About us Login Get email updates
Jamison Foser
Print

"Media Matters"; by Jamison Foser

January 11, 2008 9:17 pm ET

MSNBC's Chris Matthews problem

I do not care which person is your candidate. I don't care what you think of Hillary Clinton as a potential president. What is being done in the press is akin to a pack of rabid 7th graders trying to haze the nerdy girl in school simply because they can. It has nothing to do with her qualifications -- it has to do with gender, and these lemming pundits think that it's perfectly acceptable because everyone is doing it, including women like Andrea Mitchell and Anne Kornblut.
-- Christy Hardin Smith, Firedoglake

"OK, let's put the gender thing in here. I love gender politics, guys."
-- Chris Matthews

The behavior Christy Hardin Smith describes has its epicenter on MSNBC's Hardball, where rarely a day goes by without host Chris Matthews sputtering and shouting about Hillary Clinton, often in terms that would give Bobby Riggs pause.

Put simply, Matthews behaves as though he is obsessed with Hillary Clinton. And not "obsessed" in a charming, mostly harmless, Lloyd-Dobler-with-a-boom-box kind of way. "Obsessed" in a this-person-needs-help kind of way.

More than six years ago, long before Hillary Clinton began running for president, the Philadelphia Inquirer magazine reported that, according to an MSNBC colleague, Matthews had said of Clinton: "I hate her. I hate her. All that she stands for."

Even before that, Matthews told the January 20, 2000, Hardball audience, "Hillary Clinton bugs a lot of guys, I mean, really bugs people like maybe me on occasion. I'm not going to take a firm position here, because the election is not coming up yet. But let me just say this, she drives some of us absolutely nuts."

Not that there was much chance his feelings would go unnoticed by even the most casual Hardball viewer.

Matthews has referred to Clinton as "She devil." He has repeatedly likened Clinton to "Nurse Ratched," referring to the "scheming, manipulative" character in One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest who "asserts arbitrary control simply because she can." He has called her "Madame Defarge." And he has described male politicians who have endorsed Clinton as "castratos in the eunuch chorus."

Matthews has compared Clinton to a "strip-teaser" and questioned whether she is "a convincing mom." He refers to Clinton's "cold eyes" and the "cold look" she supposedly gives people; he says she speaks in a "scolding manner" and is "going to tell us what to do."

Matthews frequently obsesses over Clinton's "clapping" -- which he describes as "Chinese." He describes Clinton's laugh as a "cackle" -- which led to the Politico's Mike Allen telling him, "Chris, first of all, 'cackle' is a very sexist term." (Worth remembering: When John McCain was asked by a GOP voter referring to Clinton, "How do we beat the bitch?" Allen reacted by wondering, "What voter in general hasn't thought that?" So Allen isn't exactly hypersensitive to people describing Clinton in sexist terms.)

Matthews repeatedly suggests Clinton is a "fraud" for claiming to be a Yankees fan, despite the fact that all available evidence indicates that Clinton has been a Yankees fan since childhood. In April of 2007, former Washington Post reporter John Harris, who has written a book about Bill Clinton, told Matthews to his face that the attacks on Clinton over her history of being a Yankees fan were false. Harris said: "Hillary Clinton got hazed over saying she was a New York Yankees fan. It turned out, actually, that was right. She had been a lifelong Yankees fan. But people were all over [her] for supposedly embroidering her past." But Matthews doesn't let a little thing like the truth get in the way of his efforts to take cheap shots at Clinton: At least twice since Harris set him straight, Matthews has attacked Clinton over the Yankees fan nonsense, once calling her a "fraud."

Matthews has described Clinton as "witchy" and -- in what appears to be a classic case of projection -- claimed that "some men" say Clinton's voice sounds like "fingernails on a blackboard." In what appears to be an even more classic case of projection, Matthews has speculated that there is "out there in the country ... some gigantic monster -- big, green, horny-headed, all kinds of horns coming out, big, aggressive monster of anti-Hillaryism that hasn't shown itself: it's based upon gender."

Matthews has suggested that Hillary Clinton "being surrounded by women" might "make a case against" her being "commander in chief." He once asked a guest if "the troops out there" would "take the orders" from "Hillary Clinton, commander in chief." When his guest responded, "Why wouldn't they listen to a [female] commander in chief? Sure," Matthews responded: "You're chuckling a little bit, aren't you?" When his guest responded "No," Matthews couldn't quite believe it, sputtering: "No problem? No problem? No problem?"

