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The 2,515th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
6:55am EDT, Wednesday October 24, 2007 (Vol. Twelve; No. 188)
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1. NBC Nightly News Presumes Global Warming to Blame for Wild Fires
ABC and CBS stuck Tuesday night with news stories on the impact of the roaring California wild fires, but as houses were still burning NBC Nightly News found it an opportune time to make the case that global warming caused the fires. NBC's sole expert, however, delivered a circular argument in which the lack of scientific proof did not detract at all from his media-shared presumption that anything bad which occurs in the environment can be tied to global warming. After reporter Anne Thompson cautioned scientists say you can't know "after just one season" whether warming is to blame, Princeton professor Michael Oppenheimer, a leading global warming alarmist who, NBC failed to mention, serves as a science adviser to Environmental Defense, reasoned: "The weather we've seen this fall may or may not be due to the global warming trend, but it's certainly a clear picture of what the future is going to look like if we don't act quickly to cut emissions of the greenhouse gases." With two uses of the "could" caveat, Thompson asserted: "A new study out this week suggests the impact of climate change could be stronger and sooner than expected. And one of the predicted impacts from climate change could be more wildfires."

2. CBS's Smith on Clintons: 'Dynamic Duo' Are Still 'Rock Stars'
Early Show co-host Harry Smith adoringly introduced a Tuesday interview with Sally Bedell Smith, author of the new book For Love of Politics: Bill and Hillary Clinton, the White House Years: "Brad and Angelina, Charles and Diana, Burton and Taylor, and you can count Bill and Hillary's union as one of the most scrutinized marriages of our time. A simple Google search reveals there are more than 40 books about this still-young couple. They met in law school, two bookish, wonkish, idealistic kids who somehow transformed themselves into political rock stars. Remember when Bill grabbed a sax on the Arsenio Hall show during the '92 campaign? Now it's Hillary who's handling Letterman and trading one-liners with Jon Stewart on the Daily Show." Despite Bill Clinton being one of the most famous adulterers of all time, Smith managed to get through the interview without ever discussing the former President's infidelity. Instead, CBS's Smith fretted about how the "dynamic duo" will overshadow a vice presidential nominee: "What are you thinking in terms of the dynamic of the two of them? How do you fit into that?"

3. ABC's Ross Focuses on Giuliani's Link to Accused Pedophile Priest
On Tuesday's Good Morning America, reporter Brian Ross continued his critical series of investigations into Republican presidential candidates. Just two weeks after he slammed Fred Thompson for his role in the 1973 Watergate investigation, the ABC correspondent looked into the fact that Rudy Giuliani's consulting firm has employed a priest that has been accused of molesting children in the '1970s. Of course, neither Ross, nor Good Morning America, have seen fit to investigate Hillary Clinton's hiring of Sandy Berger, a man who has been convicted of stealing documents from the National Archives and stuffing them down his pants. Ross has similarly ignored the growing scandal of poor Chinese workers donating large sums of money to the Hillary Clinton campaign. Ross's October 23 report focused on Monsignor Alan Placa, who has been accused of molesting two boys in New York in the 1970s.

4. Worst Notable Quotables of the Past 20 Years: The Clintons
Now Online with 50 Flash Videos: 20th Anniversary Notable Quotables with more than 100 of the most outrageous quotes from our past two decades, many accompanied by audio and video clips. This week, the MRC's Rich Noyes is posting, on the MRC's NewsBusters blog, a daily installment of quotes from the anniversary issue. The one to be posted Wednesday: The media's love affair with Bill and Hillary Clinton. For 15 years, liberal reporters have made themselves looked like the sycophants they are, as they made excuse after excuse for the Clintons' moral failings even as they applauded the couple's supposed greatness. But perhaps no one looked sillier than Dan Rather on May 15, 2001, when the then-CBS News anchor was asked on Fox's The O'Reilly Factor if he thought Bill Clinton was honest.

