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1. On MSNBC, Alter Shoe-Horns Bush Slam Into Don Imus Debate On Tuesday's Hardball, Newsweek's Jonathan Alter managed to shoe-horn an anti-Bush jab into a discussion about Don Imus. When substitute host David Gregory asked Alter to comment on what the Imus flare-up meant for the overall discussion about race, NBC's contributing correspondent made a tortured argument that the uproar over Imus was a sign of "a thirst" from the public for the kind of accountability that they're not getting from the Bush administration: "There has been such a negative reaction against President Bush's failure to apologize, failure to seem like he is being accountable to where the people are, that we've got more of a thirst for people apologizing when they screw up, and then changing their behavior as a result of having been called to account." 2. Broadway Theater Stages a Bush-'Whacked' Assassination Drama On the heels of last year's "documentary" by Gabriel Range concocting an assassination of President Bush in "Death of A President," Bill Hutchinson of the New York Daily News reported a new play in the Big Apple that also treads along the Bush-assassination theme. The playwright's thinly disguised Bush-resembling fictional President gets "whacked like Julius Caesar by a confidant." 3. CNN's O'Brien Cheers Kucinich for Taking on Big Oil: 'Go for It' Delivering some cheerleading for a far-left politician, on Wednesday's American Morning on CNN outgoing co-host Miles O'Brien touted how dark horse Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich "flexes his muscle with big oil over the skyrocketing price of gas, and we say go to it." O'Brien's remark was made during a lead-in to a segment by CNN senior business correspondent Ali Velshi. Velshi's report gave some details of the ultra-liberal Congressman's efforts: Dennis Kucinich, he's the Chairman of the domestic policy subcommittee, has written letters to seven major oil companies, asking them a question we would like an answer to -- explaining the high price of gas..." 4. O'Donnell on Imus: 'Thought Police' Leads to Guantanamo Bay In a leap of logic too bizarre for even Joy Behar, on Wednesday's The View, in a discussion about Don Imus's racist and sexist remarks about the Rutgers women's basketball team, Rosie O'Donnell warned that "it's not a freedom if you outlaw certain words or thoughts, because then the thought police come and then before you know it, everyone's in Guantanamo Bay without representation." O'Donnell's leap from Imus to Guantanamo prompted Behar to exclaim: "What a jump!" A bit earlier on the April 11 show, O'Donnell had fretted about how the Imus controversy is distracting the public from all the deaths in Iraq: "He made that comment on April 4th and it's been all over te news, it's been the top lead story everywhere. Well, since then, 24 American soldiers have died and over 90 have been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. My point is, look how we're distracted. Howard Stern said a bad word, Anna Nicole's baby, well don't pay attention to the fact that we're in the middle of a war." On MSNBC, Alter Shoe-Horns Bush Slam Into Don Imus Debate On Tuesday's Hardball, Newsweek's Jonathan Alter managed to shoe-horn an anti-Bush jab into a discussion about Don Imus. When substitute host David Gregory asked Alter to comment on what the Imus flare-up meant for the overall discussion about race, NBC's contributing correspondent made a tortured argument that the uproar over Imus was a sign of "a thirst" from the public for the kind of accountability that they're not getting from the Bush administration: "There has been such a negative reaction against President Bush's failure to apologize, failure to seem like he is being accountable to where the people are, that we've got more of a thirst for people apologizing when they screw up, and then changing their behavior as a result of having been called to account."
[This item, by Geoff Dickens, was posted Wednesday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]
David Gregory: "Jonathan, let me start with you. We talked a little bit earlier on the phone about whether this incident has created a race moment for America. Do you think that is the case? And how would you define that?"
