Tag Archives: stephanopoulos

Robin Roberts Returns to Good Morning America for Hosting Test Run

Early today, Robin Roberts made her first visit to the Good Morning America set since undergoing a bone marrow transplant in September. Arriving at 5 a.m. like she would on a regular work day, Roberts conducted what she described during a satellite interview last week as a “dry run,” something her doctors recommend before she resumes full-time co-hosting duties. “What a thrill to be back at ‘GMA”s Times Square Studio this morning and see the best folks in the world, my ‘GMA’ family,” Roberts told ABC . “I can’t wait to get back to the anchor chair in a few weeks.” Explaining why she needs to be tested before she appears again on-camera, Roberts previously said: “My skin is very sensitive and so we have to see how it reacts to the studio lights. My vision is still a little blurry from the treatment. All of this is getting better day by day so that is the next step.” Physicians have said Roberts is displaying no abnormalities since starting her treatment and she’s expected back alongside Stephanopoulos some time next month. We cannot wait to see her there.

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Robin Roberts Returns to Good Morning America for Hosting Test Run

Bozell: Congratulations to ABC News on Departure of President David Westin

Congratulations, ABC News! You are now free from the 14-year reign of the news president that helped drive your ratings into the ground. Under his leadership, Westin continually promoted some of the most liberally biased reporters in news, including George Stephanopoulos , Diane Sawyer , Christine Amanpour and Bill Weir .  He hired an Obama donor as ABC’s new Senior Medical Editor in the midst of the healthcare debate and ignored the 83,000 Americans who petitioned him to ensure that ABC reported the truth about Obama’s government takeover of healthcare. Westin neglected to address the obvious conflict of interest in George Stephanopoulos’ daily strategy phone call with Rahm Emanuel, and failed to keep his promise that ABC News would offer ‘objective’ reporting on the War on Terror in 2003. He even had the gall to suggest that the Pentagon was a legitimate terrorism target in the wake of September 11th. Two years later, he banned any ABC News personnel from wearing a patriotic flag lapel pin . ABC should seize the opportunity to replace Westin with a president who will deliver what the American people want and deserve – real journalism. It’s ABC’s only glimmer of hope for surviving in the news industry.

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Bozell: Congratulations to ABC News on Departure of President David Westin

NYT’s Maureen Dowd Critiques: ‘Thin-Skinned Obama’ Doesn’t Like Media Portrayal

Appearing with Good Morning America’s George Stephanopoulos, liberal journalist Maureen Dowd derided Barack Obama as “think-skinned” and not happy with media coverage. This prompted Stephanopoulos to admit, ” And his press hasn’t been nearly as bad as he thinks. ” Dowd prefaced her critique by analyzing Obama’s self image: “…I cut him a lot of slack here, because many presidents like JFK and W have rich daddies. And so, they have a lot of confidence. But he’s had to develop a lot of shields.” The New York Times columnist continued, “So, he’s thin-skinned. And when you’re thin-skinned, you like to control the image. And he doesn’t often like the image that the media has of him.” In regards to other problems the President has run into, she theorized, “Well, he can’t connect at moments. He wants to ride to the rescue. So, he holds back too much. And he doesn’t connect when he could.” As for journalists not being too tough on Obama, Stephanopoulos would know. During the 2008 campaign, for instance, he declared the Democratic presidential ticket the winner in all four debates. A partial transcript of the June 30 segment, which aired at 8:33am, follows: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Before I let you go, speaking of President Obama, your Pulitzer Prize-winning colleague at the New York Post, Kathleen Parker, has a pretty provocative column out calling him our first female president. And I was wondering your take on it. Because, you have columns that go into a similar vein to that. DOWD: I love Kathleen. And I would agree with her that President Obama has female management traits. Consensus, compromise, and listening to everyone. Whereas people like Hillary and Sarah Palin have traditional male traits, which is alpha, “my way or the highway.” But, I don’t think his main problem is a gender one. It’s more of a humanoid one. STEPHANOPOULOS: Humanoid? DOWD: Well, he can’t connect at moments. He wants to ride to the rescue. So, he holds back too much. And he doesn’t connect when he could. He waits. It’s more like his mother is an anthropologist. He has that anthropologist side of just waiting and looking. That’s not really a male or female trait. It’s a problem. STEPHANOPOULOS: That’s fascinating. And I’m sure you know that this kind of analysis drives him nuts. DOWD: I know. He’s told me many times I’m irritating. I’m so proud. STEPHANOPOULOS: What’s irritated him most about your columns? DOWD: Oh, he doesn’t- He’s- he’s very unlike- You know, it’s funny and I cut him a lot of slack here, because many presidents like JFK and W have rich daddies. And so, they have a lot of confidence. But he’s had to develop a lot of shields. He’s come up, you know, basically, as Michelle says, he was raised by wolves. So, you know, he has a lot of shields. So, he’s thin-skinned. And when you’re thin-skinned, you like to control the image. And he doesn’t often like the image that the media has of him. STEPHANOPOULOS: And his press hasn’t been nearly as bad as he thinks. DOWD: No. But, he thinks it’s been bad. STEPHANOPOULOS: All presidents do. It comes with the territory. Maureen Dowd, thank you very much.

