Tag Archives: reporter

Nets Expound on ‘Cost’ of Maintaining Tax Rates, Stress How ‘Tax Break for the Wealthy Increases the Deficit’

Framing the debate through a liberal prism hostile to continuing the current income tax rates, ABC and CBS worried Thursday night about the “cost” of not raising taxes, as if all money belongs to the government, as both expounded on how not ending the Bush rates will fuel massive deficits. “If all the Bush tax cuts end for the top two percent of earners, $700 billion will be added to government coffers,” CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric warned, and “if all the cuts stay in place, the deficit will soar by $3.7 trillion over ten years.”

Get Ready to Explore Even More Layers in Inception Video Game

At a Rome press conference for Inception , director Christopher Nolan unveiled plans to develop an video game version of the blockbuster that will explore “all kinds of ideas that you can’t fit into a feature film.” No word on whether these ideas involve mind-bending dream puzzles or just more snow-mobile chases and shootouts with faceless goons in the Arctic. Still, if Nolan oversees this it may change the tune of those who dismiss video games as a lesser art form and encourage more major directors to explore the medium. [ Hollywood Reporter ]

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Get Ready to Explore Even More Layers in Inception Video Game

FDA Barring Food Makers from Advertising Products as GMO-Free

The FDA meanwhile appears to be enforcing a policy of barring food producers from trumpeting that their products don’t contain genetically modified ingredients. According to the Washington Post, the FDA has sent a “flurry of enforcement letters” to companies that have advertised GMO-free products on their labels. The warnings come on top of existing policy not to require food makers to disclose if their products do contain GMOs. Congress member Dennis Kucinich said, “This, to me, raises questions about whose interest the FDA is protecting. They are clearly protecting industry, and not the public.” added by: treewolf39

O’Donnell In 2006: Homosexuality ‘An Identity Disorder’

Here's another goodie from Christine O'Donnell, the conservative activist who has asked voters to look past her previous right-wing statements on sex: As recently as 2006 — the first time she ran for Senate, losing the Republican primary — she declared that homosexuality was an identity disorder. As Greg Sargent reports, O'Donnell said in an interview for the Wilmington News Journal in 2006 that homosexuality was a disorder. Greg has obtained the original quote from the reporter's notes: “People are created in God's image. Homosexuality is an identity adopted through societal factors. It's an identity disorder.” The TPM Poll Average gives Democratic nominee Chris Coons a lead of 52.2. added by: TimALoftis

Networks Ignore Fired Koran Burner, Defended Teacher Who Compared Bush, Hitler

Derek Fenton, the man who burned pages of the Koran while protesting the planned Ground Zero Mosque in New York City,  lost his job  at NJTransit because of his demonstration. The network news outlets couldn’t care less. None of the networks – ABC, CBS, NBC – have mentioned Fenton’s name, according to a review of show transcripts. Maybe they spent all their free speech-debate interest back in 2006 when they hurried to defend a Colorado teacher who was suspending after he compared President Bush to Adolf Hitler. Jay Bennish made headlines in March 2006 after one of his students released a tape of Bennish comparing Bush to Hitler and declaring that America was the world’s most violent nation. Bennish was suspended – placed on paid leave – while officials reviewed his conduct. (He was eventually reinstated.) All three networks defended him by characterizing his comments as free speech. On ABC “Good Morning America” March 3, Bill Weir characterized the controversy as a “battle over free speech.” Reporter Dan Harris said the incident “provoked a national debate about academic freedom.” The CBS “Early Show” on March 3 highlighted students protesting Bennish’s suspension, during which they chanted, “Freedom of speech, let him teach.” Co-host Harry Smith also downplayed Bennish’s comments, suggesting he “was suspended for saying that some people compared President Bush to Adolf Hitler,” even though Bennish himself had made the comparison. On NBC’s “Today” show March 7, co-host Matt Lauer interviewed Bennish and portrayed him as the victim of a conservative smear job. “They basically shopped it around to conservative media outlets, and when they finally released it to one, it created an uproar,” Lauer said of the student who released the tape. “And on the tape you can hear [student] Sean Allen asking you questions that seem to be egging you on a little bit. Do you feel you were set up?” Even President Bush jumped into the fray, saying that “freedom for people to express themselves must be protected.”  The near-universal defense of Bennish’s comment was that he was trying to provoke debate among his students. “His whole goal is to fire these kids up,” his attorney David Lane, said at the time, “and you have to take some extreme positions to fire these kids up. Let them debate it.” Yet today, none of the networks have been eager to characterize Fenton’s protest as “free speech” or to suggest, as some politicians and civil liberties advocates have, that Fenton was wrongly fired. “So long as his actions, however misguided, took place on his own time, and he was not acting in his capacity as a representative of NJTransit but as an American exercising his constitutional rights, then the agency is clearly in the wrong,” New Jersey State Sen.  Raymond Lesniak  said.  Like this article? Sign up for “Culture Links,” CMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter, by   clicking   here.