Matthews has wondered if she is unable "to admit a mistake" because doing so would lead people to call her a "fickle woman." He has said that Clinton is on a "short ... leash" as a presidential candidate, lacking "latitude in her husband's absence" to answer a question. He has, at least twice, called Hillary Clinton an "uppity" woman -- both times, pretending to attribute the phrase to Bill Clinton. But, as Bob Somerby has explained, there is no evidence Clinton has ever used the term.

One of Matthews' favorite topics is Clinton's marriage. After The New York Times ran an article purporting to count the number of nights the Clintons spend together, Matthews' imagination ran wild, and the MSNBC host couldn't get the Clintons' marital life out of his mind. At one point, Media Matters counted 90 separate questions Matthews asked guests about the topic during seven separate programs; the number undoubtedly grew after we stopped counting. In the middle of one of Matthews' bouts of obsessive speculation about how often the Clintons are "together in the same roof overnight, if you will," Washington Post reporter Lois Romano asked him, "[W]hat is your obsession with logistics here?" In response, Matthews snapped at her: "Because I'm talking to three reporters, and I'm trying to get three straight answers, so I don't want attitude about this. It's a point of view -- I want facts. Tell me what the facts are, Lois, if you know them. If you don't, I don't know what you're arguing about."

Matthews has claimed: "[T]he reason she's a U.S. senator, the reason she's a candidate for president, the reason she may be a front-runner is her husband messed around." John McCain's political career got started after he left his first wife for a wealthy and politically connected heiress, married her, and ran for Congress. But Chris Matthews doesn't suggest that the reason McCain is a "U.S. senator ... a candidate for president ... a front-runner" is that he "messed around." Even Fox News' Bill O'Reilly said Matthews' comments about Clinton went too far: "I mean, it's rough business what these people over there [at MSNBC] are doing. We don't do that here. We would never say that Senator Clinton got her job because her husband messed around. I mean, that is -- that is a personal attack. And it is questionable whether a network should allow that or not."

Matthews periodically gets it into his head that the most important question in the world is whether Bill Clinton will be a "distraction" or whether he will "behave himself." He badgers Clinton aides about the question and warns that Bill Clinton "better watch it." He asks if Clinton will be a "good boy" or be guilty of "misbehavior." Matthews is not so subtly referring to Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky. But curiously, he doesn't have the same concerns about McCain or about Rudy Giuliani, as I wrote nearly a year ago.

Think about this for a second: Chris Matthews is holding it against Hillary Clinton that her husband cheated on her. But he doesn't hold it against John McCain and Rudy Giuliani that they cheated on their spouses. Matthews seems to think women are to blame when their husbands have affairs -- and men who cheat on their spouses are blameless.

And then there's Matthews' fixation on Hillary Clinton's "ambition." In December 1999, Clinton spokesman Howard Wolfson appeared on Hardball to discuss Clinton's Senate campaign. Matthews asked Wolfson eight consecutive questions about whether Clinton was "ambitious." Finally, Matthews said, "People who seek political power are ambitious by definition," leading Wolfson to tell him: "if you say so. If it will make you happy, I'll agree." If Matthews has ever displayed as much interest in the "ambition" of male candidates like John McCain, Rudy Giuliani, Fred Thompson, or Mike Huckabee, he has done so in private.

And, in the midst of his years-long assault on Hillary Clinton, much of it either directly based on her gender or on a sexist double standard, Matthews has the audacity to accuse Clinton of being "anti-male" and to insist that "she should just lighten up on this gender -- 'the boys are coming to get me' routine."

None of this should surprise us. Chris Matthews acknowledged his feelings about Hillary Clinton long ago: "I hate her. I hate her. All that she stands for." And "she drives some of us [guys] absolutely nuts."

But Matthews' questionable treatment of women extends beyond Hillary Clinton.

Matthews has described House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as "scary" and suggested she would "castrate" House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer. And he has wondered how she could disagree with President Bush "without screaming? How does she do it without becoming grating?"

Just this week, Matthews claimed there isn't a plausible female presidential candidate "on the horizon" because there aren't any "big-state women governors" -- but Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire, Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, Connecticut Gov. Jodi Rell, and Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius all run states with populations comparable to male governors who have recently run for president, including Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, and Bill Richardson. How large a state does a woman have to run before she qualifies as a plausible presidential candidate to Chris Matthews? One that is twice as large as Mitt Romney's Massachusetts? Three times as large?