5. Don't Miss 'NewsBusted' Comedy Videos Making Fun of Liberals
Have you yet watched the MRC's "NewsBusted" comedy video show posted on our NewsBusters blog? If not, a fresh two-minute edition was posted Tuesday. "NewsBusted" is a new, twice a week, comedy show with jokes about politics, Hollywood and media bias.


 

NBC Nightly News Presumes Global Warming
to Blame for Wild Fires

     ABC and CBS stuck Tuesday night with news stories on the impact of the roaring California wild fires, but as houses were still burning NBC Nightly News found it an opportune time to make the case that global warming caused the fires. NBC's sole expert, however, delivered a circular argument in which the lack of scientific proof did not detract at all from his media-shared presumption that anything bad which occurs in the environment can be tied to global warming. After reporter Anne Thompson cautioned scientists say you can't know "after just one season" whether warming is to blame, Princeton professor Michael Oppenheimer, a leading global warming alarmist who, NBC failed to mention, serves as a science adviser to Environmental Defense, reasoned: "The weather we've seen this fall may or may not be due to the global warming trend, but it's certainly a clear picture of what the future is going to look like if we don't act quickly to cut emissions of the greenhouse gases."

     Environmental Defense's page for Oppenheimer: www.environmentaldefense.org

     Standing in smoldering ruins of a home in San Diego County, anchor Brian Williams introduced the story: "This has been the driest season on record, unusually severe, that's leading some people here to wonder: Are these fires somehow a result of climate change? The UN panel on global warming did warn that we would see more wildfires, so is there a real connection? We've asked our chief environmental affairs correspondent, Anne Thompson. But Thompson is hardly in a position to provide an independent assessment. In August, she filed a story smearing critics of global warming panic as "deniers" and "denier groups" and, the day Al Gore won his Nobel Peace Prize, she endorsed his position on the threat of climate change.

     With two uses of the "could" caveat, Thompson asserted in her Tuesday piece: "A new study out this week suggests the impact of climate change could be stronger and sooner than expected. And one of the predicted impacts from climate change could be more wildfires." She soon added: "The wildfires are just one example of this fall's extreme weather: Tornadoes in Michigan, a lack off fall color in the Carolinas, the spectacular foliage muted by drought and warm temperatures....And here in Minnesota's twin cities, they are still awaiting the first official frost."

     [This item was posted Tuesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     For Thompson's smear of global warming panic doubters, see the August 16 CyberAlert article, "NBC News Joins Newsweek in Smearing Global Warming 'Deniers,'" online at: www.mediaresearch.org

     The October 15 CyberAlert recounted Thompson's endorsement of Gore's views:

She [Thompson] enthused [on NBC Nightly News] that a presidential bid by Gore is "a tantalizing prospect," though "few expect" it to happen. Thompson concluded by seeing complete vindication: "Gore's co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, left no doubt that man is responsible for global warming. The debate now is over how much the climate will change if nothing is done."

     For the entire posting: www.mrc.org

     (MRC analyst Kyle Drennen's NewsBusters posting, "CBS's Pelley Uses Wildfires to Prove Global Warming," looked at a Sunday 60 Minutes report which argued warming has increased the frequency and size of "mega-fires" in Western forests: newsbusters.org )

     After Katrina, the media were full of claims that it represented a dire trend of more powerful tornadoes fueled by warmer water. Two hurricane seasons later, there have been fewer and milder hurricanes yet I'm waiting to hear from any chastened journalists. If there aren't any huge California wild fires for a few years, what are the chances Anne Thompson or NBC News will see that short term reality as disproving what they are using a couple of years and one really bad week to prove is a long term danger?

     A transcript of the October 23 NBC Nightly News story:

     BRIAN WILLIAMS: As we all know, wildfires in this area are nothing new. In fact, we see them just about every year. As Don [Teague] mentioned, the last benchmark was the Cedar fire, but this has been the driest season on record, unusually severe, that's leading some people here to wonder: Are these fires somehow a result of climate change? The UN panel on global warming did warn that we would see more wildfires, so is there a real connection? We've asked our chief environmental affairs correspondent, Anne Thompson.