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NYT’s Maureen Dowd Critiques: ‘Thin-Skinned Obama’ Doesn’t Like Media Portrayal

Network Morning Shows Unanimously Gush Over Larry King

The morning programs of the Big Three networks all sang the praises of CNN host Larry King after he announced on Tuesday his upcoming retirement from his program, while overlooking his liberal bent at times. Both Willie Geist on NBC’s Today show and CBS’s Harry Smith labeled King ” legendary ,” while ABC’s George Stephanopoulos heralded how he was ” on top of his game ” for most of his career. NBC correspondent Peter Alexander reused Geist’s “legendary” label, and chronicled the CNN personality’s “perch in prime time” during his 25 years on his Larry King Live program, spotlighting how he “has interviewed nearly 50,000 people over more than 50 years in broadcasting.” Alexander underlined this with clips from King’s interviews of Frank Sinatra, Ross Perot, and Paris Hilton, noting that ” if you wanted the country to listen, you sat down with Larry King .”  The correspondent also included a clip from Ken Baker of E! News, who stated that “whoever is going to replace Larry King has obviously very big shoes to fill .” CBS’s Smith used the “legendary” term in the top-of-the-hour tease at 7 am Eastern. Twenty minutes later, during a segment with substitute anchor Erica Hill, he described King’s 1985 premiere on CNN as a “grand experiment” and concluded that “twenty-five years later, it seemed to work out all right.” The two labeled him a “very interesting” and “good” guy. At the bottom of the hour, correspondent Jim Axelrod did a similar chronicle of the CNN host’s career to Alexander’s on NBC, choosing instead President Obama, Carrie Prejean, and Lady Gaga as the notables to highlight. His concluding line echoed Ken Baker’s line on NBC: ” Whoever gets the job, they won’t be easy suspenders to fill .” Smith then brought on The Washington Post’s  Howard Kurtz to discuss the host’s impending retirement, who, as Tim Graham noted earlier on Wednesday , speculated whether a “variety show” like King’s, where “you talk to a president one day and Lady Gaga the next,” could survive in an “increasingly partisan cable television universe.” ABC’s Stephanopoulos proclaimed the host ” the undisputed king of late night talk ” on Good Morning America and stated that “no one had a longer run and King was on top of his game for most of it .” After correspondent Dan Harris’s report on the CNN personality’s career, Harris, Stephanopoulos, and substitute anchor Elizabeth Vargas speculated on who would replace King. The former Clinton operative endorsed a liberal colleague of his at CBS: ” Katie Couric’s my pick . But, I guess she doesn’t want it.” The three morning programs did all mention how King’s past few years were “rocky,” as Stephanopoulos put it, between a decline in ratings and the reports of a possible divorce with his seventh wife. But they all omitted his occasional shots at conservatives, as MRC’s Notables Quotables chronicled over the years.

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Network Morning Shows Unanimously Gush Over Larry King

ABC Frets Over Pickle McChrystal Has Put Obama Into: Look ‘Petulant’ or ‘Weak’