Last October, Matthews mused aloud about a hypothetical couple trying to decide who to support for president. In Matthews' mind, the wife just wants to see "the first woman president." According to Matthews, the husband has to explain the math to his wife: "[T]he husband says, 'You know, dear, you know, this is going to kill our tax bracket. You know that tuition thing we pay every couple of years for the kids, every year, we can't do that if we get a higher tax bracket. We have to pay more money.' "

After the Des Moines Register endorsed Hillary Clinton earlier this year, Matthews suggested that the paper's "female editors and publisher" succumbed to "lobbying" by Bill Clinton.

Matthews has repeatedly focused on the physical characteristics of his female guests. He recently began an interview with conservative radio host and author Laura Ingraham by telling her, "I'm not allowed to say this, but I'll say it -- you're beautiful and you're smart." He ended the interview by saying: "I get in trouble for this, but you're great looking, obviously. You're one of the gods' gifts to men in this country. But also, you are a hell of a writer." Note that Matthews said Ingraham is also a good writer -- apparently, to Chris Matthews, there is no reason for men to care about whether a woman can write, only about how she looks.

Matthews' comments about Ingraham came only a month after he told CNBC anchor Erin Burnett, "You're a knockout," adding: "It's all right getting bad news from you." Matthews also told Burnett: "Come on in closer. No, come in -- come in further -- come in closer. Really close." Matthews made such a spectacle of himself during the exchange that The New York Post said "it sure looked" like Matthews had been "perving on CNBC hottie Erin Burnett on live TV the other night." Matthews explained that he had merely been "kidding around."

During MSNBC's April 26, 2007, coverage of the first Democratic presidential debate, Matthews discussed the "cosmetics" of the evening. In doing so, he complimented Michelle Obama's pearl necklace and declared that she "looked perfect," "well-turned out ... attractive -- classy, as we used to say. Like Frank Sinatra, 'classy.' "

Matthews also appeared to argue that many viewers would be basing their decisions about the candidates on how, in Clinton's case, the candidate was dressed, or, in the case of the male candidates, how their spouses were dressed: "Some people are, by the way, just watching tonight. They stopped listening a half-hour in, and they noticed how pretty she is -- Michelle -- and they said, 'I like the fact he's [Barack Obama] got this pretty wife. He's happily married. I like that.' They like the fact that Hillary was demure, lady-like in her appearance." When NBC chief foreign affairs correspondent Andrea Mitchell interjected, noting "You're talking about two ... lawyers," who went to "Harvard and Yale," Matthews defended himself, saying, "Cosmetics are a part of this game."

Nor is any of this new: In August 1999, Matthews hosted notorious liar Gennifer Flowers, during which he told her: "I gotta pay a little tribute here. You're a very beautiful woman, and I -- and I have to tell you, he knows that, you know that, and everybody watching knows that; Hillary Clinton knows that. How can a woman put up with a relationship between her husband and somebody, anybody, but especially somebody like you that's a knockout?" After Flowers told him "Gosh, you make me blush here," Matthews replied, "[I]t's an objective statement, Gennifer. I'm not flirting."

In 2000, Matthews responded to linguist Deborah Tannen's explanation of then-presidential candidate George W. Bush's efforts to appeal to women voters by saying, "So is this like the political equivalent of Spanish fly? That these seductive number of words you just drop out there and women just swoon." That led another Hardball guest, Lynn Martin -- a Republican -- to point out, "You wouldn't suggest he's seducing men."

Chris Matthews has been treating female guests as sexual objects for years. He has been judging women -- senators, presidential candidates, the speaker of the House -- on their clothes and their voices and their appearance for years. He has been referring to women as "castrating" for years. He has been applying double standards to male and female candidates for years.

This is who Chris Matthews is. He is a man who thinks that men who support women politicians are "eunuchs."

He isn't going to stop unless you make him stop. Chris Matthews uses his voice to marginalize women. Use yours to tell MSNBC you've had enough.

It's time to play a little "hardball." Please contact MSNBC and Chris Matthews today and let them know what you think.

Expand All Expand 1st Level Collapse All Add Comment
    • Author by jjamele2880 (January 11, 2008 10:12 pm ET)
         

      Matthews is a sexist pig, and this trait just becomes amplified when Hillary is involved.  He clearly cannot BEAR the thought of her becoming President.  Exactly why is a secret he probably shares with no one but himself, unless he has a therapist.