     ANNE THOMPSON: Wildfires so unusual today may not be in the future. A new study out this week suggests the impact of climate change could be stronger and sooner than expected. And one of the predicted impacts from climate change could be more wildfires.
     PROFESSOR MICHAEL OPPENHEIMER, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY: The study is very disturbing because it means we're lunging forward faster and faster at an accelerating pace, pouring emissions into the atmosphere while the earth continues to warm.
     THOMPSON: China and India's growing economies are spewing more carbon dioxide into the air and the earth's forests and oceans are losing their ability to absorb it. The wildfires are just one example of this fall's extreme weather: Tornadoes in Michigan, a lack off fall color in the Carolinas, the spectacular foliage muted by drought and warm temperatures.
     MARTHA BOGLE, BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAIN PARKWAY: We've been through periods of short droughts, but nothing of this magnitude.
     THOMPSON: And here in Minnesota's twin cities, they are still awaiting the first official frost, when the temperature dips to 32 degrees. It should have happened two weeks ago. But not this year. So does all this add up to global warming? Scientists say you can't answer that question after just one season.
     OPPENHEIMER: The weather we've seen this fall may or may not be due to the global warming trend, but it's certainly a clear picture of what the future is going to look like if we don't act quickly to cut emissions of the greenhouse gases.
     THOMPSON: A stark warning in this autumn of change. Anne Thompson, NBC News, Minneapolis.

 

CBS's Smith on Clintons: 'Dynamic Duo'
Are Still 'Rock Stars'

     Early Show co-host Harry Smith adoringly introduced a Tuesday interview with Sally Bedell Smith, author of the new book For Love of Politics: Bill and Hillary Clinton, the White House Years: "Brad and Angelina, Charles and Diana, Burton and Taylor, and you can count Bill and Hillary's union as one of the most scrutinized marriages of our time. A simple Google search reveals there are more than 40 books about this still-young couple. They met in law school, two bookish, wonkish, idealistic kids who somehow transformed themselves into political rock stars. Remember when Bill grabbed a sax on the Arsenio Hall show during the '92 campaign? Now it's Hillary who's handling Letterman and trading one-liners with Jon Stewart on the Daily Show." Despite Bill Clinton being one of the most famous adulterers of all time, Smith managed to get through the interview without ever discussing the former President's infidelity. Instead, CBS's Smith fretted about how the "dynamic duo" will overshadow a vice presidential nominee: "What are you thinking in terms of the dynamic of the two of them? How do you fit into that?"

     [This item is adapted from a Tuesday afternoon posting, by Kyle Drennen, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     Bedell-Smith later commented on how the Clintons had "...such a unique collaborative relationship that when they were back in Arkansas, people called them 'Billary.'" Smith wondered if Bill Clinton would maintain this "collaborative relationship" given the fact that "he has this separate life now. He is this world traveler. He is a solver of problems. The Clinton Global Initiative, et cetera..." When Bedell-Smith speculated on "the notion of having two Presidents in the White House," Smith countered with his own speculation: "Right. Maybe worse yet, a Secretary of State."

     After such a glowing interview that completely glossed over some of the most obvious flaws in the Clinton marriage, Smith oddly ended it by discussing how Bedell-Smith's book "is meticulous and at times an excruciating look at the two of them in their public lives." It was clear that this segment was neither.

     The full transcript of the October 23 interview in the 8am half hour of The Early Show:

