top
|
1. ABC's Cuomo Presumes Obama Hurt by 'America's Inherent Racism' Presuming the United States is an inherently racist nation, an assumption Barack Obama's frontrunner status in the presidential contest would seem to belie, ABC's Chris Cuomo wrapped up a Thursday Good Morning America interview by asking the Democratic candidate: "What do you think the bigger obstacle is for you in becoming President, the Clinton campaign machine or America's inherent racism?" Obama, who beats two top Republicans in the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll -- and by bigger margins than the white Hillary Clinton -- rejected Cuomo's premise. This wasn't the first time a GMA host presumed America is racist. Thirteen months ago, on November 13, 2006, Diane Sawyer pressed Obama: "We have seen new polls this morning about you and Senator Hillary Clinton. Here's my question. Do you think that residual resistance is greater for race or for gender? Is the nation secretly, I guess, more racist or more sexist?" 2. McFadden to Hillary Clinton: Do the Critics Make You Cower? Do all those attacks against Hillary Clinton reduce the candidate to cowering in bed? Nightline co-anchor Cynthia McFadden posed that question to the former First Lady on Wednesday's program. She sympathetically asked: "There's never a night, when you go back to whatever hotel room, whatever city you're in that night, and crawl in a ball and say, 'I just, this just hurts too much?" McFadden, who spent a day with Clinton in Iowa, protectively spun most of her questions. She observed that Barack Obama has been successful with "some people" at painting Clinton as an opportunist and then queried simply: "How do you fight back against that?" 3. CNN Features College-Age Backers of Obama & Clinton, Not GOP CNN's senior political correspondent Candy Crowley, in a report aired Thursday afternoon about college student participation in the Iowa caucuses, featured two supporters of Democratic presidential candidates, one for Barack Obama, and the other a supporter of Hillary Clinton. While host Kyra Philips, in her introduction to the report, highlighted how "all presidential supporters want all the support they can get, and that includes the under-30 crowd," the report did not feature any young supporters of Republican candidates. Crowley's story, which aired 16 minutes into the 1pm Eastern hour, focused on the Obama campaign's outreach to the "under-30 crowd," and described him in glowing terms: "Barack Obama is a hit on college campuses. He's young. He's new. He campaigns against status quo politics." 4. Olbermann Won't Support MRC, So We're Counting on Your Donation Support CyberAlert and the work of the MRC with a tax-deductible year-end donation. We can provide CyberAlerts -- as well as all of the MRC's publications and sites -- as free services only because of the thousands of concerned conservatives who support the MRC financially each year and make possible the unique research operation behind the MRC's ongoing efforts to document, expose, and neutralize liberal media bias. Please consider a donation and demonstrate that CyberAlert readers are committed to the MRC's mission and value the products we provide and the impact of the evidence we gather. If you contribute $100 or more, we will send you a complimentary copy of MRC President Brent Bozell's new book, 'Whitewash: What the Media Won't Tell You About Hillary Clinton, but Conservatives Will.' 5. Don't Miss: '20th Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting' Now Online: Results for the "Best Notable Quotables of 2007, the Twentieth Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting." A panel of 53 leading media observers judged 17 award categories and the winning quotes and top runners-up were posted Monday, with the quotes from television accompanied by click-and-play Flash video, as well as downloadable Windows Media video and MP3 audio clips. ABC's Cuomo Presumes Obama Hurt by 'America's Inherent Racism' Presuming the United States is an inherently racist nation, an assumption Barack Obama's frontrunner status in the presidential contest would seem to belie, ABC's Chris Cuomo wrapped up a Thursday Good Morning America interview by asking the Democratic candidate: "What do you think the bigger obstacle is for you in becoming President, the Clinton campaign machine or America's inherent racism?" Obama, who beats two top Republicans in the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll -- and by bigger margins than the white Hillary Clinton -- rejected Cuomo's premise: "I don't actually think race has played a significant role in this campaign." Obama did concede "there are people out there who might not be comfortable voting for me because of my race," but suggested "there are some people who are excited about the prospects of being able to help heal some of our past racial divisions." In the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released Wednesday, head-to-head, Obama beats Republicans Rudy Giuliani and Mike Huckabee by greater margins than does Hillary Clinton: Obama leads Giuliani "by 9 points (49-40 percent)" and Huckabee by "12 points (48-36 percent)" while Clinton is only ahead of them by three points and two points, respectively. See: www.msnbc.msn.com This wasn't the first time a GMA host presumed America is racist. Thirteen months ago, on November 13, 2006, Diane Sawyer pressed Obama: "We have seen new polls this morning about you and Senator Hillary Clinton. Here's my question. Do you think that residual resistance is greater for race or for gender? Is the nation secretly, I guess, more racist or more sexist?" For details, check the November 14, 2006 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org For video of