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1. Couric Presses Obama on Effectiveness of Tax Cuts Not Spending Federal spending is already at a record level, but instead of asking President-elect Barack Obama about the effectiveness of his proposed additional deficit spending, in an "exclusive" interview excerpted Wednesday night, CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric hit him on the tax cut component: "Forty percent of your stimulus package relies on tax cuts with the hopes that people will invest that money or put it back into the economy. But some critics have said, 'hey, that didn't really happen the last time.' Why will it this time?" 2. AP: Bush's Inaugural 'Extravagant,' Now It's Spend, Baby, Spend Four years ago, the Associated Press and others in the press suggested it was in poor taste for Republicans to spend $40 million on President Bush's inauguration. AP writer Will Lester calculated the impact that kind of money would have on armoring Humvees in Iraq, helping victims of the tsunami, or paying down the deficit. Lester thought the party should be cancelled: "The questions have come from Bush supporters and opponents: Do we need to spend this money on what seems so extravagant?" Fast forward to 2009. The nation is still at war (two wars, in fact), and now also faces the prospect of a severe recession and federal budget deficits topping $1 trillion as far as the eye can see. With Barack Obama's inauguration estimated to cost $45 million (not counting the millions more that government will have to pay for security), is the Associated Press once again tsk-tsking the high dollar cost? Nope. "For inaugural balls, go for glitz, forget economy," a Tuesday AP headline advised. 3. Network Evening Shows Downplay Geithner Tax-Evasion Speed Bump The network evening shows didn't have much of an appetite for Democratic hypocrisy among the team they hailed as a "superstar Cabinet" on Tuesday night. Timothy Geithner, Barack Obama's nominee for Treasury Secretary, a man who would oversee the IRS, failed to pay $42,000 in Social Security and Medicare taxes -- and waited to pay more than half of that amount -- $26,000 â€" only after Obama decided to nominate him. On top of that, one of Geithner's household employees failed to renew her green card. Only ABC mentioned Geithner in their introductions, and featured no report, just an interview with George Stephanopoulos, who said it was a mere "speed bump" and "fairly common." CBS and NBC spent little more than a minute on Geithner, and NBC's screen featured the Obama team's claim in quotes. Under Geithner's picture were the words "Honest Mistakes." 4. Most Networks Skip Story of Obama's Socialist Global Warming Czar The Fox News Channel on Wednesday morning continued to be one of the very few media outlets covering the fact that Barack Obama's new "global warming czar" has ties to socialist groups. While all three network morning shows ignored the story, Fox News Live host Megyn Kelly interviewed climate change skeptic Senator James Inhofe on the subject. After noting that appointee Carol Browner was a member of the Socialist group Commission for a Sustainable World Society, Kelly seemed puzzled as to how such a person could be given a prominent position in the Obama administration. "And she's pretty openly committed to these socialist policies....How does that happen? Is there going to be an uproar about it," the Fox News host wondered. 5. Olbermann: Unlike Palin, Pitbull Can 'Keep Its Mouth Closed' On Tuesday's Countdown on MSNBC, after a segment with the Washington Post's Eugene Robinson at the end of the program in which he and host Keith Olbermann lambasted Sarah Palin over her recent interview with Esquire magazine, the Countdown host made a crude joke at Palin's expense as he introduced the Rachel Maddow Show. Olbermann: "But, apropos of Palin, I can't remember who said this, but it came to mind: What's the difference between a governor of Alaska and a pitbull? You can train a pitbull to occasionally keep its mouth closed. Do you know who said that? Because I can't remember." 