Tag Archives: press

Spencer Pratt Vists Strip Club, Seeks "Talent" For New "Film Project"

Newly single and increasingly scruffy Spencer Pratt reportedly dropped $7,515 at 4 Play Gentleman’s Club in Los Angeles the other day … from 2-5 p.m. The Hills villain was allegedly “scouting out actresses: for his upcoming R-rated beach movie entitled, Tower 69: Beach Patrol Featuring 3D Boobs . We’re dead serious, yes. Memo to Spencer Pratt : Claiming to be a film producer won’t impress anyone. If you’re able to drop $7,515 in three hours, strippers couldn’t care less. Still, the erratic reality star told Radar Online that “we were casting for the new film I am producing … Tell all the press Spencer was casting ‘talent’!” A source said: “Spencer and his pals had a blast. He was sitting at a table with around seven scantily-clad women who were all vying for his attention. THE FACE OF FILM GREATNESS : Freed from the shackles of MTV The Hills, Spencer Pratt is ready to dominate the world of movies. And breasts in 3-D . “His posse of security guys and friends were scattered at surrounding tables. Spencer Pratt was spotted with a big wad of $100 bills in his hands.” An Australian actress named Sophie Turner is supposedly his top “candidate.” No word if she’s had so many plastic surgeries she can no longer smile. Speaking of Spencer’s estranged wife, Heidi Montag has reportedly been told to distance herself from him because she’s losing endorsement deals. Heidi filed for divorce from Pratt in June, and has become upset she was missing out on the kind of deals landed by her co-stars like Audrina and LC. Why would Lauren Conrad be a better face for any product on Earth than Heidi Montag? Not in our wildest dreams could we even venture a guess.

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Spencer Pratt Vists Strip Club, Seeks "Talent" For New "Film Project"

ABC Hypes Michelle Obama’s ‘Lush,’ Luxurious’ Spanish Vacation, Hit Extravagance of Laura Bush

Good Morning America’s Yunji de Nies on Friday touted Michelle Obama’s “five-star,” “luxurious” vacation to Spain, skipping any discussion of controversy over the $148,000 trip. In January of 2009, however, the very same program chided Laura Bush for introducing new presidential dinnerware, despite the fact that the bill was being paid by a private organization. De Nies gushed, “They toured the plaza in old Marbella. Cooled off with chocolate gelato and bought matching sun dresses. Michelle and Sasha Obama are making a splash in Spain.” News reader Juju Chang vaguely hinted at criticism, allowing, “Michelle Obama may be taking heat for her luxury vacation with her nine-year-old daughter, but as Yunji de Nies shows us, the Spanish can’t get enough of her.” What that “heat” was, exactly, went unsaid. Good Morning America certainly hasn’t reported on it. ( CBS News reported that the”6.5 hour flight to Spain would run $73,781.50 – double for the round trip.”) ABC brought on reporter Ann Compton to defend the vacation: “Whether they’re sitting on a beach or meeting with a king in a palace. It is bringing forth the American culture, the American people, representing the United States of America. It’s never really just vacation.” Yet, on January 7, 2009 , the same Compton worried, “So, why is Laura Bush introducing new Bush china two weeks before they move out?” Co-host Robin Roberts warned about the “brewing brouhaha” and alerted, “President and First Lady Laura Bush are leaving behind a new set of dinnerware when they leave the White House in two weeks.” At the very end of the segment, Compton explained that the $485,000 cost was being paid by the private White House Historical Association. DeNies has a history of fawning over Michelle Obama. On October 1, 2009 , she predicted that the First Lady’s pitch for the 2016 Olympics in Chicago would leave not “a dry eye in the house.” On April 29, 2009 , she lauded Mrs. Obama as the “belle of the ball.” A transcript of the August 6 segment, which aired at 8:03am EDT, follows: JUJU CHANG: And the First Lady’s summer in Spain . Michelle Obama may be taking heat for her luxury vacation with her nine-year-old daughter, but as Yunji de Nies shows us, the Spanish can’t get enough of her. YUNJI DE NIES: They toured the plaza in old Marbella. Cooled off with chocolate gelato and bought matching sun dresses. Michelle and Sasha Obama are making a splash in Spain . UNIDENTIFIED SPANISH WOMAN [through translator]: She’s very beautiful. Very nice. I couldn’t see more, though, because the whole world is waiting. DE NIES: Wherever they go, the press follows. [Montage of Spanish reporters saying “Michelle Obama.] DE NIES: They’re traveling with old friends from Chicago. All staying at this five-star resort. Its website boasts lush gardens and luxurious suites. ROBERT GIBBS: It’s a private trip and is being paid for that way. DE NIES: She’s not the first first mom to jet set with her daughter. Hillary Clinton brought Chelsea around the world. Jenna Bush joined her mother in Africa. ABC’s Ann Compton covered it all. And says, there’s value to these visits. ANN COMPTON: Whether they’re sitting on a beach or meeting with a king in a palace. It is bringing forth the American culture, the American people, representing the United States of America. It’s never really just vacation. DE NIES: America’s littlest ambassadors have toured Russia’s Kremlin, Rome’s Coliseum. Even met with Queen Elizabeth. On Sunday, mother and daughter will lunch with the Spanish king and queen, a royal finish to this summer vacation. For Good Morning America, Yunji de Nies, ABC News, the White House. CHANG: I just love the way the Spanish say Michelle Obama.