Conservative Funders Furious Over New Yorker Hit Piece

Conservative businessman David Koch told Elaine Lafferty of  The Daily Beast that a recent hit piece in The New Yorker has him steaming. “It’s hateful. It’s ludicrous. And it’s plain wrong.” The object of his ire is a 9,963 word story in The New Yorker magazine, published last week which accuses David, his brother Charles, and Koch Industries of…well, just about everything: Secretly funding the Tea Party movement, secretly manipulating the Smithsonian, along with, not-so-secretly polluting the planet, stealing oil from Native American land, denying the existence of climate change, and promoting carcinogens — all in the self-interest of making further billions. The title of Jane Mayer’s story is “Covert Operations.” That upsets Koch: “If what I and my brother believe in, and advocate for, is secret, it’s the worst covert operation in history,” Koch says, in reference to the New Yorker headline, adding that a lengthy letter to the magazine, rebutting nearly every allegation in the story is in the works… The origins of “the Billionaire who Secretly Funds the Tea Party” narrative seems to be his connection to Americans for Prosperity, an organization he founded six years ago, whose message is indeed aligned with the Tea Party movement’s message of less tax and more-efficient government. But, he says, no one from the Tea Party movement has ever approached him for money, and when I ask him straight up if he’s funding the Tea Party, all he says is, “Oh, please .” But despite being demonized by liberal magazines and the Obama White House, David Koch isn’t uniformly conservative in his political donations: While they have been politically active for more than 30 years, largely funding Republicans, they have never been identified with conservatives on hot-button issues such as gay marriage or abortion. He and his wife Julia have contributed $74,900 to New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s Democratic campaign for governor, according to Ira Stoll at www.FutureofCapitalism.com. Politico.com reported that KochPac has contributed $196,000 to Democrats in the 2010 election cycle alone, including $30,000 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Lafferty noted that none these accusations — “covertly supporting the Tea Party movement, polluting the planet, stealing oil and being a climate-change denier” — bother him as much as the suggestion that his position as a member of the National Cancer Advisory Board, an arm of the National Cancer Institute, presents a “conflict of interest” because Koch Industries has lobbied against the classification of formaldehyde as a carcinogen. Koch has struggled with prostate cancer for 20 years. A statement the Koch brothers put out included these paragraphs: We provided the New Yorker with a tremendous amount of information in hopes it would enable the publication to produce a balanced and accurate portrayal of our company. Unfortunately, that information was largely omitted or ignored, resulting in inaccuracies and misstatements. A catalog of all these errors would take up more space than the article itself. For a more accurate review of the issues, please go to www.kochfacts.com … Unfortunately, some of those who disagree with a market-based point of view continue to try to demonize the Kochs’ 40 years of unwavering, well-known, lawful and principled commitment to economic freedom and market-based policy solutions. The Kochs have steadfastly supported the benefits of economic freedom, the importance of the rule of law, private property rights, the proper and limited role of government in society and warned against the perils of excessive government spending. We see escalating efforts to discount and mischaracterize important and authentic citizen efforts, as well as dismiss and degrade our support of education and human services programs. The New Yorker article, and those pieces that have echoed it, rely heavily on innuendo and unsubstantiated assertions. Unnamed sources and those with a strong philosophical opposition to the Kochs – many of whom have no current or first-hand knowledge of Koch Industries, Charles Koch or David Koch – go unchallenged. Supporters of the Kochs are largely ignored (as evidenced by the fact that the reporter chose not to include the vast majority of supportive comments made by a number of people who know the Kochs and were interviewed for this article). On the other hand, those who support the reporter’s preconceptions are given a free pass.

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Conservative Funders Furious Over New Yorker Hit Piece

Engel Falsely Accuses Fleischer Of Alleging Osama-Iraq Ties

NBC’s Richard Engel has done some good reporting from Iraq.  But scratch the reporter’s surface, and you find a political partisan eager to echo the anti-Bush party line.   Witness his exchange with Ari Fleischer on Morning Joe today.  Engel twisted the former Bush press secretary’s words, accusing him of alleging an Osama Bin Laden connection with Iraq.  Fleischer had palpably said no such thing. The springboard was Fleischer’s citation of a 1998 OBL interview in which the terrorist boss said America was weak because it is unable to see through long wars.  Fleischer went on to argue that America’s resolve will be tested should things go badly wrong in Iraq or Afghanistan, thus putting under pressure the arbitrary dates that have been set for US withdrawal from those countries. Engel jumped in to claim that Fleischer was claiming an OBL tie with Iraq.  Even after Fleischer made explicitly clear he was alleging no such connection, Engel obdurately pressed his point. I’ll be back with a transcript, but in the meantime, view the video and observe as Engel does his best Olbermann-Maddow impression.