6. ABC's Chris Cuomo Actually Grills Nancy Pelosi on Accountability Good Morning America news anchor Chris Cuomo conducted a surprisingly tough interview with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday, grilling her on the lack of accountability for how 2008's financial bailout money has been spent. He told the powerful Democrat: "...I think there are a few issues that unite Americans like this. Don't waste our money, especially right now." Regarding the news that Congress doesn't know how much of the $350 billion T.A.R.P has been spent, Cuomo challenged, "Why didn't savvy lawmakers like yourself, like Barney Frank, say, 'We're not going to just release this money with no strings. We'll build it in the law. We'll build in accountability?' Why didn't you do that?" 7. Bravo Reality Show Contestant Wears Hammer & Sickle Shirt On Wednesday's episode of Bravo's Top Chef: New York reality show, "cheftestant" Stefan Richter could be seen wearing a red T-shirt with a gold hammer & sickle -- the emblem of Soviet totalitarianism which oppressed hundreds of millions and murdered tens of millions -- inside a gold-outlined Red Army star, matching the colors and symbols on the Soviet flag. In the scene on the NBC-owned Bravo cable channel, Richter, owner of Stefan's European Catering in Santa Monica, California, was lighting up a cigarette as he argued with some other chefs in his contestant group over the elements of a meal menu. This wasn't the first time an NBC show has featured someone sporting the pro-Soviet communist shirt. Back in April of 2006, an entertainment reporter wore the very same shirt over two nights on the NBC-produced Access Hollywood. Couric Presses Obama on Effectiveness of Tax Cuts Not Spending Federal spending is already at a record level, but instead of asking President-elect Barack Obama about the effectiveness of his proposed additional deficit spending, in an "exclusive" interview excerpted Wednesday night, CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric hit him on the tax cut component: "Forty percent of your stimulus package relies on tax cuts with the hopes that people will invest that money or put it back into the economy. But some critics have said, 'hey, that didn't really happen the last time.' Why will it this time?" Couric did at least raise how "your nominee for Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner, failed to pay some taxes, and did so only after he learned he would be tapped as Treasury Secretary. How embarrassing do you think this is for a future Treasury Secretary who will be overseeing the IRS?" Otherwise, the excerpt covered Couric's inquiries about Osama bin Laden and the situation in Gaza. A longer portion will air Tuesday night during a prime time special, "Change and Challenge: The Inauguration of Barack Obama." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Wednesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The tax cuts also most-concerned ABC's George Stephanopoulos when Obama sat down with him. On Sunday's This Week, Stephanopoulos demanded: "Do you really believe those business tax cuts are going to work to create jobs?" He soon yearned: "But you might give up on some of the business tax cuts?" Details in the January 12 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org The tax cut exchange as aired on the Wednesday, January 14 CBS Evening News, the only section aired which related to the "stimulus" plan:
KATIE COURIC: And let me just end by asking you about the stimulus package. Forty percent of your stimulus package relies on tax cuts with the hopes that people will invest that money or put it back into the economy. But some critics have said, "hey, that didn't really happen the last time." Why will it this time? CBSNews.com's transcript of what aired on the CBS Evening News, along with a video clip of Obama's comments on capturing or killing bin Laden: www.cbsnews.com