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ABC Hypes Michelle Obama’s ‘Lush,’ Luxurious’ Spanish Vacation, Hit Extravagance of Laura Bush

Bill Press Mocks Southern Senator with Banjo Music; Suggests ‘Taking Citizenship Away from People Born in Alabama’

Ah yes – liberalism, or as its recent branding has labeled it, progressivism, is the most open-minded and culturally sensitive place to be on the ideological spectrum. Those who subscribe to those beliefs are far more enlightened and far more able to respect those from all over the globe, or least all over the United States, right? Not the case with liberal talk show host Bill Press. On his Aug. 4 program, Press launched into a long-winded rant about a handful of U.S. Senators who question the interpretation of the 14 th Amendment , which allows for so-called “anchor babies” to provide a way for some illegal immigrants to achieve legal status, despite having broken the law by entering the United States. Press took issue with Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., the ranking member on the Senate Judiciary Committee, who suggested the 14 th Amendment is being abused and wasn’t what was intended by the original authors of it. But he didn’t just disagree with him for his stance. Instead, he took to mocking his southern accent, playing to a stereotype of people from the South. “You know the only thing we’re missing with that are the banjos, you know,” Press said. “I mean – yeah, Jeff Sessions. I mean give me a freaking break. [ In faux southern accent with banjo music playing ] You know our founding fathers didn’t know them jet skis – they got them jet skis in Tijuana. They do, they just zip up the coast and have their baby on the beach in La Hoya, La Joya, La Jolla and then they back to Tijuana with a little baby American. God darn if Thomas Jefferson had only know’d that we would have been different.” Press went on to show his audacity was boundless and called critics of the way the 14 th Amendment has been used as “mean-spirited.” Press framed the entire debate in a manner that made it seem like legislators were taking their concerns over illegal immigration out on children. “Where do we get these people from?” Press continued. “You know, unfreaking believable. Look this is such a stupid thing. Number one, it’s just – look, it’s so mean-spirited, right? Yeah, OK – we’re going to take it out on the kids. Yeah, we’re going to get even with those illegal immigrants. We’re going to get even with anybody that came here to try to improve their life and do better for their family. Yeah, we’re going to take it out on their kids and throw those little buggers back across the boarder.” But he didn’t stop there with the mocking Sessions. Later in his broadcast, Press launched into another anti-Sessions screed with the same theatrics. [ With faux southern accent with banjo music playing ] “Ah yeah, did Thomas Jefferson know ‘bout dem UFOs?” Press said. “Man, those aliens coming here from outer space, popping out a baby and then hopping in their spaceship and goin’ home. What’s this world coming to? I’m tellin’ ya, if James Madison know’d that he would’ve done different.” And to end his bizarre high-minded, left-of-center condescending anti-Alabama rant, this wizard of smart suggested maybe we should revoke citizenship from Alabamians. “You know, how about we just take citizenship away from people born in Alabama ?” Press said. “That’d be a good start. Just kidding, Alabamans – well, yeah maybe [laughter]. Alright, there we go, yes indeed.” One can only ask what is next for Press. Will he mock someone of another ethnicity which he disagrees with a stereotype? It is hard to imagine a conservative talker pulling such a feat off without some sort of pushback from Press and his ilk.