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Engel Falsely Accuses Fleischer Of Alleging Osama-Iraq Ties

‘Rand Fan’ Impersonator Apologizes for Being an Idiot and Quits Columnist Job

Does anybody out there remember Tyler Collins who earlier this month had the distinction of performing perhaps the worst political impersonation ever recorded? Collins later claimed that his “performance” at Kentucky’s annual Fancy Farm picnic was just satire but for satire to work, it must have even a slight degree of credibility. Nobody bought Tyler’s obvious act which was so humiliating that all he accomplished was embarrassing himself and becoming a Web laughingstock. In fact, “Rand Fan” Collins, who was also a columnist for the Crittenden Press, was so embarrassing in his entirely unconvincing role as a Tea Partier that even former fake Washington Post “conservative” Dave Weigel panned his pathetic act: When Collins was young and irresponsible, he was young and irresponsible. He’s not the first kid to play dress-up to make fun of a politician he dislikes, and he won’t be the last. But he really should have dropped the ruse when he was caught; he must realize now that he’s become a cause celebre for activists who claim that all “racism” in the tea party is fake. And here is Tyler Collins stubbornly remaining in stupid mode in response to a skeptical TV news reporter:

‘So-called Gay Mafia’ Adding Bias to the New York Times

The Times Business section Wednesday carried a press release of a story headlined “A Resort for Gays Rises in Manhattan: Similar Nightlife Complexes Are Springing Up in Several Cities.” Reporter Beth Greenfield talked to no one in this story except the gay entrepreneurs behind the forthcoming “Out NYC Urban Resort.” The text box was “Looking for ‘a concentrated feeling of community.'” There’s nothing in the story, for example, about the developers’ active support for Washington-based gay-left advocacy groups , as well as donations to liberal city pols and congressmen and the William J. Clinton Foundation.  Sympathy for the gay “community” is apparently growing by leaps and bounds, according to Reacttoyournews.org , the official blog of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association. Michael Triplett wrote: We’ve talked about changes at the NYT before on this blog , but it’s important to remember that the last 20 years have seen a pretty amazing change at how the paper covers LGBT issues and treats its LGBT journalists.  There is still room for growth, especially in regards to promotion of lesbians and its treatment of transgender employees and issues, but the paper has come a remarkable distance in the time that NLGJA has been advocating for LGBT journalists and fair and accurate coverage of LGBT issues. After revisiting history, including some questionable comparisons of the AIDS epidemic with the Holocaust, Triplett concluded: Because of the work of NLGJA and pioneering LGBT journalists, things have changed dramatically at the paper. We are indebted to the journalists and activists who pushed for change at the paper. In a piece for Mediaite , Triplett was more explicit: Twenty years after [reporter Jeffrey] Schmalz feared telling anyone he was gay because it would harm his career, a gay man– Richard Berke –is now the national editor and a so-called gay mafia – which includes Ben Brantley, Frank Bruni, Stuart Elliot, Adam Nagourney, and Eric Wilson – hold key positions at the paper. Alas, the paper has no openly gay or lesbian voices on it editorial pages. Now, of course, gays are everywhere in the paper’s coverage and in the newsroom. Triplett also mentioned the top Times officials attending an event sympathizing with overturning the California Prop 8 vote to defend traditional marriage, which caused former Timesman Charles Kaiser to gush that the Times was now “one of the most gay-friendly institutions in the world.” Mysteriously, after all this touting of the staunchly pro-gay sympathies, Triplett thinks the question of liberal bias remains a puzzle that conservatives can’t seriously expose: Concluding “[w]hat a difference a new generation can make,” [former Timesman Charles] Kaiser said “Andy Rosenthal’s editorial page has published more brilliant editorials in defense of equal rights for gay people than any other editorial page in the world.” So does the NYT have a bias now in how it covers same-sex marriage and gays generally?  That’s probably something for the next public editor to explore. There’s no doubt that few papers cover the LGBT community  as extensively as the New York Times , but it is far from perfect. Some critics argue that gay people are much more likely to show up on the culture and arts pages than the news pages, and locals complain that the paper does a poor job of handling news that involves the local LGBT community. In addition,  lesbians still remain largely invisible in coverage (and in the newsroom). And, of course, conservative critics of the paper will always contend there is a strong pro-gay bias, not [sic] matter the facts on the ground.

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‘So-called Gay Mafia’ Adding Bias to the New York Times

Moment of Truth: A Barely SFW Chat With Argentine Sex Goddess (and New Doc Star) Isabel Sarli

Welcome back to Moment of Truth, Movieline’s spotlight on the best in nonfiction cinema. Today we hear from legendary Argentine movie star Isabel Sarli, the subject of a new documentary having its U.S. premiere this weekend in New York. It’s not every day you see a retrospective honoring Isabel “Coca” Sarli, the Argentine siren whose work with director (and eventual husband) Armando Bo resulted in one of the most prolific, searing and sensational partnerships of the 1960s and ’70s. In fact, it’s not really ever that you see such an event in the U.S. — at least not until now.

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Moment of Truth: A Barely SFW Chat With Argentine Sex Goddess (and New Doc Star) Isabel Sarli