AP: Bush's Inaugural 'Extravagant,' Now It's Spend, Baby, Spend Four years ago, the Associated Press and others in the press suggested it was in poor taste for Republicans to spend $40 million on President Bush's inauguration. AP writer Will Lester calculated the impact that kind of money would have on armoring Humvees in Iraq, helping victims of the tsunami, or paying down the deficit. Lester thought the party should be cancelled: "The questions have come from Bush supporters and opponents: Do we need to spend this money on what seems so extravagant?" Fast forward to 2009. The nation is still at war (two wars, in fact), and now also faces the prospect of a severe recession and federal budget deficits topping $1 trillion as far as the eye can see. With Barack Obama's inauguration estimated to cost $45 million (not counting the millions more that government will have to pay for security), is the Associated Press once again tsk-tsking the high dollar cost? Nope. "For inaugural balls, go for glitz, forget economy," a Tuesday AP headline advised. [This item, by the MRC's Rich Noyes, was posted Wednesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] In her lede, reporter Laurie Kellman argued for extravagance: So you're attending an inaugural ball saluting the historic election of Barack Obama in the worst economic climate in three generations. Can you get away with glitzing it up and still be appropriate, not to mention comfortable and financially viable? To quote the man of the hour: Yes, you can. Veteran ballgoers say you should. And fashionistas insist that you must. "This is a time to celebrate. This is a great moment. Do not dress down. Do not wear the Washington uniform," said Tim Gunn, a native Washingtonian and Chief Creative Officer at Liz Claiborne, Inc. "Just because the economy is in a downturn, it doesn't mean that style is going to be in a downturn," agreed Ken Downing, fashion director for Neiman Marcus. And if anyone does raise an eyebrow at those sequins, remind them that optimism is good for times like these. "Just say you're doing it to help the economy," chuckled good manners guru Letitia Baldridge. END of Excerpt For the January 13 AP item in full, go to: www.google.com That spin is a far cry from four years ago, when the AP seemed interested in spurring resentment of the Bush inaugural's supposedly high cost. Of course, displays of Republican wealth are routinely slammed by the media as elitist or aristocratic, while reporters seem to consider rich Democrats as stylish paragons whom we all should copy. To get a real feel for the contrast, here's an excerpt of Lester's January 13, 2005 piece (as recounted in the MRC's CyberAlert), starting with a lede designed to rain all over Bush's parade and including the suggestion from two liberal Democrats that Bush eat cold chicken salad and pound cake instead: President Bush's second inauguration will cost tens of millions of dollars -- $40 million alone in private donations for the balls, parade and other invitation-only parties. With that kind of money, what could you buy? - 200 armored Humvees with the best armor for troops in Iraq. - Vaccinations and preventive health care for 22 million children in regions devastated by the tsunami. - A down payment on the nation's deficit, which hit a record-breaking $412 billion last year.... The questions have come from Bush supporters and opponents: Do we need to spend this money on what seems so extravagant? New York Rep. Anthony Weiner, a Democrat, suggested inaugural parties should be scaled back, citing as a precedent Roosevelt's inauguration during World War II. "President Roosevelt held his 1945 inaugural at the White House, making a short speech and serving guests cold chicken salad and plain pound cake," according to a letter from Weiner and Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash. "During World War I, President Wilson did not have any parties at his 1917 inaugural, saying that such festivities would be undignified."... Billionaire Mark Cuban, owner of the National Basketball Association's Dallas Mavericks, voted for Bush -- twice. Cuban knows a thing or two about big spending, once starring in ABC's reality TV show, "The Benefactor," in which 16 contenders tried to pass his test for success and win $1 million. "As a country, we face huge deficits. We face a declining economy. We have service people dying. We face responsibilities to help those suffering from the...devastation of the tsunamis," he wrote on his blog, a Web journal. Cuban challenged Bush to set an example: "Start by canceling your inauguration parties and festivities." END of Excerpt January 17, 2005 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org Obviously, that's not the media's message to Barack Obama this year. And no one in the press is going to argue that, with the nation at war, the new President should be satisfied with cold chicken salad and pound cake.