Broadway Theater Stages a Bush-'Whacked' Assassination Drama On the heels of last year's "documentary" by Gabriel Range concocting an assassination of President Bush in "Death of A President," Bill Hutchinson of the New York Daily News reported a new play in the Big Apple that also treads along the Bush-assassination theme. The playwright's thinly disguised Bush-resembling fictional President gets "whacked like Julius Caesar by a confidant." [This item, by Tim Graham, was posted Wednesday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The April 11 Daily News reported: "A famed city theater group is inviting controversy by staging a play in which a character thinly veiled as President Bush gets assassinated. 'President and Man' begins a five-day run at The Duke on 42nd St. tonight as one of eight one-act plays staged by the Naked Angels Theater Company, whose members include Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick. Conservatives are already panning it as another sick liberal jab at the President."
The headline was "Right-wingers outraged by Prez slay play." In this case, the MRC's Tim Graham took the phone call: Hutchinson then turned to the playwright to contradict the critic, who had no idea this play was so brief: "Cancelmi scoffed at Republicans and conservatives for knocking his 15-minute play, adding that such themes are 'trodden ground' in the theater. 'You don't have to look very far into Shakespeare's plays to find examples of regicide,' he said.
The April 11 New York Daily News article: www.nydailynews.com
CNN's O'Brien Cheers Kucinich for Taking on Big Oil: 'Go for It' Delivering some cheerleading for a far-left politician, on Wednesday's American Morning on CNN outgoing co-host Miles O'Brien touted how dark horse Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich "flexes his muscle with big oil over the skyrocketing price of gas, and we say go to it." O'Brien's remark was made during a lead-in to a segment by CNN senior business correspondent Ali Velshi. Velshi's report gave some details of the ultra-liberal Congressman's efforts: Dennis Kucinich, he's the Chairman of the domestic policy subcommittee, has written letters to seven major oil companies, asking them a question we would like an answer to -- explaining the high price of gas..." [This item is adapted from a Wednesday posting, by Matthew Balan, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]
Velshi elaborated: "So Kucinich is asking these oil companies to explain particularly refining. He cited examples in California where he says prices of refining a barrel of oil have jumped from $17 a barrel five years ago to $39 a barrel, and that's creating a big upward swing in the price of gasoline. As the segment closed, O'Brien and Velshi listed some of the reasons why new refineries have not been built.
O'Brien: "No one wants a refinery in their backyard."
O'Brien and Velshi, however, failed to mention two other major reasons there aren't any new refineries: too many regulations and litigation costs. Check: www.cnsnews.com
O'Donnell on Imus: 'Thought Police' Leads to Guantanamo Bay In a leap of logic too bizarre for even Joy Behar, on Wednesday's The View, in a discussion about Don Imus's racist and sexist remarks about the Rutgers women's basketball team, Rosie O'Donnell warned that "it's not a freedom if you outlaw certain words or thoughts, because then the thought police come and then before you know it, everyone's in Guantanamo Bay without representation." O'Donnell's leap from Imus to Guantanamo prompted Behar to exclaim: "What a jump!" A bit earlier on the April 11 show, O'Donnell had fretted about how the Imus controversy is distracting the public from all the deaths in Iraq: "He made that comment on April 4th and it's been all over te news, it's been the top lead story everywhere. Well, since then, 24 American soldiers have died and over 90 have been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. My point is, look how we're distracted. Howard Stern said a bad word, Anna Nicole's baby, well don't pay attention to the fact that we're in the middle of a war." [This item is based on a transcript the MRC's Justin McCarthy created for a NewsBusters.org posting: newsbusters.org ]
Guest panelist Jamie-Lynn Sigler, of HBO's The Sopranos, got O'Donnell going with this observation: "I think people who have a public voice just need to be conscious then of what they're saying and the effect that it can have and understand that there's going to be consequences if they say things like that." Earlier in the segment, Elisabeth Hasselbeck, and surprisingly, Joy Behar commented on the lack of moral authority Imus' harshest critics, Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton possess.
Joy Behar: "There's also something about casting the stone, when you, everybody else is so innocent? You know."
-- Brent Baker
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