and then asserted that Limbaugh had echoed "something another commentator said nine years ago," namely Osama bin Laden. Olbermann read the bin Laden quote, without any mocking impersonation, and then concluded the August 1 Countdown segment: "Rush Limbaugh, following the logic and ethics of Osama bin Laden, today's Worst Person in the World!" A video and audio clip will be added to the posted version of this CyberAlert. But in the meantime, to watch the Real or Windows Media video, or to listen to the MP3 audio clip, go to the NewsBusters.org blog node where this item was first posted on Tuesday night: newsbusters.org
Olbermann's announcement of the winner in the daily segment in which he lists three candidates: Surprisingly, there's nothing on the Media Matters for America Web site -- Olbermann's usual source for attacks on conservative media figures -- about this analysis by Limbaugh, so I don't know where Olbermann got his Limbaugh quote. Limbaugh beat out the "worser" runner-up, a Rochester, New York man who had asked his employer for a paid leave of absence to take care of his three-year-old son suffering from cancer, though the son was perfectly healthy, a scam he had pulled with a previous employer.
Williams Skips Declining Troop Deaths, Cites Total 'Death Toll'
A night after ABC anchor Charles Gibson highlighted some good news on the Iraq front -- how "the U.S. military death toll in Iraq fell in July, for the third-straight month" to "the third-lowest monthly death toll in two years" -- NBC anchor Brian Williams on Tuesday chose to put a downbeat spin on the situation in Iraq as he provided only the total number of U.S. deaths without any mention of whether they are increasing or decreasing. On the August 1 NBC Nightly News, Williams, who on Monday did not report the declining monthly deaths, set up a story from Iraq: On screen as Williams spoke, "DEATH TOLL" with this beneath: "2579 TROOPS SINCE THE INVASION." [This item was posted Tuesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]
An August 1 CyberAlert item recounted:
In '59, NY Times Called Castro 'Conservative,' Justified Killings As the totalitarian communist dictator of Cuba for 47 years, Fidel Castro repressed those who worked for democracy, human rights and a free press. Yet through the decades, many in the American media have maintained their romanticized mythology of Castro as a progressive revolutionary icon, provider of "free" health care, a Latin American David vs. the Goliath of the United States. In contrast to their coverage of right-wing dictators, like Chile's Augusto Pinochet, journalists do not often mention those killed, imprisoned or exiled by Castro's ruthless "revolution," but treat him as a celebrity head of state. Just a few years ago, ABC's Barbara Walters trekked to Havana to produce yet another soft feature on the dictator. "For Castro, freedom starts with education," Walters oozed on the October 11, 2002 20/20. "And if literacy alone is any yardstick, Cuba would rank as one of the freest nations on Earth." See: www.mrc.org [This item, by Rich Noyes, was posted Tuesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Now that Fidel's reign may have ended, it was interesting to see that the New York Times Web site included a sidebar "From the Archives," with links to PDF versions of their own coverage of Castro's rise to power in the late 1950s: www.nytimes.com I didn't read them all, but one that I clicked on showed an incredible pro-Castro bias, with the Times justifying Castro's executions of political opponents, touting his genius and insisting that his new government wasn't communist but "conservative." Herbert L. Matthews wrote the article, headlined "Castro Aims Reflect Character of Cubans," which the Times Web site indicates originally appeared on page E6 ("Week in Review" section) of the January 18, 1959 edition, just a few days after Castro seized Cuba. The Times's subheadline on Castro: "He Is a Creature of His Country and He Is Followed as a Hero." Here is an excerpt, beginning with the first paragraph: The hunted young man who for three hours whispered his passionate hopes and ideals into my ear in the gloomy jungle depths of the Sierra Maestra at dawn on Feb. 17, 1957, is now the chief power in Cuba. In the eyes of nearly all his compatriots, Dr. Fidel Castro is the greatest hero that their history has known. People in the United States are now disturbed by the executions of men who, Cubans are convinced, were torturers and killers under Gen. Fulgencio Batista. The Cuban point of view can be simply stated. For seven years, Cuba lived through the most brutal reign of terror in recent history. Cubans know this, because there is hardly a family in Cuba that did not have a member at least arrested and at worst tortured and killed by President Batista's soldiers and police. Moreover, in every city, town and village, the killers and torturers are known. Then came the revolution, and much to everyone's surprise, especially the Cubans, there was no blood bath. In the first twenty-four hours in Havana, the riff-raff and gangsters ran around looting; but as soon as the 26th of July Movement and the other organized rebel groups got going, order was restored. It had been taken for granted that there would be fearful mob violence because of the bitterness and hatred of the people against the tormenters. Nothing of the sort took place. However, Fidel Castro and the new Provisional Government felt, in the first place, that justice must be done and, in the second place, that, if the authorities did not mete out justice in an orderly way, the people would exercise lynch law and in the process there would be some private vengeance and some innocent victims.... The sensational stories [about the executions] that some American correspondents sent and the reaction in the United States astounded and hurt Cubans greatly. To anyone writing about Cuba at this moment it's necessary to keep a basic fact in mind. Dr. Castro is not in any sense different in character from his fellow Cubans. Those who want to condemn him must condemn all Cubans, as there are very few Cubans indeed who would disapprove of the executions that have been and are taking place. Two years ago Dr. Castro was a revolutionary pure and simple. He was then 30 years old. As an undergraduate of 21 at the University of Havana, he had been a wild harum-scarum, so careless of politics that he was involved with student organizations containing Communists. Neither the Batista regime nor the United States Embassy in Havana was ever able to present proof that Fidel personally had been a Communist. He himself always denied that he knowingly had anything to do with communism.... The ministerial Cabinet in office today consists mainly of older men and, by any standard that can be applied, it is economically and politically conservative.... Whatever one wants to think, everybody here seems agreed that Dr. Castro is one of the most extraordinary figures ever to appear on the Latin-American scene. He is by any standards a man of destiny. Cubans wish that the United States would realize he is the creature of his race, his history and his traditions, and above all of the horror and tyranny of the seven-year reign of Fulgencio Batista. END of Excerpt
That's online at: www.nytimes.com
You Read It Here First: On FNC, Pinkerton Chides CNN on Hezbollah You read it here first. Picking up on some CyberAlert/NewsBusters items by the MRC's Rich Noyes on how CNN covered the Hezbollah terrorist group, on FNC's Fox Newswatch over the weekend Jim Pinkerton recited how CNN's Nic Robertson relayed Hezbollah propaganda and CNN's Anderson Cooper later showed how Hezbollah manipulates the media.
On the July 29 Fox Newswatch, Pinkerton, a columnist for Newsday, observed of media coverage of the Israel-Hezbollh war: The three CyberAlert items on the topic, in date sequence:
# July 20, CNN's 'Exclusive:' Nic Robertson's Forum for Hezbollah Agitprop: For full details and a video clip: www.mrc.org
-- Brent Baker
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