Network Evening Shows Downplay Geithner Tax-Evasion Speed Bump The network evening shows didn't have much of an appetite for Democratic hypocrisy among the team they hailed as a "superstar Cabinet" on Tuesday night. Timothy Geithner, Barack Obama's nominee for Treasury Secretary, a man who would oversee the IRS, failed to pay $42,000 in Social Security and Medicare taxes -- and waited to pay more than half of that amount -- $26,000 â€" only after Obama decided to nominate him. On top of that, one of Geithner's household employees failed to renew her green card. Only ABC mentioned Geithner in their introductions, and featured no report, just an interview with George Stephanopoulos, who said it was a mere "speed bump" and "fairly common." CBS and NBC spent little more than a minute on Geithner, and NBC's screen featured the Obama team's claim in quotes. Under Geithner's picture were the words "Honest Mistakes." [This item, by the MRC's Tim Graham, was posted Wednesday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] ABC's World News at least put the Geithner scandal in its opening seconds. Anchor Charles Gibson declared: "Tax trouble. Questions are raised about Barack Obama's choice for Treasury Secretary, and his failure to pay some taxes." About four minutes into the show, the story was aired:
CHARLES GIBSON: Next, we turn to the transition, and questions being raised today about Tim Geithner, Barack Obama's choice to be Treasury Secretary. The man who will have supervision over the IRS and hundreds of billions of dollars in funds to invigorate the economy failed to pay some of his taxes. Didn't pay them for years. So George Stephanopoulos, host of This Week, is joining us. So, George, what do we know about this? To his credit, Gibson pressed a bit harder on the subject:
GIBSON: But George, as I said in the introduction, this is not somebody who was nominated to be veterans affairs secretary or at interior or whatever, this is the guy that will handle the Internal Revenue Service and hundreds of billions of dollars in financial rescue funds. Don't they expect some sort of public reaction about this, if he doesn't pay his taxes? The CBS Evening News devoted the least time to the story, 63 seconds sandwiched on both sides of a Chip Reid story on Hillary Clinton's confirmation hearings:
KATIE COURIC: It's a bit warmer in Washington, especially for Hillary Clinton, who faced few tough questions today at her Senate confirmation hearing. But Chip Reid reports another cabinet nominee may be in trouble. Later, after a few minutes on the Hillary Clinton hearing, Couric returned briefly to Geithner:
COURIC: And Chip, in talking to people up there, how much trouble do you think Geithner faces? NBC Nightly News offered 77 seconds with reporter Kelly O'Donnell and the words "Honest Mistakes" on screen.
BRIAN WILLIAMS: The man Barack Obama wants to be his next Treasury Secretary may have, of all things, a tax problem. He is Tim Geithner, head of the New York Federal Reserve. This has to do with money he once owed, and it's a problem the Obama transition team brought to the attention of senators who must now take on Geithner's nomination. NBC's Kelly O'Donnell's on Capitol Hill tonight with more on this still-developing story. Kelly, good evening. The networks all avoided casting this scandal in a more skeptical light. Take this report in Politico (headlined "Can Obama Save Geithner?") by Craig Gordon and Amie Parnes: Geithner's tax problems surfaced publicly Tuesday -- but Obama's team has known about them for at least six weeks, waging a behind-the-scenes campaign to push him through the Senate Finance Committee, despite the blemishes on his record, according to documents from the committee. The episode raises questions about whether Geithner's nomination will survive, despite early soundings of support from Democrats, and perhaps, more importantly, a larger question: What was Obama thinking? Obama's choice of Geithner flirts with an issue that has deep-sixed Cabinet picks before â€"his former housekeeper's immigration status lapsed briefly while she was in his employ. Also, Obama's choice to oversee the IRS flubbed his own tax returns -- some of which he had personally prepared â€" to the tune of $42,700 in back taxes and penalties. And Geithner decided to pay more than half that amount -- $26,000 -- only after Obama decided to nominate him, according to finance committee documents. Obama's team calls them "honest mistakes." And in the end, Geithner had the only supporter that mattered -- Obama himself. One source familiar with Geithner's vetting says Obama knew about Geithner's tax problems and decided to push ahead with the nomination anyway because he "still wanted him." "At the end of the day, Barack decided that he was the best person for a really important job," the source said. Politico story: www.politico.com