     HARRY SMITH: So many people say that Senator Hillary Clinton's biggest asset in her presidential bid is Bill Clinton, but it's only fair when he was president she was his biggest asset. And after 35 years, we still want to know what makes them tick. Brad and Angelina, Charles and Diana, Burton and Taylor, and you can count Bill and Hillary's union as one of the most scrutinized marriages of our time. A simple Google search reveals there are more than 40 books about this still-young couple. They met in law school, two bookish, wonkish, idealistic kids who somehow transformed themselves into political rock strs. Remember when Bill grabbed a sax on the Arsenio Hall show during the '92 campaign? Now it's Hillary who's handling letterman and trading one-liners with Jon Stewart on the Daily Show.
     HILLARY CLINTON: I think you've got a future.
     SMITH: Sally Bedell Smith explains the Clintons' complicated marriage and the impact it has had on all of us in her new book, For Love of Politics: Bill and Hillary Clinton, the White House Years. And she joins us. Good to see you again.
     SALLY BEDELL SMITH: Good to be here.
     SMITH: This is a meticulous reconstruction, or even deconstruction, of their lives, and the thing that I came away with -- and tell me if you agree with this. You're the one who spent all this time researching this book -- is ambition trumps everything. Could that be the subtitle?
     BEDELL-SMITH: Well, I think ambition has been very much a part of their lives from the beginning. And politics is something that really attracted them to each other in the very beginning.
     SMITH: Right.
     BEDELL-SMITH: Back in 1972, one of the first things they did was work for the McGovern campaign. And they have been such a political unit. Their marriage is so unusual, and they have such a unique collaborative relationship that when they were back in Arkansas, people called them "Billary."
     SMITH: Billary, yeah.
     BEDELL-SMITH: It was even -- it was a term of sort of admiration and disparagement. And those habits of close collaboration carried through into the White House, which is why now that we are facing the prospect of possibly having two presidents in the White House-
     SMITH: Right.
     BEDELL-SMITH: Which is really unprecedented. The way to understand how they might work together in the White House were she to return as president and he to return as president, you have to look back and see the dynamics of that relationship.
     SMITH: Which is the question, because she was sort of omnipresent in his presidency. If she were to become president, would you assume that he would have a similar sort of role?
     BEDELL-SMITH: Well, I think it's -- it's absolutely consistent with the way they operated back then.
     SMITH: But he has this separate life now. He is this world traveler. He is a solver of problems. The Clinton Global Initiative, et cetera, et cetera. He's not going to be -- have an office in the West Wing like she did, would he?
     BEDELL-SMITH: Well, he hasn't ruled it out. He said he'd take an office in the basement if somebody offered it to him. But, but she was, in effect, a kind of -- she was a sort of de facto vice president for him. I kind of think we should look at them as more a president and a chairman of the board.
     SMITH: Interesting. Well, they dropped that two-fer stuff a long, long time ago. Remember back in '92, during the campaign.
     BEDELL-SMITH: They did.
     SMITH: For a little while, they were doing a two for one. They've stopped that. If you were thinking, if she -- assume she gets the nomination and you get a call and "I want you to be my vice presidential candidate," are you -- what are you thinking in terms of the dynamic of the two of them? How do you fit into that?
     BEDELL-SMITH: Well, I think that's a serious question, and it's one of the many questions that follow from the notion of having two Presidents in the White House because this is something the Founders never anticipated, not only two presidents, but two presidents married to each other with all the undercurrents --
     SMITH: Right. Maybe worse yet, a Secretary of State.
     BEDELL-SMITH: Secretary of State because she's already said that one of the things that he would do would be ambassador to the world. I think when they talk about the notion of first spouse, or he says "Oh, I'll be First Laddy," that's really beside the point. I mean, we have a 22nd Amendment that precludes a president from serving more than two terms. And it might not be too far-fetched to say that this is sort of an end run. It was interesting during the health care debate, for example, somebody who was in the health care industry said at one point, the two Clintons are working so much at cross-purposes with each other that there's a Hillary White House and a there's a Bill White House, and we don't know who's in charge.
     SMITH: Wow. Sally Bedell Smith, thank you very, very much for joining us this morning. It is meticulous and at times an excruciating look at the two of them in their public lives.
     BEDELL-SMITH: But it needs to be looked at.
     SMITH: There you go. You can read an excerpt from For Love of Politics on our website at cbsnews.com.

 

ABC's Ross Focuses on Giuliani's Link
to Accused Pedophile Priest

     On Tuesday's Good Morning America, reporter Brian Ross continued his critical series of investigations into Republican presidential candidates. Just two weeks after he slammed Fred Thompson for his role in the 1973 Watergate investigation, the ABC correspondent looked into the fact that Rudy Giuliani's consulting firm has employed a priest that has been accused of molesting children in the '1970s.