Cuomo's loaded question to Obama, check a NewsBusters blog posting by the MRC's Justin McCarthy: newsbusters.org The questions posed by Cuomo to Obama, who appeared from Nashua, New Hampshire, on the December 20 Good Morning America -- ending with the "racist" exchange: CHRIS CUOMO: In Iowa, there are just two weeks left until the caucuses, and Illinois Senator Barack Obama holds a slim lead in many of the polls. The question is can he keep it? We're very happy to have the Senator joining us this morning from New Hampshire. Senator, good morning, thanks for being here. CUOMO: So one of the questions that pops up this morning, you have been a critic of Hillary Clinton for not having a definite stand on issues. Turns out that you voted "present" as opposed to "yes or no" over 100 times as a state legislature. One vote in particular I want to talk to you about. The bill was about trying juveniles as adults. You voted "present" instead of no. Were you playing politics? CUOMO: We understand that more than 4,000 votes we're talking about,130 "present" votes. But let me ask you. When you put yourself out there as the agent of change, that you won't play politics as usual, and then the explanation for why you vote president, "present" is inside politics, is that sending a mixed message?
CUOMO: Now, both you and your main opponent at this point, Hillary Clinton are saying you're the proper agent for change. Hillary's husband, the former President, Bill Clinton, has been coming after you a little bit lately about whether or not supporting you is risky. Let's take a listen to what he had to say. CUOMO: Let me ask you, now, John Edwards has been coming after you a little bit now. Obviously the Clinton campaign is bearing down on you. How is it different, going from being the hunter to the hunted, as a presumed front-runner?
CUOMO: Let me ask you, going to the same point. What do you think the bigger obstacle is for you in becoming President, the Clinton campaign machine or America's inherent racists, racism?
McFadden to Hillary Clinton: Do the Critics Make You Cower? Do all those attacks against Hillary Clinton reduce the candidate to cowering in bed? Nightline co-anchor Cynthia McFadden posed that question to the former First Lady on Wednesday's program. She sympathetically asked: "There's never a night, when you go back to whatever hotel room, whatever city you're in that night, and crawl in a ball and say, 'I just, this just hurts too much?" McFadden, who spent a day with Clinton in Iowa, protectively spun most of her questions. She observed that Barack Obama has been successful with "some people" at painting Clinton as an opportunist and then queried simply: "How do you fight back against that?" [This item, by Scott Whitlock, was posted on Thursday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] At another point, McFadden helpfully recounted the Senator's comment that going negative against Obama would be "the fun part." "Did you really mean that," she queried. Interpreting the '08 contender's emotions, McFadden continued: "Because it didn't look fun to me from where I sat. It didn't look like you were having much fun going negative." The December 20 CyberAlert item, "ABC: TheHillaryIKnow.com Illustrates She's Double-Standard Victim," recounted another portion of the December 19 Nightline segment: Cuing up Hillary Clinton for an "I am Woman" moment, ABC's Cynthia McFadden on Wednesday's Nightline managed to turn the Clinton campaign's "TheHillaryIKnow" Web site, created to demonstrate her likeability, into evidence Hillary Clinton is the victim of a double-standard compared to men. McFadden oozed about how the site is "terribly sweet in so many ways, and yet, it sort of has this Sally Field quality to it. You know, 'they like me, they really like me.'" McFadden queried, without consideration for the possibility the other candidates really are nicer: "I wonder if there's not a double standard? I don't see the guys doing it. Are you judged differently, do you think, on the personal level?" Clinton, naturally, agreed and used the prompting to channel Helen Reddy: "I think that that's the world we live in. I understand that. I accept it, but I don't let it deter me. You know that wonderful old line about women do everything, it's like Ginger Rogers who did everything that Fred Astaire did only backwards and in high heels? Well, we just have to go out and do it." For the entire previous CyberAlert article: www.mrc.org Clinton seemed quite happy to have the ABC journalist along for the day. The former First Lady greeted McFadden as "my dear" and promised to see the reporter at another event, saying, "It's a date." If there's a reason for this, it could be the September 2006 exclusive with McFadden in which the two can be seen having tea together. That interview also featured these softball questions: - "Do you actually like campaigning?" - "If you could pick an adjective that you hope people would use to describe you, what would it be?" (Clinton's answer? "Real.") - "Why would anyone want to be president? Can you help me understand that?" For more on the '06 Nightline, see the September 11, 2006 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org And although Wednesday's interview did see McFadden challenge Clinton on minor issues, such as whether America is sick of /Bush/Clinton/Bush/Clinton, most of the interview followed the syrupy format of the 2006 version. A partial transcript of the segment on the December 19 Nightline:
CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: Likability has always been a problem for Clinton. And with Barack Obama's rapid rise, she seemed to get the message that experience alone was not going to win her the race here. People had to like her too.
