Showing posts with label newsbusters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newsbusters. Show all posts

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Fox News Watch panel discusses Gov Palin and the media

"Refreshing to see somebody who just says screw you to these people who treat her like garbage."
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From Noel Sheppard at NewsBusters:
The gang at "Fox News Watch" had some very interesting things to say about how media members who absolutely despise former Alaska governor Sarah Palin just can't get enough of her "One Nation" bus tour.

The best line came from liberal commentator Kirsten Powers who said of the former vice presidential candidatee, "It’s actually kind of refreshing to see somebody who just says screw you to these people who treat her like garbage"

NewsBusters has a transcript of this segment here.

- JP

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Ron Reagan slams Palin intelligence, then gets dad's record wrong

Hubris
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Ah, the arrogance...
At ABC's The Note on Wednesday, Rick Klein reported an interview with Ronald Prescott Reagan, where Klein and Jon Karl told him they were discussing whether Reagan was more like Barack Obama or Sarah Palin. This is a tough one? The president's son insisted his father more like Obama than that idiot Sarah Palin:
“Just on the basis of intelligence, you would have to say Barack Obama. I don’t think my father has anything in common with Sarah Palin whatsoever,” Ron Reagan told us on ABC’s “Top Line” today. “I'm a little offended that we even have to talk about Sarah Palin, who has nothing interesting to say.”
ABC's Klein and Karl laughed with him as he said that. At least Klein noted Reagan Junior is a "prominent liberal voice," or he's at least as prominent as the media's Reagan-haters desire to make him. Klein said "He feels as if his father’s memory has been misappropriated by some conservatives, who gloss over elements of his record that they don’t agree with." Klein didn't stop him from mangling his father's record on taxation:
“It's not surprising that Republicans revere him as an icon and want to use him in that way. He's almost a fetish object, as I've said, over on the right,” Reagan told us. “True enough, he was a lower-taxes-and-small-government kind of guy. But of course the top marginal rate when he was in office was 50 percent, so he might be pretty happy with things the way they are now. I don't know though -- I can't speak for him. A lot of other people do like to speak for him, though, but I think it's a mistake. Many of them have never even met him, of course.”
Is Reagan Junior really demonstrating his superior politically savvy over conservatives like Palin? The top marginal tax rate at Reagan's inauguration was 70 percent. The first round of Reagan tax cuts lowered that to 50 percent, and then the tax reform of 1986 dropped the top marginal rate to 28 percent in 1988. It's currently 35 percent, so Reaganites would prefer 1988 rates to 2011 rates.

[More]
One of the great man's quotes, it seems, applies to his lesser son: "Well, the trouble with our liberal friends is not that they're ignorant; it's just that they know so much that isn't so."

- JP

Friday, November 19, 2010

CBS 'surprised' when Gov. Palin slaps media for promoting Levi Johnston

NewsBuster Kyle Drennen reports
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The Early Show on CBS (the network that touted made-up documents about George W. Bush's Air Guard service as "fake but accurate") had self-admitted liar Levi Johnson on as a guest half a dozen times, yet is surprised that Gov. Palin would criticize the lamestream media for promoting the crazy, mixed-up kid. Go figure:
On Friday's CBS Early Show, correspondent Nancy Cordes reported on leaked excerpts of Sarah Palin's new book, 'America By Heart,' claiming, "some of the topics she tackles may be surprising." One such topic was Palin's criticism of the media for promoting Levi Johnston: "It was disgusting to watch as his 15 minutes of fame were exploited by supposed adults taking advantage of a lost kid."

While Cordes found that comment "surprising," CBS, and the Early Show in particular, were chief among those who exploited Levi Johnston and his attacks on the Palin family. As has been detailed on NewsBusters, throughout 2009 and 2010, the CBS Early Show has featured six lengthy stories on Johnston, including three "exclusive" interviews.

At the end of her report, Cordes seemed disconcerted over Palin's criticism of the First Lady: "She even takes a swipe at Michelle Obama, dredging up that comment about being proud of her country for the first time when her husband started to win elections. This is going to be some pretty provocative stuff."