     Of course, neither Ross, nor Good Morning America, have seen fit to investigate Hillary Clinton's hiring of Sandy Berger, a man who has been convicted of stealing documents from the National Archives and stuffing them down his pants. Ross has similarly ignored the growing scandal of poor Chinese workers donating large sums of money to the Hillary Clinton campaign.

     Ross's October 23 report focused on Monsignor Alan Placa, who has been accused of molesting two boys in New York in the 1970s. Placa has since been forced by the Catholic Church to stop performing his priestly duties and a grand jury concluded that he did commit these actions. (The statute of limitations has expired and no charges have been brought.) Ross questioned whether such a man should be employed by Giuliani's consulting firm. However, the GMA reporter closed the segment by conceding: "A Giuliani spokeswoman did arrange for four other students from the same school, although from a different class, to vouch for Father Placa. They said they had not been molested and that they had never heard of allegations like this when they were at the school." Although Ross did feature the students defense of Placa in an online version of the story, they were not interviewed on camera and did not appear in the piece airing on ABC.

     Ross wrote on ABCNews.com: "'There was absolutely not a hint of rumor of a speculation or a whisper, in four years, or in decades after of any sexual predatoriness on the part of Rev. Placa,' wrote [former student] Matthew Hogan in an e-mail to ABCNews.com."

     For the entire ABCNews.com article, go to: abcnews.go.com
     [This item, by Scott Whitlock, was posted Tuesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     In addition to ignoring the Sandy Berger story, Ross and GMA have yet to cover the potential scandal relating to poor Chinese immigrants donating large sums of money to Hillary Clinton's campaign, as reported last week by the Los Angeles Times.

     For more on Brian Ross's investigation into Fred Thompson's Watergate role, see the October 10 CyberAlert articles: "Nixon's Denigration of Fred Thompson Newsworthy to ABC" and "GMA Gleefully Plays Watergate Tapes Attacking 'Dumb' Thompson." Go to: www.mrc.org

     A transcript of the segment, which aired at 7:33am on October 23:

     7:31am tease, DIANE SAWYER: And also ahead in this half hour, other topics. Brian Ross is here with another major investigation in the presidential race, focusing on a longtime friend of Rudy Giuliani who faces some terrible accusations.

     7:33am, DIANE SAWYER: But now let's change topics and get back to Brian Ross's investigation. Rudy Giuliani has been dogged by questions in the past about his colleagues. Well, there's another one that has now arisen because of the defense of a longtime friend. And chief investigative correspondent Brian Ross is here with that. Brian?

     ABC GRAPHIC: Brian Ross Investigates: Predator or Priest?