      For Matthews, women are to be ogled, complimented for their looks, and sneered at and put down when they attempt to do something other than look pretty and defer to him.  A strong, self-assertive woman like Hillary Clinton clearly sets him off.  Add to that the fact that Matthews is a failed politician himself, and the pieces really begin to come together.

      Matthews spends so much time talking about "tough Irish boys hanging out on street corners," "saloon, big-city machine politics" and "brokered conventions run by bosses," not to mention making constant rambling references to Hubert Humphrey, Adlai Stevenson, the first Mayor Daley, etc. that sometimes I'm convinced he just lives in a little fantasy world in which powerful, cigar-smoking, pot-bellied men manipulated politics like a chess game and bargained over delegates in smoke-filled rooms.  I think he resents the fact that he was born fifty years too late to really witness a lot of the stuff he talks about, and is hostile to the world he finds himself in now- a world in which women are journalists and pundits and (gasp) serious candidates for President.  And we get to witness this resentment six days a week on national television.  

      Matthews needs to get over himself and his issues.  Better yet, NBC needs to stop giving him a forum to spew his misogynistic crud over the airwaves. 

      Report Abuse
      • Author by wolfbato (January 13, 2008 2:36 pm ET)
           
        I urge everybody to take Matthews off your DVR/TIVO and let MSNBC know you are doing this. Hurt him where it hurts ... his ratings. Let's get rid of this Fascist ... once and for all.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by The Stranger (January 14, 2008 6:06 pm ET)
             
          MSNBC's real problem isn't Chrissy...it's Olbermann. He's an absolute embarrassment.

          Here Chicken 'n Waffles is caught in yet another lie:

          http://www.olbermannwatch.com/archives/2008/01/caught_on_tape.php

          For this he is the Worst Person in the Universe.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by ernandbet9772 (January 14, 2008 7:59 pm ET)
               
            Yeah, Fox acknowledgement Begala's denial AFTER this was all over the internet:

            http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-begala/fox-news-we-report-e_b_80698.html

            Olbermann was correct. The e-mails from Fox's Garrett Major tell the true story of their lack of ethics and truthfulness in reporting.
            Report Abuse
        • Author by The Stranger (January 14, 2008 6:07 pm ET)
             
          MSNBC's real problem isn't Chrissy...it's Olbermann. He's an absolute embarrassment.

          Here Chicken 'n Waffles is caught in yet another lie:

          http://www.olbermannwatch.com/archives/2008/01/caught_on_tape.php

          For this he is the Worst Person in the Universe.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by 1st Republic 14th Star (January 11, 2008 10:22 pm ET)
         

      I'm convinced Hillary Clinton turned Matthews down for a date when they both worked on Capitol Hill back in the 70s. 

       
      The other possibility I see is that Matthews' resentment stems from the fact that Hillary has won elections, while he lost his only attempt.  In addition, Matthews sees the part Hillary played in her husband's success, so he's convinced that if only Hillary had married him, HE'D have been President, and not Bill Clinton.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by avedon (January 12, 2008 4:12 pm ET)
           
        "I'm convinced Hillary Clinton turned Matthews down for a date "

        I was about to suggest something similar - when I've heard that some guy is talking this way about me, they've always been guys I turned down. And when I've heard men talk this way about other women, same story. When guys get a personal hate on for a woman (who isn't their ex), that's usually the reason.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by Clevenative (January 11, 2008 10:40 pm ET)
         
      Nice job Jamison Foser! Exactly the kind of story I wished for in a post just an hour earlier, You must be a mindreader (or maybe it's me?). This one gets saved on my PC for future reference.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by captfoster2 (January 11, 2008 10:48 pm ET)
         

      This is exactly the kind of stuff that should be railed against.......

      I don't care if its a liberal media person (if there really is such a thing?) or a conservative one or a media ass-clown like Matthews..... when you are doing your job as what is supposed to be a neutral stance as a media figure, you have no right to take or have an opinion when you claim to be telling news..... if Matthews wants to keep going this route, I firmly believe that he should be forced to start his show with the disclaimer that he is an 'opinion' person and not a 'news' person!

      This is part of why this country is in such trouble, when pundits are allowed to spew their opinions and claim it is a form of news......