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Bill Press Mocks Southern Senator with Banjo Music; Suggests ‘Taking Citizenship Away from People Born in Alabama’

Today Show Invites on Rolling Stone Reporter to Complain About Pentagon Ban

NBC’s Today show invited on the reporter, whose Rolling Stone article essentially got General Stanley McChrystal fired, on Thursday’s show to complain that the Pentagon denied him an embed because the war in Afghanistan isn’t going well. After Today co-anchor Meredith Vieira questioned Michael Hastings for his explanation as to why the Pentagon denied him an embed, Hastings concluded “This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going…The war has hit its all-time low.” This caused Vieira, herself, to cry censorship, as she asked: “Do you think the military is trying to say to reporters,’We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?'” MEREDITH VIEIRA: So why do you think, ultimately, you lost this, this right to an embed? I mean, what do you think is going on? Is it the McChrystal article or is there something much bigger than that? MICHAEL HASTINGS: I think it’s, I think it’s much bigger. This is not just about a Rolling Stone reporter being banned from an embed. This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going. June and July were the deadliest months that we’ve ever seen in the war in Afghanistan. The war has hit its all-time low in approval ratings, so clearly there’s great concern in Washington about how the war is going, and the response to this embed. The response to me on this embed sort of indicates that. I think it’s important to, to just let you know, with this helicopter story, these are stories that I’m very passionate about telling. And it is a great privilege to tell the story of the troops. VIEIRA: But do you think, but do you think the military is trying to say to reporters, “We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?” The following Jim Miklaszewski set-up piece and entire interview with Hastings were aired on the August 5 Today show: MEREDITH VIEIRA: And now to the war in Afghanistan. It has been a difficult summer for U.S. troops there. July was the deadliest month yet for Americans. And a new commander took over after a controversial Rolling Stone article led to the end of General Stanley McChrystal’s military career. Well now the Pentagon is refusing to let that reporter, the reporter who wrote it, embed with another unit in Afghanistan. We’re gonna talk about that with Michael Hastings in a moment. But first NBC’s Jim Miklaszewski is at the Pentagon. Mik, good morning to you. [On screen headline: “Pentagon Payback? McChrystal Reporter Not Allowed Back With Troops”] JIM MIKLASZEWSKI: Good morning, Meredith. It’s been a couple of months since the story broke that forced General McChrystal out of the Army, but the fallout over media military relations is far from over. On his last day as a soldier, General Stan McChrystal managed to joke about the article that ended his career, with a word of warning to his fellow soldiers. GEN. STANLEY MCCHRYSTAL: I have stories on all of you, photos on many, and I know a Rolling Stone reporter. MIKLASZEWSKI: That reporter is Michael Hastings. In an interview on Today in June, Hastings explained how he landed that Rolling Stone scoop. MICHAEL HASTINGS: The access I got was almost a throwback to the old days of “fly on the wall” reporting, where, nowadays, access is almost so controlled, it’s always very so controlled. So it was very rare to get this kind of access anyway. MIKLASZEWSKI: But not any more. The U.S. military has revoked Hastings’ recent request to embed with American forces in Afghanistan, after first granting the request last month. Pentagon spokesman Colonel David Lepenn insists it’s not retribution but explains “a key element of an embed is having trust,” and essentially commanders in Afghanistan no longer trust Hastings. But as a freelancer, Hastings has covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan for various publications, and Internet news blogs with no apparent complaints. Military officials have, in fact, praised Hastings’ upcoming piece in the Men’s Journal on Army combat helicopters saying “It accurately portrays the Army’s warrior mentality.” So what is going on here? Media watchdogs claim the military is striking back. LUCY DALGLISH, THE REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS: Since they have all of the power, all of it, once he’s published his story they have, if he wants back in, they have all of the power. If they say they don’t trust him to do what they want him to do anymore, they’re just not going to play in the sandbox with him anymore. MIKLASZEWSKI: Meanwhile, the Army Inspector General is still investigating whether if any of McChrystal’s aides who were blindly quoted in that article should face disciplinary action. And as a reporter who’s often been embedded with the military, there is, indeed, a fine line between trust