Most Networks Skip Story of Obama's Socialist Global Warming Czar The Fox News Channel on Wednesday morning continued to be one of the very few media outlets covering the fact that Barack Obama's new "global warming czar" has ties to socialist groups. While all three network morning shows ignored the story, Fox News Live host Megyn Kelly interviewed climate change skeptic Senator James Inhofe on the subject. After noting that appointee Carol Browner was a member of the Socialist group Commission for a Sustainable World Society, Kelly seemed puzzled as to how such a person could be given a prominent position in the Obama administration. "And she's pretty openly committed to these socialist policies....How does that happen? Is there going to be an uproar about it," the Fox News host wondered. [This item, by the MRC's Scott Whitlock, was posted Wednesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] She later added, "Okay, but I think the viewers watching this are wondering what does it mean when you've got someone who advocate these socialist policies and has been an open member of this group?" (Browner's name has since been removed from the group's web page.) Kelly also suggested viewers take a look at the organization's website, which she suggested some would find "extreme." (The group advocates global government and aggressive economic penalties on countries such as the U.S. to reduce global warming.) Defining the possibility of what could happen if environmental policies are adopted, Senator Inhofe explained, "What we've got to do is make sure people understand that this isn't cheap. If you want to have a cap-and-trade system for Co2, you're talking about an annual tax increase of $300 billion a year." (A version of the so-called cap and trade plan will be considered by Congress this year.) He elaborated, "This is the wrong time to try to push something. But all of them are all together on this and will make every effort to do it. Just remember that." ABC's Good Morning America, NBC's Today show and CBS's Early Show have all yet to address the topics discussed by Ms. Kelly and Senator Inhofe. A transcript of the January 14 segment, which aired at 9:36am EST, follows:
MEGYN KELLY: Well, she is our new global warming czar. And new questions arising this morning about her socialist ties. Until last week, Carol Browner was listed as a leader of a socialist group called Commission for a Sustainable World Society. Now, this group advocates global governance, believing that rich countries like the United States have an obligation to shrink their economies and their energy use to limit global warming. The group has also been harshly critical of various U.S. policies. Browner's name and her bio were scrubbed from the group's web site just last week. And now some are wondering if she is an appropriate choice for this newly created post. Joining us now, the top Republican on the Senate's Environment and Public Works Committee, Oklahoma Senator James Inhofe. Senator, good morning to you.
Olbermann: Unlike Palin, Pitbull Can 'Keep Its Mouth Closed' On Tuesday's Countdown on MSNBC, after a segment with the Washington Post's Eugene Robinson at the end of the program in which he and host Keith Olbermann lambasted Sarah Palin over her recent interview with Esquire magazine, the Countdown host made a crude joke at Palin's expense as he introduced the Rachel Maddow Show. Olbermann: "But, apropos of Palin, I can't remember who said this, but it came to mind: What's the difference between a governor of Alaska and a pitbull? You can train a pitbull to occasionally keep its mouth closed. Do you know who said that? Because I can't remember." After laughing hysterically, Maddow responded: "No, I can't. No, that's new to me. Is that the safe thing to say here?" [This item, by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth, was posted Tuesday night, with video added by Ken Shepherd, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Below is a complete transcript of the exchange from the Tuesday, January 13, Countdown on MSNBC:
KEITH OLBERMANN: It's Rachel's turn. Barbara Boxer her special guest tonight on the Clinton confirmation hearings. But, apropos of Palin, I can't remember who said this, but it came to mind: What's the difference between a governor of Alaska and a pitbull? You can train a pitbull to occasionally keep its mouth closed. [RACHEL MADDOW LAUGHS] Do you know who said that? Because I can't remember.