      My heart breaks just thinking about it.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by sideswiped (January 11, 2008 11:49 pm ET)
           
        Unfortunately MSNBC is flagging in the Nielson Ratings so Chris is resorting to Faux New tactics. A former mentor of mine once said to me that publicity good or bad is still publicity and it gathers and garners and audiences attention. I have lost all the respect for him and Hardball and will go back to NPR for unbiased news because Fox New is hardly news it too has become ratings entertainment
        Report Abuse
    • Author by conleytgwinn (January 11, 2008 11:44 pm ET)
         

      License to opine - even stupidly as Chrissie does? Sure - that comes with the salary MSNBC pays, and although I might myself opine that his opinions are as useless as he is, still, the license is there.

      License to lie? Nope! Just as with Betray-Us (only more so, given that Chrissie's "service" to his country has consisted entirely of his unfortunate statements), his contract does not grants such license.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by steeve (January 12, 2008 1:14 am ET)
         

      As with most other people in the media, Matthews brings gross incompetence to his job along with all his other flaws.

      In any other profession, Matthews would have been fired years ago, and not for anything mentioned in this article.  He would be fired for having a below-kindergarten level of knowledge on every issue on which he opines (and for never allowing a guest to complete a sentence).

      Alterman has the quote of the year, despite it being a young year:  "How can an entire industry continue to exist when the product it provides is both unwanted and defective, and proven repeatedly to be so?"  Not even the most savvy media observer can answer that question.  It's not corporate greed, as that would not deliver an unwanted product.  It's not partisan bias, as that would not have allowed the republican party to be embarrassed as it has.  It's not pure idiocy, as plenty of qualified people are available lower in the ranks (but never get moved up until they prove themselves unqualified).  All of those things exist, but none explain the media's continued survival unchanged in such a wretched form.

      Nothing will change the media, not even ratings falling in the toilet.  All we can do is not watch.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by carlileb5935 (January 12, 2008 2:47 am ET)
         

      It's not just Matthews. The script is in elsewhere. On BBC last week, the Pew Group's Andrew Kohut made the inane claim that Clinton voters are largely lower income or the college educated, and that they might be more apt to be "less comfortable with Black People." 

      He also made such insinuations on the NYT op-ed page this week, regarding polling result discrepancies. 

      This echos Matthews comments, that people might have voted for Clinton because they were voting against Obama because he is Black. These guys are ridiculous in their bias.

       

      Report Abuse
    • Author by novadem (January 12, 2008 3:01 am ET)
         

      Why this sudden eruption over the same disgraceful behavior that Matthews has been demonstrating against Democrats for 10 years on his show?  Is it because this is the first time that it might have produced an unintended consequence at odds with the desired result of the MSM? Good folks like Bob Somerby have been fighting this battle against Matthews, seemingly alone, for years.  Matthews has done the same thing to Gore for two solid years (1999-2000, and recently), mocked Dean mercilessly in 2004 until he dropped out (then became best friends with Joe Trippi), and provided loads of free air time to the Kerry Swiftboaters, with absolutely no grasp of the facts of the case and without the slightest idea of how to dispute their accusations.  Even KO loses respect in my book over his failure to take on Matthews, station-mate or not.

      It's great to see that Matthews has finally crossed some line so that people are pushing back; it's long overdue.  However, you can write emails from now until the end of the century but the only thing that will change this situation is by organizing boycotts of the MSNBC sponsors.  It's all about money and once they start losing it, things would change fast.  As it stands now, MSNBC is probably happy that this is generating so much attention for Hardball. 

      Go with the sponsor boycotts; that's what the other side does in these situations and it always works.  Otherwise, say hello to President McCain.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by frautuck (January 12, 2008 3:39 am ET)
         

      It strikes me that Matthews has been saying, lo these many years, the sexist equivalent of what Don Imus said.  There seems to be something of a double standard here.  NBC dispatched Imus forthwith.  Yet they have been silent on the incendiary comments of Matthews. 

      With Imus, NBC had an epiphany when Imus' sponsors started dropping out.  Maybe its time for the Matthews sponsors to get a word from us consumers.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by nativeofsf (January 12, 2008 9:28 am ET)
         

      Snob elitism covertly displayed?

      What else is news?  What else is new?

      Oh, what shall those ponderous, pachyderm-pundits trumpet?