and control. And while the military can control a reporter’s access, there must be no control over the reporter’s content. Meredith? MEREDITH VIEIRA: Mik, thank you very much. Michael Hastings is with us, exclusively. Good morning to you. MICHAEL HASTINGS: Good morning, thanks for having me. VIEIRA: Not at all. Just so people are clear on this, you were offered this embed in June, then the article on General McChrystal comes out at the end of June, between then and now you didn’t hear anything, and then you get this letter this week. Who is it from, and what did it say? HASTINGS: The letter was from a public affairs official in Kabul, named Colonel Wayne Shanks, and it just basically laid out the case that I, noting that I had, had approval and that approval was being revoked because the military was unhappy with, first, the helicopter story, and actually, they, they, they mentioned the helicopter story, and then they mentioned the story that I wrote about General McChrystal for Rolling Stone. VIEIRA: So they specifically pointed out two stories? HASTINGS: Two stories, yes. But the more important part of their case being, what seemed it to be the General McChrystal story. And in fact, what they refer to as the “political fallout” from the General McChrystal story. So nothing to do, really, or there was no specific cases where they mentioned accuracy or anything I got wrong, or, or any, any rules I supposedly broke. VIEIRA: Well when asked about this, a spokesperson for the Defense Department said this, and I’m quoting here, “There is no right to embed. It is a choice made between units and individual reporters. And a key element of an embed is having trust that the individuals are going to abide by the ground rules. The command in Afghanistan decided there wasn’t the trust requisite, and denied your request.” In other words, they didn’t trust you to accurately report. HASTINGS: And that’s what’s very troubling about this. I’ve been doing this for five years. I’ve gone on dozens of embeds with American troops, accompanied them on many combat missions, traveled regularly with senior military officials and I’ve never had an issue. In fact I have many great friends, both Marines and soldiers, who, who I’ve met along the way for this. I think what also should be made clear is that my travels with General McChrystal were not considered an embed at the time. And if the military’s position now is that it was an embed, then the rules for embeds are very clear. Rule number seven says all comments are on the record. All interviews with service personnel are on the record. VIEIRA: Did you take comments off the record- HASTINGS: No. VIEIRA: -in that, in that interview with General McChrystal at all? HASTINGS: No, and, in fact, if you look at the, the people who are sort of making that assertion, and what, and what appears to be their case about why they’re, why they’re saying I can’t do this embed, those assertions are being made by people who, unfortunately, lost their job as a result of the article, and they’re currently under investigation. So they’re not necessarily the most credible sources. VIEIRA: So why do you think, ultimately, you lost this, this right to an embed? I mean, what do you think is going on? Is it the McChrystal article or is there something much bigger than that? HASTINGS: I think it’s, I think it’s much bigger. This is not just about a Rolling Stone reporter being banned from an embed. This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going. June and July were the deadliest months that we’ve ever seen in the war in Afghanistan. The war has hit its all-time low in approval ratings, so clearly there’s great concern in Washington about how the war is going, and the response to this embed. The response to me on this embed sort of indicates that. I think it’s important to, to just let you know, with this helicopter story, these are stories that I’m very passionate about telling. And it is a great privilege to tell the story of the troops. VIEIRA: But do you think, but do you think the military is trying to say to reporters, “We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?” HASTINGS: That appears to be the case. You’d have to ask the military if that’s what they’re doing. But, but I think if we look at just, say, the, the, the story about the Kaiwa pilots — the Kaiwa is a kind of an attack helicopter – you know, sometimes, sometimes reporters will do a story about policy. Sometimes that’s going to be very critical. I think that’s a good thing to be critical about policy, especially if the policy is not going well. And sometimes you do it about the people who are fighting the war, the American men and women over there who are actually implementing the policy, and whose stories deserve to be told. And for that I’ve always said it’s a privilege to, to be able to see that. VIEIRA: Alright, Michael Hastings. Thank you so much for joining us this morning. Appreciate it. HASTINGS: Thanks for having me. Appreciate it.