     BRIAN ROSS: Good morning, Diane. For Rudy Giuliani, it is apparently a case of loyalty to a close friend. But the friend is priest accused of sexually abusing teenage boys and currently banned from performing his priestly duties by the church. And now, some of the priestly accusers want to know why Giuliani is defending and protecting him. When he went to Rome this year, Giuliani was accompanied by his wife Judith and his longtime friend and priest, Monsignor Alan Placa.
     RUDOLPH GIULIANI, 2008 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Alan Placa has been a friend of mine for 38 years, 39 years. I know him really well.
     ROSS: Placa was a college classmate and best man at Giuliani's first wedding, the priest at Giuliani's second wedding to Donna Hanover. And now Placa works for Giuliani at his consulting firm, Giuliani Partners. That has outraged some of the Monsignor Placa's former students and victims right groups who say the priest is a child molester who should not be protected by a man running for President.
     DAVID CLOHESSY, SURVIVORS NETWORK OF THOSE ABUSED BY PRIESTS: Anything that gives monsignor Alan Placa any credibility or access to kids is very risky and dangerous and we think that Giuliani especially as former prosecute should realize this.
     ALAN PLACA: I'm Father Alan Placa, a priest of the diocese of Rockville Center in New York.
     ROSS: Monsignor Placa was told by the church to stop performing his priestly duties in 2002, as two former students and an altar boy came forward with their allegations.
     RICHARD TOLLNER, ACCUSED PRIEST PLACA OF SEXUAL MOLESTATION: Alan Placa molested me in January of 1975 and that's when it started.
     ROSS: Richard Tollner, now a mortgage broker in Albany, New York, was a student at a boy's Catholic high school where Placa taught. Appearing publicly for the first time, Tollner says the abuse started when he and Placa were making posters for a Right to Life march.
     TOLLNER: As he started to explain how these poster shows be done, I realized that something was rubbing my body and I didn't know when it was. When after a minute or two I realized that he's feeling me.
     ROSS: Tollner and the others testified before a grand jury in Suffolk County, New York, which concluded that Priest F, who Tollner says is Placa, had sexually molested three teenage boys again and again and again. The report also accused Priest F of being instrumental in developing a church policy that used deception and intimidation to essentially keep the church scandal quiet.
     MELANIE LITTLE, ATTORNEY, DELL & LITTLE: He was more concerned with protecting the priest, protecting the reputation of the diocese and protecting the church coffers than he was protecting the children.
     ROSS: No criminal charges were brought against Placa because of the statute of limitations and he denied the allegations. It was just months later that Giuliani put Placa on the payroll of Giuliani Partners where Placa now works. Giuliani now defended Placa last week on the campaign trail, after protesters in St. Louis and Milwaukee confronted him.
     GIULIANI: Hasn't been convicted of anything. Hasn't been convicted of anything. We give some of the worst people in our society presumption of innocence and benefit of the doubt. And this is more than that. I mean, I know the man. I know who he is. So, I support him.
     TOLLNER: This man did unjust things and he's being protected and employed and taken care of and it's not a good thing.
     ROSS: Monsignor Placa would not speak with us for this story, but a Giuliani spokeswoman did arrange for four other students from the same school, although from a different class, to vouch for father Placa. They said they had not molested and that they had never heard of allegations like this when they were at the school. Diane?

 

Worst Notable Quotables of the Past 20
Years: The Clintons

     Now Online with 50 Flash Videos: 20th Anniversary NQ. Since the MRC was founded 20 years ago, Notable Quotables has been a vital tool in our mission to document, expose and neutralize the media elite's liberal bias. The special 20th Anniversary Edition contains more than 100 of the most outrageous quotes from our past two decades, many accompanied by audio and video clips. Watch Dan Rather berate Vice President Bush during a live interview; listen to Bryant Gumbel suggest radio hosts like Rush Limbaugh bore responsibility for the Oklahoma City bombing; and recall the media's sneering disdain for Ronald Reagan, and their utter admiration for Bill and Hillary Clinton.

     To read the quotes and watch the videos: www.mrc.org

     For the 8-page PDF which matches the hard copy, but without any pictures or videos: www.mrc.org

     CLICK AND PLAY FLASH VIDEO, Plus other options: We're very excited that this production marks the MRC's first time to post "click and play" Flash video. So if you have Flash functional in your browser, as most do who use Firefox or Internet Explorer, just click on a screen shot and the video will play.

     If you want to see a larger version, or prefer to download, you'll see Windows Media icons to allow you to download the wmv. Same goes for the MP3 audio clips for radio hosts or producers who wish the play the clips of their show.
     This week, the MRC's Rich Noyes is posting, on the MRC's NewsBusters blog, a daily installment of quotes from the anniversary issue. Here's the collection to be posted Wednesday:

The media's love affair with Bill and Hillary Clinton.

For 15 years, liberal reporters have made themselves looked like the sycophants they are, as they made excuse after excuse for the Clintons' moral failings even as they applauded the couple's supposed greatness. But perhaps no one looked sillier than Dan Rather on May 15, 2001, when the then-CBS News anchor was asked on Fox's The O'Reilly Factor if he thought Bill Clinton was honest.