      Will anyone hear anything from the news media? [sic]

      If not, what will the noose media spew-out from this tasty morsel?

       

      anybody got a peanut? 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by handyguyny (January 12, 2008 11:11 am ET)
         

      Media Matters chose not to publish my previous comment about this.

      I am a fan of MM...but also of Chris Matthews [and of David Schuster, slammed elsewhere on the site].

      The shrill, tendentious tone of this coverage - and especially of the "Action Alert" e-mail by which it first came to my attention - disturbs me.

      I have defended MM against right-wingers elsewhere who claim that it indulges in one-sided character assassination.  Please don't live up to their caricatures.  Apply your own standards of fairness to this sort of ad hominem material.

      You've reduced a very interesting, multifaceted journalist-politician relationship [Matthews and Clinton] to a shrill cartoon designed to stir partisan blood.  Shame on you. 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by goldenforce.mary59 (January 12, 2008 11:22 am ET)
         

      With the microphone comes opportunity to influence many other people; it includes a responsibilty to base commentary on the facts.  Matthews should call his show "oddball" because he is just projecting his own peculiar oddball makeup onto his analysis of political figures.  He's getting worse, and it would be merciful if someone pulled his plug.

      By the way, I'm Mary59...haven't been able to log in since Thursday.  First the log in made a little boink noise with nothing happening.  Later in the day it declared "done" but didn't log me in.  Then on Friday it proclaimed that my username or password didn't match their records.  So today I decided it was easier to just sign up all over again.  Perhaps my voice cackled too much and was too shrill.  I do clap my hands on occasion. 

      There could also be a prejudice against dial-up users with old software and a monitor with a loose connection that blanks out every so often  :-)

      Report Abuse
    • Author by itsbenj1158 (January 12, 2008 12:33 pm ET)
         

      Yes, Chris Matthews is an idiot who, besides being incredibly wrong and neanderthalic about gender issues, does not belong as a prominent commentator about American politics in this day and age.

      But Chris Matthews idiocy seems to be being subtly transferred onto Clinton's opponents' campaigns, and this is wrong.  There are a lot of cheap shots coming from Clinton towards her opponents, but I've only seen substantive criticism coming from them.  I'm talking directly about the campaigns, which is what the media should be covering.  Let's not over-ascribe importance to Chris Matthews on this, he's just another misinformed babbling voice coming out of the TV sometimes.  If there are people out there dumb enough to vote based on what he says, there probably isn't much hope for them anyways.

      While he's worth criticizing, it's getting to the point where blogs following what he says in great detail and commenting about it as if he were truly significant is just part of the general media self-love-fest wherein they see themselves as the story, rather than the actual race for the office itself.  It is certainly uncontested within the blogosphere that Chris Matthews' commentary is absolutely atrocious.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by scootmandubious (January 12, 2008 1:00 pm ET)
         

      I am not a Hillary fan, but personally I can't stomach Chris Matthews and his political blather. His comments about her border on the inane.

      As one who has just switched to John Edwards, specifically because the media has chosen to marginalize the only clear anti-corporatism candidate, Matthews is even worse.

      Is Chris Matthews even capable of discussing John Edwards without calling into question his 'manliness?'

      Matthews represents the very worst of what passes for political punditry on the nets.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by bn14581 (January 12, 2008 1:26 pm ET)
         

      Thanks for documenting what Clinton- and women-hater "Hardball Chris" has said over the years. 

      In spite of all of this, there have not been outcries against this chauvinist-in-chief nor criticism and indignation in the mainstream media as was the case in the wake of Imus's racist remarks.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by spooky3 (January 12, 2008 1:51 pm ET)
         
      Wonderful job, Jamison. I sent my email to MSNBC earlier this week, and everyone who can should donate to MMFA to support their great work.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Clevenative (January 12, 2008 2:19 pm ET)
           
        I decided to sign up for a monthly contribution over the holidays. Not much - but as a percentage of monthly income I'm sure it's much higher than anything someone like conleytgwinn might have given.