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Today Show Invites on Rolling Stone Reporter to Complain About Pentagon Ban

SEC Claims Information Opacity, But Media No Longer So Concerned With Transparency

It seems that not even the truth can possibly overturn the narrative that President Obama and the Democrats in Congress have brought transparency to Washington. Last Wednesday I wrote about how the Dodd-Frank financial regulatory bill Obama signed into law last month contains a provision exempting the Securities and Exchange Commission from Freedom of Information Act requests. Such an exemption would surely have been grounds for a media outcry during the Bush administration, yet apart from The Wall Street Journal and CNN, only blogs have been following the developments. The latter opted simply to parrot the administration’s claims without challenge. Other media ouetlets, such as National Public Radio and MSNBC, completely ignored the controversy, in stark contrast to their extensive coverage of the Bush administration’s attempts to curtail the scope of the Freedom of Information Act. NPR’s Don Gonyea said “When conflicts arise over what should or should not be open, the administration does not hesitate to invoke the memory of 9/11. And while it’s true that 9/11 changed the security landscape, it’s also true that the administration was tightening the control of information much earlier . . .” Some journalists are simply accepting the official SEC double-talk at face value. Unlike The Wall Street Journal , which actually bothered to talk to people familiar with the SEC and the bill, CNN just repeated what Chairwoman Mary Schapiro said in her letters, starting off their story with: “The Securities and Exchange Commission was not seeking a blanket exemption from public information laws . . .” Contrast this “see no evil” approach with CNN’s coverage of similar controversies during the Bush administration. In August of 2007, CNN’s Jack Cafferty covered the Bush administration’s attempt to exempt the White House Office of Administration from FOIA, noting the administration’s claims that certain federal officers were exempt from the law. “What do you suppose is in the millions of missing White House e-mails that President Bush doesn’t want anyone to see?” Cafferty asked, rhetorically. And in March of 2004, CNN analyst Ron Brownstein hammered home the alleged lack of transparency in the Bush administration, as evinced by its stance on FOIA. “They’re [the Bush administration] very tough on executive privilege in general, and on the flow of information more broadly than that,” Brownstein claimed. “Everything from the Freedom of Information Act to the Cheney Commission on Energy.” But with Obama in office, CNN doesn’t seem to be particularly concerned about the SEC’s apparent disdain for transparency. All it’s doing is reprinting talking points, after all. MSNBC, another news outlet that has yet to devote a single word to the SEC exemption, was also far more concerned with openness during the previous administration. Mike Barnicle, guest-hosting Hardball in 2007, said in reference to Bush’s Office of Administration: “The White House says the Freedom of Information act doesn’t apply to the office that handles their e-mails, even though their Web site says it does. Are they breaking the law?” Meanwhile, Rachel Maddow claimed on the day after Obama’s inauguration that secrecy was “the hallmark of the Bush years, the thing that often made Bush administration law-breaking possible because nobody knew it was happening. The best tool that we, the people, have to break through government secrecy is often the Freedom of Information Act. It was treated as an annoyance, an obstacle to be overcome by the Bush administration.” Again, these are a concerns this cable network has yet to extend to the SEC. Chairwoman Schapiro has written letters to Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Ct) and Rep. Barney Frank (D-Ma) explaining that the law doesn’t really exempt them from responding to FOIA requests. She asserted that entities regulated by her agency under the new financial “reform” legislation must “be able to provide us with access to confidential information without concern that the information will later be made public.” Schapiro claimed in her letter that the provisions in question are “not designed to protect the SEC as an agency from public oversight and accountability.” The mainstream press has apparently decided to take her word for it. How nice of them. It’s not like federal bureaucrats have ever failed to follow their agency’s guidelines . . . This press’s attitude, of course, stands in sharp contrast to just a few years ago, when members of the media were outraged by Republican attempts to restrict FOIA requests. Many in the media have, like NPR, decried the Bush administration’s use of 9/11 to curtail transparency, but thus far no one has criticized the current administration’s use of financial reform for the same goals. The double standard is telling.