     Bill O'Reilly: "I want to ask you flat out, do you think President Clinton's an honest man?"
     Dan Rather: "Yes, I think he's an honest man....I do."
     O'Reilly: "Even though he lied to Jim Lehrer's face about the Lewinsky case?"
     Rather: "Who among us has not lied about something?...I know that you consider it sort of astonishing anybody would say so, but I think you can be an honest person and lie about any number of things."

I'll let you decide whether Rather was more or less adoring than former Time magazine reporter Nina Burleigh, who made this suggestion in July 1998 during the Lewinsky scandal: "I would be happy to give him [Bill Clinton] a blow job just to thank him for keeping abortion legal. I think American women should be lining up with their presidential kneepads on to show their gratitude for keeping the theocracy off our backs."

Some of the other quotes that show the media's affection for Bill and Hillary:

# "I must say I was struck by the expanse of their chests, though. They may have to put out their stats." -- Newsweek reporter Eleanor Clift on the new Democratic ticket of Bill Clinton and Al Gore, CNN's Inside Politics, July 9, 1992.

# "If we could be one-hundredth as great as you and Hillary Rodham Clinton have been in the White House, we'd take it right now and walk away winners....Tell Mrs. Clinton we respect her and we're pulling for her." -- Dan Rather to Bill Clinton at a May 27, 1993 CBS affiliates meeting, talking about anchoring with Connie Chung.

# "Hillary Rodham Clinton will define for women that magical spot where the important work of the world and love and children and an inner life all come together. Like Ginger Rogers, she will do everything her partner does, only backward and in high heels, and with what was missing in [Lee] Atwater -- a lot of heart." -- Time correspondent Margaret Carlson, May 10, 1993.

# "She's ecumenical but prefers Italian and Mexican. The President fixes her eggs with jalapeno peppers on the weekends....Valentine's Day at the Red Sage restaurant. Even at a romantic outing, the President can be the date from hell, talking to everyone but the girl he brung....Finally alone, they have 'painted soup' and the lamb baked in herbed bread. They exchange gifts and touch each other more in two hours than the Bushes did in four years." -- Time reporter Margaret Carlson, June 1993 Vanity Fair.

# "His sturdy jaw precedes him. He smiles from sea to shining sea. Is this President a candidate for Mt. Rushmore or what?...A single medley of expressions from Clinton may be worth much more, to much of America, than every ugly accusation Paula Jones can muster." -- Los Angeles Times television writer Howard Rosenberg reviewing Clinton's Inaugural Address, January 22, 1997.

# "There is a simple alchemy to their relationship: she's goofy, flat-out in love with him and he with her. 'They don't kiss. They devour each other,' says one aide. He needs her -- for intellectual solace, political guidance and spiritual sustenance....They see themselves in almost Messianic terms, as great leaders who have a mission to fulfill. Her friends speculate that the Bible gives her a historical context for what she's going through. 'There's a lot of consolation, guidance and refueling that comes from reading about centuries-old calamities,' says a friend. Given the storm they're in, it's a source of inspiration they'll need." -- Matthew Cooper and Karen Breslau writing in the February 9, 1998 Newsweek.

# "I'm endlessly fascinated by her [Hillary Clinton]....She's so smart. Virtually every time I've seen her perform, she has knocked my socks off." -- CBS's Lesley Stahl, as quoted by Gail Shister in the December 8, 1999 Philadelphia Inquirer.

Tomorrow's edition: America the Awful.

 

Don't Miss 'NewsBusted' Comedy Videos
Making Fun of Liberals

     Have you yet watched the MRC's "NewsBusted" comedy video show posted on our NewsBusters blog? If not, a fresh two-minute edition was posted Tuesday. "NewsBusted" is a new, twice a week, comedy show with jokes about politics, Hollywood and media bias. The idea for the show is really quite simple: Politics is absurd, so is the news. Why not have some laughs from it all? Enjoy the freshest comedy on the Web making fun of liberals and the media.

     You'll find the latest edition at the top of NewsBusters: www.newsbusters.org

     For the archive of ones you've missed, as posted on YouTube in click and play Flash format: www.youtube.com

     There are 13 episodes online to enjoy.

-- Brent Baker

 


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