[More]
A New York Daily News columnist labeled it as more than just provocative, calling it "mudslinging." Because the left believes when a conservative directly quotes a liberal's own words, it's "mudslinging" or something...

Via Twitter Thursday, Gov. Palin made reference to the leaked excerpts:

"The publishing world is LEAKING out-of-context excerpts of my book w/out my permission? Isn't that illegal?MT @C4Palin http://bit.ly/cD6DOQ"
- JP

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

NewsBusters: Contradictions Pile Up Around Vanity Fair’s Palin Hit Piece

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Vanity Fair attack dog Michael Joseph Gross has admitted to one glaring "error" in his smear job on Sarah Palin, but the reports contradicting his hatchet job continue to stack up, according to NewsBuster Nathan Burchfiel:
In a Sept. 7 post on The Corner, Katrina Trinko "refudiated" Gross's characterization of Palin as vicious, vengeful, and fake. Unlike Gross's sources, almost all of which were anonymous, Trinko provided citations.

Gross had cited "people who know" suggesting Palin's relationship with close friends Kristan Cole and Kris Perry had "deteriorated." But Cole reportedly told Trinko the charge was "absolutely not true. I don't know where they get this stuff from, honestly."

A former Palin aide, Ivy Frye, also contradicted Gross's characterization that she parted ways with Palin "on bad terms." "I didn't leave on ‘bad terms,'" she said in a statement. "Gross' 8 page hit piece is a complete work of fiction from beginning to end."
Although Gross admitted that he "misreported" an incident in his story in which he had alleged that Gov. Palin was using her Down Syndrome child to curry political sympathy, Burchfiel checked the Vanity Fair website, and the original story appears unedited, with no correction or apology added.

Related: Ben Smith has an update at Politico which casts some serious doubt on another Gross anecdote from his VF hit piece:
Now Scott Conroy, a Palin embed and co-author of the critical, reported book on Palin's rise Sarah from Alaska emails over his informed thoughts on the matter:
[Co-author] "Shushannah [Walshe] and I were fed the same story more than a year ago while we were researching our book. We decided not to print it because although it was related to us by a senior aide who claimed to have been on the receiving end of Palin's inquiry, the source had a very obvious axe to grind and insisted upon anonymity. Also, there were several other people present at the time that Palin supposedly posed the question. We spoke to all of them, and none recalled hearing Palin ask, at that time, about when Bristol should marry Levi. In fact, a couple of the people present said that they would have overheard the question if she had indeed asked it..."
- JP

Friday, August 27, 2010

Johnston via CBS: 'That apology kind of makes me sound like a liar'

Kind of?
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From NewsBuster Rich Noyes:
Continuing their obsession with the credibility-challenged Levi Johnston, whose sole claim to fame is his continuing ability to exploit his relationship with Sarah Palin’s daughter, Bristol, CBS’s The Early Show on Friday devoted more than four minutes to an “exclusive” interview with the “reality star” and how he now recants his apology for lying about the Palins in previous interviews.

To her credit, correspondent Betty Nguyen challenged Johnston’s openly frivolous approach to running for mayor of Wasilla, Alaska (a stunt concocted for a reality show) and whether his temporary apology was “honest” (he said it was “something I did to make my fiancee happy”).

But CBS has shown a particular fetish for publicizing Johnston’s antics, especially his slams of Sarah Palin.

[...]

As for Johnston himself, he ludicrously claimed that his interest in running for mayor of Wasilla was completely independent of the fact that it used to be Sarah Palin’s job (“I don't care what she did or where she was at. I'm doing it because I want to”).

And, just weeks after he apologized for lying about the Palin’s, he insisted that everything he’s said is true.

[...]

The only thing less credible than that is the notion that CBS is repeatedly showcasing this publicity hound for any reason other than to embarrass Sarah Palin and diminish her political clout.
It's sad that this kid has no redeeming values. Not one.