ABC, CBS and NBC all led Tuesday night with multiple stories on the “firestorm” over disrespectful coments by General Stanley McChrystal and his aides about President Obama and other administration officials, but ABC’s Diane Sawyer and George Stephanopoulos particularly despaired over the position in which McChrystal has put Obama. Sawyer fretted that Obama “now faces a mind-boggling choice,” before Stephanopoulos kvetched “the President has really been put in a real political box” and “a very painful political position,” forcing him to choose between “looking thin-skinned and petulant” or “looking weak.” CBS’s Katie Couric didn’t go that far, but she was disturbed by the burden on Obama: “This controversy is about the last thing the President needed on his plate as he deals with two wars overseas and another against an invasion of oil off the gulf coast.” Sawyer asked chief political correspondent/Good Morning America co-host Stephanopoulos: “What are you hearing, George?” He worried about Obama’s plight: That a debate has been raging inside the administration since this article hit last night, and that the President has really been put in a real political box. If he fires McChrystal after this, he risks looking thin-skinned and petulant. But if he accepts these words, which some consider insubordination, then he risks looking weak. So it’s a very painful political position right now for the President. Sawyer had led the June 22 World News: Good evening. There was a giant explosion heard around the world today, and it had nothing to do with weapons. Everything to do with words. General Stanley McChrystal, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, gave an interview to a magazine. And in it, he and his aides took aim at everyone from the President to the Vice President to Senators and diplomats. The General has been summoned to the White House by President Obama, who now faces a mind-boggling choice. Does he fire the man central to the war right before a major battle? Jake Tapper takes us inside a stunned and furious White House.

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ABC Frets Over Pickle McChrystal Has Put Obama Into: Look ‘Petulant’ or ‘Weak’

Stephanopoulos Enchanted By Obama’s ‘Marshal Language’ and ‘Feel of FDR’

President Barack Obama’s Oval Office address about the oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico certainly impressed George Stephanopoulos, though that’s not a difficult achievement for the favorably pre-disposed Democratic operative turned network political expert. ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC were all back to regular programming two minutes or less after Obama finished, but that was enough time for Stephanopoulos to display his delight. “What struck me tonight,” he informed ABC anchor Diane Sawyer, is: Oval Office addresses are often used when the nation is at war and tonight the President used marshal language. He talked about a “siege,” the “assault on our shores” and his “battle plan” to fix it. And he said we have to “rally together.” The co-host of ABC’s Good Morning America proceeded to relay, presuming the inspirational goal was met, that the White House was “reaching for” the “feel of Franklin Roosevelt during World War II and those fireside chats and the President even said that during World War II they said we couldn’t build enough planes and tanks, but we did. We can beat this as well.” To which, Sawyer chimed in by quoting liberal hero FDR: “Only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” From immediately following Obama’s 8 PM EDT speech on Tuesday night, June 15: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: What struck me tonight, Diane, is you know those Oval Office addresses are often used when the nation is at war and tonight the President used marshal language. He talked about a “siege,” the “assault on our shores” and his “battle plan” to fix it. And he said we have to “rally together.” And I think what the White House was reaching for tonight is the feel of Franklin Roosevelt during World War II and those fireside chats and the President even said that during World War II they said we couldn’t build enough planes and tanks, but we did. We can beat this as well. DIANE SAWYER: “Only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”

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Stephanopoulos Enchanted By Obama’s ‘Marshal Language’ and ‘Feel of FDR’

Stephanopoulos Cites Tea Party ‘Losing Steam,’ But Skips Obama’s Plummeting Numbers

On Tuesday’s World News, ABC’s George Stephanopoulos touted how “we’ve got a new poll out tonight that shows the Tea Party may be losing steam nationwide” as its unfavorable rating has “gone up eleven points in the last couple of months to 50 percent. Their favorable rating has gone down.” Stephanopoulos and ABC, however, didn’t find time, in multiple stories on the oil leak, to inform viewers how the same ABC News/Washington Post survey, released Tuesday morning, found that by 49 to 44 percent the public disapproves of President Obama’s handling of the disaster. In addition, “the number of Americans who think the President ‘understands the problems of people like you,’ at 51 percent, is down from 56 percent in a Washington Post poll in late March; and at 57 percent his rating as a strong leader is down from 65 percent in March.” ( PDF of poll results ) Stephanopoulos raised the Tea Party’s standing in a preview of Tuesday’s primary elections. Anchor Diane Sawyer wondered: “And what does this mean, the outsider momentum for the Tea Party? Does it roll straight to November?” Stephanopoulos answered: Not entirely clear. We’ve got a new poll out tonight that shows the Tea Party may be losing steam nationwide. Look at the unfavorable rating. It’s gone up eleven points in the last couple of months to 50 percent [from 39]. Their favorable rating has gone down [41 to 36]. So the Tea Party still has enough juice to win these primaries, but they may be putting their party in a position of making it harder to win those seats in November.

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Stephanopoulos Cites Tea Party ‘Losing Steam,’ But Skips Obama’s Plummeting Numbers