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SEC Claims Information Opacity, But Media No Longer So Concerned With Transparency

White House apologizes to Shirley Sherrod

This is a good start: At the press briefing just now, Robert Gibbs apeared to extend a heartfelt apology to Shirley Sherrod on behalf of the Obama administration, and promised a look at what went wrong. Interestingly, though, he sidestepped a question about whether fear of the conservative media drove the decision to fire Sherrod before the facts were all in. Here's what Gibbs said, referring to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack: The secretary is trying to reach her. I hope the secretary reaches her soon, and they have an opportunity to talk. The Secretary will apologize for the actions that have taken place over the past 24 to 36 hours. And on behalf of the administration, I offer our apologies. Gibbs also seemed to promise some kind of reckoning as to how the White House botched this mess, though he stopped short of promising anything official: I think everybody has to go back and look at what has happened over the past 24 to 36 hours, and ask ourselves how we got into this. How did we not ask the right questions? How did you all not ask the right questions? How did other people not ask the right questions? When asked directly by a reporter whether the administration had “overreacted” because the White House is “afraid” of the conservative media, Gibbs brushed off the question. http://voices.washingtonpost.com/plum-line/2010/07/white_house_apologizes_to_shi… added by: unimatrix0

Liberals on JournoList Would Watch Limbaugh Die, Press DNC, Obama to Refuse to Recognize Fox News

Jonathan Strong of the Daily Caller has more shocking e-mails from liberal journalists today. He starts with an NPR producer who admits flaming hatred for Rush Limbaugh: If you were in the presence of a man having a heart attack, how would you respond? As he clutched his chest in desperation and pain, would you call 911? Would you try to save him from dying? Of course you would. But if that man was Rush Limbaugh, and you were Sarah Spitz, a producer for National Public Radio, that isn’t what you’d do at all. In a post to the list-serv Journolist, an online meeting place for liberal journalists, Spitz wrote that she would “Laugh loudly like a maniac and watch his eyes bug out” as Limbaugh writhed in torment. In boasting that she would gleefully watch a man die in front of her eyes, Spitz seemed to shock even herself. “I never knew I had this much hate in me,” she wrote. “But he deserves it.” So much for the idea that NPR is an oasis of civil discourse in a desert of vituperation. Spitz is a producer for trendy-hot NPR station KCRW and its nationally distributed talk show Left Right & Center (which could be called Three Leftists and Tony Blankley ). But Spitz has also  done stories for NPR’s evening newscast All Things Considered. Strong found that JournoList liberals also discussed how Fox News isn’t a news organization and should be denied access to White House briefings and denied a skybox at the Democratic National Convention. Strong summarized it this way: The very existence of Fox News, meanwhile, sends Journolisters into paroxysms of rage. When Howell Raines charged that the network had a conservative bias, the members of Journolist discussed whether the federal government should shut the channel down. “I am genuinely scared” of Fox, wrote Guardian columnist Daniel Davies, because it “shows you that a genuinely shameless and unethical media organisation *cannot* be controlled by any form of peer pressure or self-regulation, and nor can it be successfully cold-shouldered or ostracised. In order to have even a semblance of control, you need a tough legal framework. ” Davies, a Brit, frequently argued the United States needed stricter libel laws. “I agree,” said Michael Scherer of Time Magazine. Roger “ Ailes understands that his job is to build a tribal identity, not a news organization. You can’t hurt Fox by saying it gets it wrong, if Ailes just uses the criticism to deepen the tribal identity.” Jonathan Zasloff, a law professor at UCLA, suggested that the federal government simply yank Fox off the air. “ Do you really want the political parties/white house picking which media operations are news operations and which are a less respectable hybrid of news and political advocacy? ” But Zasloff stuck to his position. “ I think that they are doing that anyway; they leak to whom they want to for political purposes ,” he wrote. “If this means that some White House reporters don’t get a press pass for the press secretary’s daily briefing and that this means that they actually have to, you know, do some reporting and analysis instead of repeating press releases, then I’ll take that risk.” Scherer seemed alarmed. “So we would have press briefings in which only media organizations that are deemed by the briefer to be acceptable are invited to attend?” John Judis, a senior editor at the New Republic, came down on Zasloff’s side, the side of censorship. “Pre-Fox,” he wrote, “I’d say Scherer’s questions made sense as a question of principle. Now it is only tactical. ” It’s a little bizarre to see liberal journalists saying Fox offers too much opinion to be recognized at the Obama White House, when the Obama White House puts Ed Schultz in the front row of press conferences and calls on The Huffington Post — as if it were a news outlet that didn’t offer opinions.