- JP

Sunday, August 15, 2010

NewsBusters: Ultraliberal NY Times columnist defends Gov. Palin

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Surprise! New York Times überliberal columnist Charles Blow actually came to Sarah Palin's defense after the 2008 GOP vice presidential candidate was the target of death wish attacks by two New Hampshire Democrats. NewsBusters associate editor Noel Sheppard reports:
In case you missed it, on Tuesday Keith Halloran, a Democrat candidate for the New Hampshire House, posted in a Facebook thread about the plane crash that killed former Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens, "Just wish Sarah and Levy [sic] were on board."

New Hampshire State Representative Timothy Horrigan replied Wednesday, "Well a dead Palin wd [sic] be even more dangerous than a live one ... she is all about her myth & if she was dead she cldn' t [sic] commit any more gaffes."

Rather surprisingly, Blow took issue with this Saturday:
Then there's the Democratic state representative, Timothy Horrigan, from New Hampshire. After Ted Stevens, the former Alaska senator, was killed in a plane crash this week, Keith David Halloran, a New Hampshire Democrat, posted this message on his Facebook page: "Just wish Sarah and Levy were on board," clearly referring to Sarah Palin and Levi Johnston.

To that, Horrigan responded: "Well a dead Palin wd be even more dangerous than a live one ... she is all about her myth & if she was dead she cldn't commit any more gaffes."

Seriously guys? I'm the first to say that I want to keep Palin as close to Russia and as far away from Washington as humanly possible, but debating the merits of her demise in a plane crash is heinous. Horrigan has since resigned.
In reality, Blow was being surprisingly bipartisan in this column mocking the behavior of both Republicans and Democrats...
Noel Sheppard's full NewsBusters op-ed is here.

- JP

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Keith Olbermann Is No Man of His Word

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When it comes to bashing Sarah Palin and other conservative women, Keith Olbermann has proven to be something less than a man of his word. NewsBuster Brad Wilmouth has documented a big Bathtub Boy lie:
Since April 8 of this year, MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann has called former Governor Sarah Palin an "idiot" 22 times on his Countdown show, usually by uttering the words, "That woman is an idiot." But in August 2004, the MSNBC host claimed to be too "naive and old-fashioned" to call a woman an "idiot," as he attacked conservative commentator Michelle Malkin for misquoting him as having called her an "idiot," when, in reality, he had charged that she had "made a fool out of herself" instead. In fact, Olbermann contended that if he had in reality called Malkin an "idiot," it would have been grounds for him to apologize:
We at Countdown were preparing an apology for my choice of language last night after the writer Michelle Malkin went on Rush Limbaugh's radio entertainment program and wrote in her Web blog that I had called her a, quote, "idiot." It was Ms. Malkin, who on Hardball last night, raised the accusation that John Kerry's Vietnam wounds may have been self-inflicted. It's naive and old-fashioned, but I feel you should reserve those terms like "idiot" exclusively for men. Political differences, fault or innocence are all secondary. There are codes. There's also a problem. I never called her an idiot.
But since April, the words, "That woman is an idiot," referring to Palin, have become a near regular part of the show, as the Countdown host has called the former governor an "idiot" during 20 episodes of his show between April 8 and July 8, including once when he used the label three times in one show as he also called her "idiot woman" and "that idiot."

Over the last couple of years, Olbermann has a history of making even more incendiary attacks on Malkin and Palin, once comparing Malkin to a "mashed-up bag of meat with lipstick on it," and once crudely joking with Rachel Maddow about the difference between Palin and a pitbull being that "you can train a pitbull to occasionally keep its mouth closed."

Last February, he slammed Sarah Palin, former New York Lieutenant Governor Betsy McCaughey, and other ObamaCare critics, especially those who have used the term "death panels," calling such national health care opponents by the names "subhumans," "ghouls," and "fiends." He went on to "damn" to "hell" those who use the term "death panels." Olbermann: "It’s a life panel, and damn those who call it otherwise to hell!"
Say, isn't it the left that is always complaining about the "hate speech" and "incendiary rhetoric" it claims it hears from conservatives? Perhaps leftists should look a little closer to home to find some real examples of what it whines about. It need look no further than MSNBC and Olberman's "Countdown" "Meltdown" program.