ABC's Chris Cuomo Actually Grills Nancy Pelosi on Accountability Good Morning America news anchor Chris Cuomo conducted a surprisingly tough interview with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday, grilling her on the lack of accountability for how 2008's financial bailout money has been spent. He told the powerful Democrat: "...I think there are a few issues that unite Americans like this. Don't waste our money, especially right now." Regarding the news that Congress doesn't know how much of the $350 billion T.A.R.P has been spent, Cuomo challenged, "Why didn't savvy lawmakers like yourself, like Barney Frank, say, 'We're not going to just release this money with no strings. We'll build it in the law. We'll build in accountability?' Why didn't you do that?" [This item, by the MRC's Scott Whitlock, was posted Wednesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] When the Speaker of the House attempted to pass blame off to President Bush, the ABC journalist retorted, "Are you saying that you can promise the American people, that going forward, with your president and your party, things will be different? That they will know where the money is?" During a discussion of the possible distribution of the second $350 billion funds, Pelosi again blamed Bush. Regarding that money, Cuomo proclaimed, "I guess the way to say it, this will be on Obama's account. Not on Bush's account, how this money is spent." After Cuomo called for no more pointing at the administration and saying, "Well, they screwed up T.A.R.P.," a unrepentant Pelosi attacked back, "Well, they did. But they did." The GMA news anchor closed out the discussion by again instructing, "Now, it's you. It really is you by any other definition." Cuomo did offer some softball questions for the liberal congresswoman. On the topic of a children's health care program, he blandly wondered, "With everything that's going on, this is a very important first step for you. You want this high on the agenda. Why?" The network host followed up with the equally uninteresting query: "So, what is the message that you're hoping to send by bringing this up early? And I guess, with your hopes, getting passage, with a President Obama?" But, overall, Cuomo should be commended for pressing the House Speaker on accountability. A transcript of the January 14 segment, which aired at 7:15, follows:
CHRIS CUOMO: We have an exclusive interview for you this morning, Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. About to enter a new era with a Democrat in the White House. The big issue, of course, is the economy and the problem the government has had managing the use of your tax dollars. What went wrong with the first $350 billion? What will be different going forward? That's where we started with the speaker in her Capitol Hill office. Why didn't savvy lawmakers like yourself, like Barney Frank, say, 'We're not going to just release this money with no strings. We'll build it in the law. We'll build in accountability?' Why didn't you do that?
Bravo Reality Show Contestant Wears Hammer & Sickle Shirt On Wednesday's episode of Bravo's Top Chef: New York reality show, "cheftestant" Stefan Richter could be seen wearing a red T-shirt with a gold hammer & sickle -- the emblem of Soviet totalitarianism which oppressed hundreds of millions and murdered tens of millions -- inside a gold-outlined Red Army star, matching the colors and symbols on the Soviet flag. In the scene on the NBC-owned Bravo cable channel, Richter, owner of Stefan's European Catering in Santa Monica, California, was lighting up a cigarette as he argued with some other chefs in his contestant group over the elements of a meal menu. This wasn't the first time an NBC show has featured someone sporting the pro-Soviet communist shirt. Back in April of 2006, an entertainment reporter wore the very same shirt over two nights on the NBC-produced Access Hollywood. [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted late Wednesday night, with screen shots, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Bravo's bio for Richter reports he's a native of a country long in the shadow of Soviet communism: "Stefan was born in Finland but spent the majority of his childhood in Germany" and in 1998 he was "part of the creative team for the opening of the Bellagio Hotel, Resort & Spa in Las Vegas." The April 18, 2006 CyberAlert item, posted with video, "Soviet Communism as Fashion Statement -- Again," recounted: On Monday, for the second straight weekday, Access Hollywood's New York correspondent, Tim Vincent, a veteran of the BBC, sported a hammer and sickle T-shirt as he introduced a story. Just as on Friday's show, as documented in an April 15 NewsBusters item, though he wore a jacket over the red shirt with the symbol of the regime which murdered tens of millions and oppressed hundreds of millions more for decades, a gold hammer and sickle was clearly visible inside a gold-outlined red star which, sans the hammer and sickle, would match the Soviet's Red Army emblem... Full rundown: www.mediaresearch.org Stefan Richter's European Catering in Santa Monica: stefanscatering.com Bravo's page for the show: www.bravotv.com Bravo's page on Richter: www.bravotv.com Image of the Soviet flag: flagspot.net
-- Brent Baker
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