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Liberals on JournoList Would Watch Limbaugh Die, Press DNC, Obama to Refuse to Recognize Fox News

Matthews to Tea Party: Tear Down Those Racist Signs and Then I’ll Believe You!

Chris Matthews, on Monday’s Hardball, actually reported on two different Tea Party organizations condemning Mark Williams, of Tea Party Express, for penning a racially charged satire, however Matthews wasn’t impressed, as he questioned the sincerity of the Tea Party movement’s commitment to fighting discrimination, and demanded that they do more to remove “racist signs at the next Tea Party rally.” After reciting some of Williams’ “fictional letter” the Hardball host then noted that both the National Tea Party Federation and the Tea Party Nation chastised Williams, but Matthews wasn’t buying it as he commanded tea partiers at the next rally to “Reach over, grab the [racist] sign and tear it out of the guy’s hands, then I’ll believe you.” The following was aired during the Sideshow segment of the July 19 edition of Hardball: CHRIS MATTHEWS: Next the Tea Party reaches its tipping point. It started when Tea Party Express leader Mark Williams wrote a fictional letter in defense of slavery to President Abraham Lincoln. Quote, these are his words, quote: “We coloreds have taken a vote and decided that we don’t cotton to the whole emancipation thing. Freedom means having to work for real, think for ourselves and take consequences along with the rewards. That is just far too much of us to ask of us colored people.” Well that’s, Williams called that satire, the leaders of the National Tea Party Federation called it trouble. Yesterday they expelled Williams. The sentiment continued today. The Tea Party Nation, the group that hosted the big party convention down in Nashville has just put out a statement saying they have quote, “zero tolerance, a zero tolerance policy against racism and they will ban any members who show themselves to be racist.” Okay I’m gonna wait to see just one of those Tea Party people pull down one of those racist signs at the next Tea Party rally. I’m just waiting. Reach over, grab the sign and tear it out of the guy’s hands, then I’ll believe you.

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Matthews to Tea Party: Tear Down Those Racist Signs and Then I’ll Believe You!

Daily Kos: Fox News the ‘Only’ Network To Inspire Cop-Shooters

San Francisco-area newspapers reported a heavily armed unemployed 45-year-old man in body armor named Byron Williams had a shootout with California Highway Police in Oakland, and apparently he was angry with left-wingers. Naturally, the Daily Kos blog was the first to see the killer as inspired by…Fox News. So said blogger “Dem Beans” on Monday, who worried he might have targeted Barbara Boxer or Nancy Pelosi: His mother said simply that he ‘watched the news’ and was ‘upset at Congress railroading through all these left-wing agenda items’.  One can surmise that the only ‘news’ churning their viewers constantly and getting them ‘upset’ is Fox. The irresponsibility of the right-wing media is surely going to result in more Byron Williams across the country.   Potential bloodshed, even of police officers, seems a price they’re willing to pay to push their agenda .   This kind of charge is the thing that makes bloggers look bad, to imagine the absolute worst intentions of your enemies, that they’re willing to accept a few downed policemen or assassinated politicians for the ratings points. Twenty minutes earlier, the diarist “eternallyvigilant” wondered why those “low information” conservatives have to shoot things up, while liberals believe in making peaceful change at the polling place: Seeing all the Sarah Palin diaries this morning makes me wonder why these low information people are not more angry about the kinds of erosion of our freedoms as mentioned in Jesselyn Radack’s diary and the take over of the press during the BP disaster than they are of the attempts by this administration to help the working people of this country? Why do they pick up guns for their “solution” and we go to the ballot box? [Hat tip: MSE, Not MSM]

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Daily Kos: Fox News the ‘Only’ Network To Inspire Cop-Shooters