Read Brad Wilmouth's excellent exposé unabridged at NewsBusters.com.

- JP

Monday, July 5, 2010

Newsweek blames Sarah Palin for sexist treatment of GOP women

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NewsBuster Noel Sheppard catches Newsweek, which has a long record of sexist treatment of Sarah Palin, suggesting it's Gov. Palin's own fault that Republican women are being attacked for their beauty:
"There seems to be an insistent, increasingly excitable focus on the supposed hotness of Republican women in the public eye, like Sarah Palin, Michele Bachmann, Michelle Malkin, and Nikki Haley-not to mention veterans like Ann Coulter," the article now being prominently featured at the magazine's website began.

Hypocritically, Julia Baird's piece never once explained or wondered why the same thing isn't being done to Democrat women.

Instead, the numerous headlines exclusively trivialized physically attractive GOP females...
Newsweek's hypocrisy would be considered stunning were it not owned by the Washington Post Company, which has been reduced to little more than a stenographer service for the Democrat Party. What was once a glossy news magazine has been reduced in more ways than just circulation figures, advertising revenue and the number of its pages. It's just a brochure full of DNC talking points now, which may explain why Newsweek's owners are having so much trouble finding a buyer for the troubled periodical.

Read Noel Sheppard's full story here.

- JP

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Matthews: 'Is Sarah Palin The Most Important Republican In The Country?'

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NewsBusters Associate Editor Noel Sheppard watches MSNBC so we don't have to. He observed some unusual activity on Chris Matthews' weekend show when Tweety asked his panel if Sarah Palin is the most important Republican in the country:
What made this even more surprising was how his guests -- CNN's Gloria Borger, Politico's John Harris, the BBC's Katty Kay, and former "CBS Evening News" host Dan Rather -- seemed to feel she was.

[...]
DAN RATHER: Well, she's not running at the moment for President. But I wouldn't underestimate her. She's a version now of a Deacon with four aces. She can go a lot of different ways. She is playing an almost perfect hand. If she wants to stay a power in the Party, make a lot of money and not run, she can do that. I wouldn't underestimate her even for 2012 for one second. If she decides to run, it would be hard to bet against her for the nomination.

MATTHEWS: Good point. Is she Richard Nixon? Is she going around and picking up chits, proving that she can deliver, carefully selecting winners, avoiding losers when they're on the right, so that day after this election, like Nixon did in '66, "Look what I did for the party, I should be the nominee?"

RATHER: And goes into the convention with maybe thirty percent of the votes.
Imagine that.

For approaching two years, America's press have been mercilessly eviscerating this woman with every opportunity.

Now, with Obama plummeting in the polls, and Democrats looking like they're in a lot of trouble in the upcoming midterm elections, suddenly Palin is not only possibly the most important Republican in the country, but is also a legitimate candidate for President.

Is hell freezing over, or is something else at play here?
We seriously doubt that hell is freezing over. The moonbats, as they do on rare occasions, just want to build her up to try to tear her down. They will resume their usual attacks on the governor soon enough.

- JP

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Evidence? We don' need no steenking evidence!