CNN Features College-Age Backers of Obama & Clinton, Not GOP CNN's senior political correspondent Candy Crowley, in a report aired Thursday afternoon about college student participation in the Iowa caucuses, featured two supporters of Democratic presidential candidates, one for Barack Obama, and the other a supporter of Hillary Clinton. While host Kyra Philips, in her introduction to the report, highlighted how "all presidential supporters want all the support they can get, and that includes the under-30 crowd," the report did not feature any young supporters of Republican candidates. Crowley's story, which aired 16 minutes into the 1pm Eastern hour, focused on the Obama campaign's outreach to the "under-30 crowd," and described him in glowing terms: "Barack Obama is a hit on college campuses. He's young. He's new. He campaigns against status quo politics." [This item, by Matthew Balan, was posted Thursday evening on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The report also featured two sound bites from John Mahoney, a Obama supporter at the University of Northern Iowa, and one from Chris Hasstedt, a "Clinton man" who is a senior at Iowa State University. The full transcript of the report from Thursday's CNN Newsroom: KYRA PHILLIPS: It's an irony of politics. The group with the biggest stake in the future is often the least likely to vote. In Iowa, with the caucuses now exactly two weeks away, all the presidential hopefuls want all the support they can get, and that includes the under-30 crowd. One candidate in particular is counting on a big caucus turnout from college kids. Here's CNN senior political correspondent Candy Crowley.
CANDY CROWLEY, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Josh Mahoney, a junior at University of Northern Iowa, is caucusing for Obama. It's a logistical nightmare.
Olbermann Won't Support MRC, So We're Counting on Your Donation Support CyberAlert and the work of the MRC with a tax-deductible year-end donation. We can provide CyberAlerts -- as well as all of the MRC's publications and sites -- as free services only because of the thousands of concerned conservatives who support the MRC financially each year and make possible the unique research operation behind the MRC's ongoing efforts to document, expose, and neutralize liberal media bias. Please consider a donation and demonstrate that CyberAlert readers are committed to the MRC's mission and value the products we provide and the impact of the evidence we gather. If you contribute $100 or more, we will send you a complimentary copy of MRC President Brent Bozell's new book, 'Whitewash: What the Media Won't Tell You About Hillary Clinton, but Conservatives Will.' The book will ship in January. To donate, via credit card online or by snail mail, go to: https://www.mediaresearch.org/secure/mediaresearch/welcome.asp From that page, you can print a form to fill out and mail to us with a check or you can donate with a credit card via the MRC's VeriSign system or via PayPal. Use the remarks/comment field to tell us you want the Whitewash book for your $100 or more donation. Otherwise, please write/type "CyberAlert" to show how CyberAlert readers are providing support. Phone: If you prefer to make your credit card contribution by telephone, call: (800) 672-1423 between 9 and 5:30pm EST weekdays. Keith Olbermann won't be sending us any money, so we're counting on you! Make us look good by proving that CyberAlert readers appreciate what arrives in their e-mail and is posted fresh online every day. The Web address again for donations: https://www.mediaresearch.org/secure/mediaresearch/welcome.asp
Don't Miss: '20th Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting' Now Online: Results for the "Best Notable Quotables of 2007, the Twentieth Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting." A panel of 53 leading media observers judged 17 award categories and the winning quotes and top runners-up were posted Monday, with the quotes from television accompanied by click-and-play Flash video, as well as downloadable Windows Media video and MP3 audio clips. The direct address: www.mrc.org You'll also see a link to an Adobe Acrobat PDF that matches the eight-page hard copy version. Direct address for the PDF: www.mrc.org For the list of judges, who were generous with their time: www.mrc.org Starting the day after Christmas, I'll distribute the text of all the winners and runners-up, but for now you'll have to go online to learn the results.
-- Brent Baker
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts |
|