Media That Accused Fox of Shilling for Bush Yawn at Zuckerman’s Ties to Obama

Days after Mort Zuckerman, the Editor-in-Chief of U.S. News and World Report,  claimed to be close to President Obama’s advisors, the national media have yet to express any interest. Of the few outlets that mentioned it, the White House’s denial was taken as gospel truth, and no more investigation was apparently warranted. What a difference when the sitting president is a Democrat. Under the Bush Administration, the media were obsessed with linking the White House to Fox News in an effort to accuse Republicans of spreading propaganda. Yet now that U.S. News is linked to Obama, suddenly such allegations are quickly dimissed. For a taste of the double standard, observe two different reports from Politico. First is a post on Tuesday concerning Zuckerman: Real Estate and media mogul Mort Zuckerman raised eyebrows all over yesterday with the claim on Fox that he “helped write one of [Obama’s] speeches,” and his subsequent refusal to go into it right now. Among those with reason to be puzzled, a White House source tells me, were Obama’s speechwriters, Jon Favreau and Ben Rhodes. Neither “has ever met or spoken to Mort Zuckerman” and the two have “been closely involved in every speech the President has given since 2005,” said the official. Zuckerman has met President Obama a few times and no doubt encountered other Administration officials, and he could well have suggested a theme to the president or another aide. But the question of what he “helped write”  remains a bit of a mystery. Those three small paragraphs comprise Ben Smith’s entire report. President Obama is denying the story, so that’s just that. Was that kind of trust extended to Republicans under President Bush? Not so much. Here’s Politico giving space to one Matt Stoller in 2007: First, we argued that Fox News is not a news channel, but a propaganda outlet that regularly distorts, spins, and falsifies information. Second, Fox News is heavily influenced or even controlled by the Republican Party itself. As such, we believe that Fox News on the whole functions as a surrogate operation for the GOP. Treating Fox as a legitimate news channel extends the Republican Party’s ability to swift-boat and discredit our candidates. In other words, Fox News is a direct pipeline of misinformation from the GOP leadership into the traditional press. So, we have a self-proclaimed fan of Obama working as Editor-in-Chief of a major newspaper, but Politico isn’t much worried about bias seeping onto his pages. But when Fox News is perceived as being in the tank for Republicans, it’s apparently okay to launch accusations against them. In 2002, the Washington Post’s Bob Woodward revealed that Fox News head Roger Ailes had written a letter to President Bush immediately after the attacks on September 11. Woodward portrayed it as improper contact between the White House and the press, but Ailes insisted it was nothing more than an emotional letter from a scared citizen following a terrorist attack. The media jumped all over the controversy with fervor. On November 21 of that year, PBS News Hour filed a report on the scandal, with host Terrence Smith asking bluntly “is that an appropriate role for a journalist,” which set up a nice tee for Woodward to reply “he’s not supposed to do it.” News Hour then provided input from Tucker Carlson: Roger Ailes is the editorial chief of fox news [sic], and this gives the appearance of partisanship. This is sucking up to power. Then CNN’s Arthel Neville: Does that shed new light on, “we report, you decide,” Jack? And of course an expert from Harvard: Mr. Ailes has had a very close relation with a number of Republican presidents. I doubt this is a letter — despite what he said in the Washington Post — I doubt this is a letter that he would have sent to [Democratic President] Bill Clinton. The current reaction to Zuckerman’s claim of advising public officials? Mostly crickets. Salon covered the incident if only to promptly insist “it is safe to say that this is not true” and Zuckerman’s rebuttal was “kind of sad.” A search for Mort Zuckerman on Google News reaps scant results, mostly from blogs, and certainly nothing like the accusations launched against Fox News. Curiously missing is someone to accuse Zuckerman of “sucking up” to Democrats. No one took to the airwaves of PBS to suggest he wouldn’t have offered speechwriting help to a Republican. And no one sat on the air at CNN asking if U.S. News & World Report could be trusted as unbiased news. Any news source that is perceived as being friendly to Republicans is presumed to be a propaganda wing for the GOP. Yet when a well-respected editor openly flaunts his support of a Democrat, the media’s reaction is a collective shrug. Americans will probably never get the truth about exactly how close Zuckerman is to the White House – and that’s the way the media want it.

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Media That Accused Fox of Shilling for Bush Yawn at Zuckerman’s Ties to Obama