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NewsBuster Tim Graham recalls how the national media beat itself up during the Clinton presidency "for being too quick to acknowledge when women suggested they'd had affairs or been harassed by Clinton." In retrospect the press admitted that it would need to be cautious about reporting an alleged cheating scandal without knowing the details or having compelling evidence. So why, Graham wants to know, is the media repeating unsubstantiated adultery allegations against a woman made by a blogger with a documented history of domestic violence?
Because she's a Republican? In Mark Sanford's South Carolina? Sarah Palin-endorsed South Carolina gubernatorial candidate Nikki Haley has seen an unsubstantiated adultery charge spread by the Associated Press, The Washington Post, Newsday, and CNN, whose Wolf Blitzer ran to the evidence-free story on The Situation Room Monday.
Blitzer gave his lead-in to correspondent Lisa Sylvester, who mentioned, in her report:
Will Folks, who says he is a Haley supporter [!], says he decided to come forward after rival campaigns began leaking the story to the media. Folks, who resigned from the state government in 2005, before admitting a domestic violence charge, says he isn't saying anymore.
If, as Folks maintains, rival campaigns were leaking details to the media, why had no media outlet reported on the alleged affair before Folks made his accusations on his blog? The question apparently never crossed the minds of either Blitzer or Sylvester to ask. Graham comments:
Earth to CNN: it is not impressive "news judgment" to conclude "there's something in the South Carolina water" and spread this story without proof. Surely CNN wouldn't have started telling adultery stories about other Arkansas politicians on the principle "if Clinton does it, they must all do it." But then CNN compounded the offense, by psychologizing Haley as an offender:
Temple University professor Frank Farley says politics, by its nature, draws a Type T personality -- T for thrill seeker. They're natural leaders, charismatic, but there is a down side.
PROF. FRANK FARLEY: The T negative, unfortunately, is where they take risks in destructive ways, either self-destructive ways or in ways that are destructive of other people. And it's like you sometimes -- it sometimes overflows in a sense. You know, you may be this big T personality out there, a leader, changing the world, but you also have a little bit of that negative potential.
A week after the Monica Lewinsky story broke, CNN aired a self-flagellating special titled "Investigating the President: Media Madness?"

Jeff Greenfield began: "More than 200 years after the Founding Fathers risked their lives to found a nation built on the idea of freedom, after crafting the Bill of Rights, whose very first guarantee is the right of a free press to inform and educate the people, millions of those people are asking the press one question fraught with significance: What the hell are you people doing trying to find out what kind of sex the President of the United States might or might not be having?"

They didn't offer the same regrets for Nikki Haley.
CNN cannot seem to understand why the first all-news network is floundering. That it chose to run with a blogger's unproven charges -- in particular when that blogger was reported by the largest newspaper in his state to "shrug off accusations that he is paid to publish certain stories" might be a big clue for CNN as to why it is in a state of free fall.

- JP

Monday, May 17, 2010

MSNBC/Olbermann: The Worst Hubris in the World

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Excellent observation by Mark Finkelstein:
Note to Olbermann: when calling someone else an "idiot-woman," avoid misspelling "you're" as "your" in your show graphics...
msnbc hubris

BTW, why should Sarah Palin, who works for Fox News, appear on MSNBC? Doing so would reduce her Nielson ratings by 300 percent.

Silly liberals...

- JP

Sunday, May 16, 2010

NewsBusters: Post Buries Article on Palin's Call for 'Conservative, Feminist Identity'

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Newsbusters managing editor Ken Shepherd was "disappointed but hardly surprised" that the Washington Post "buried" a story written by Amy Gardner on Sarah Palin's call for pro-life women to form a "conservative, feminist identity":
While the 10-paragraph article in itself didn't raise any bias alarm bells, I was disappointed but hardly surprised that the Post buried the story on the last page of its A-section.

Gardner's article focused on how Palin, "[s]peaking to a breakfast gathering of the Susan B. Anthony List in downtown Washington on Friday" observed that liberal pro-choice feminists are hypocrites for on the one hand insisting that women can hold fulfilling careers while being mothers but at the same time those same feminists hold out abortion for young women who might feel their unwanted pregnancies are an inconvenience obstacle to career or educational goals.
Gov. Palin's calling out of liberal feminists for their hypocrisy, observes Shepherd, was the stimulus for the Post's Jonathan Capehart, a Palin critic who took the trouble to attend the SBA List's Celebration of Life Breakfast fundraiser to see her speak. In his column, Capehart conceded that the first woman ever to be the vice presidential candidate of the Republican Party had made "a very interesting point."

Read Shepherd's full NewsBusters post here.

- JP

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

The hypocrisy of Katie Couric

The NewsBusters.com headline just about sums it up:

Couric Advises Against 'Nastiness' -- In Speech That Mocked Rush, Palin, Rumsfeld, and Miss California

- JP