        And since I gave up on my Catholicism, I figured I should give to a better cause than pedophile lawsuits. -:)
        Report Abuse
        • Author by conleytgwinn (January 12, 2008 6:39 pm ET)
             
          Good for you! And it is not really a competition with one another - it is a contribution to truth, justice, etc.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by Clevenative (January 13, 2008 10:29 pm ET)
               
            I forgot the smiley face after the 1st paragraph - but I'm sure you know I was jokin'. But since you're the only one who responded to my "net worth" post (last I checked) - you get to be the target of my humor.:)
            Report Abuse
    • Author by joe5260 (January 12, 2008 2:01 pm ET)
         
      Matthews is actually right now -- Hillary is dangerous.  I think I will email my support to MSNBC
      Report Abuse
    • Author by jxbrown4736 (January 12, 2008 2:40 pm ET)
         
      I'm a physician and Mr. Matthews disinhibition with his female guests and bizarre obsession with the Clintons always looks to me like symptoms of early dementia.  My DVR picks up the last two minutes of Hardball before it records Countdown and I always have to fast forward through those minutes because Matthews makes me so uncomfortable.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by draftedin68 (January 12, 2008 2:58 pm ET)
         

      Bullseye!

      "Obsessed" in a this-person-needs-help kind of way.

      Dead. Friggin'. Center.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by res0wlry3916 (January 12, 2008 3:16 pm ET)
         
      you think MSNBC is getting the message?- I've seen a couple of Chris Matthew promotional adds on MSNBC yesterday and today, like how Hardball is such a great show and Matthews such a great host. Could they be a little worried about ratings?
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Clevenative (January 12, 2008 4:47 pm ET)
           
        you think MSNBC is getting the message?

        I don't know, did you email them and tell them how you feel about Matthews? If not, please DO IT! -:)
        Report Abuse
    • Author by justoffal7504 (January 13, 2008 8:28 am ET)
         
      Remember now that Matthews is a closet gay...this explains many of his furtive and vituperous otbursts and it also explains why he is so effusive in the company of other men.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by mookie von zipper (January 13, 2008 11:45 am ET)
         

      media matters, aka thought police, is obsessed with chris matthews...  he has used the same "hardball" style phraseology since the inception of his program, most of which is vented toward males...  this is not parlor room chit-chat nor should he attempt to be an objective reporter, this is mainstream media punditry, where opinions rule the day, not facts, for better or worse...  but i guess it's good strategy for hillary and her minions to cry foul and play the girl card when convenient, which they do at every opportunity...  i don't hate hillary, but she is without question a fickle she-devil, and pelosi most defintiely is scary and grating...  so the notion of telling msnbc "how you feel" is fine, but what is the objective, for matthews to be nice and not express his opinion?...  to have him treat a potential president with kid gloves?...  good luck with that, that's the whole point of his program...       

       

       

      Report Abuse
    • Author by ktsdad3212516 (January 13, 2008 4:04 pm ET)
         
      I'm a little disappointed that MMFA isn't being a little more "fair" in this matter.  It's as if they've eschewed an pretense of being something they're accused of being by the right.  Namely, little more than a front for the Clinton Administration. 
      Report Abuse
    • Author by dide (January 14, 2008 3:30 am ET)
         
      Wow, does misogyny drive his hatred of Clinton or does the usual Leftist anti-Hillary sentiment drive his targeted sexism?  He needs an intervention.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by stormskies (January 14, 2008 11:02 am ET)
         
      The simple, sadistic, fact is: This corporate pig has been bought and paid for by GE. Just like the pigs Russert and Williams. As such they are DOING EXACTLY WHAT THEY HAVE BEEN PAID TO DO. This is why no amount of email to these pigs/ MSNBC, NBC will do any good at all. And, because of this, this explains they arrogance and derision at any criticism leveled against them. The corporations and the media that they own should be charged, tried, and convicted for purposeful, criminal, fraud committed against the American people. They are, indeed, the NEW AXIS OF EVIL.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by August Heat (January 14, 2008 2:26 pm ET)
         
       Great piece of writing there.  Damn compeling arguement.  I wonder when he will address either Media Matters or any of his sexist criticisms.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by The Stranger (January 14, 2008 4:08 pm ET)
         

      The only reason Matthews is considered a "problem" is because he is telling the truth about Hill....

      ...it's the reason why the left considers FOX a "problem"

      Report Abuse
    • Author by proudconservative (January 14, 2008 7:54 pm ET)
         

      This travesty needs to be exposed for what it is, a denial by the media of the deceitful methods used to lie, misinform and distract from the important matters of the day.  Let us continue to show how media impacts the political process when it hides truth and refuses to honestly address the fraudulent comments made by its representatives.

      I am glad tha MM is stepping forward to uncover the lies found in the Lancet's report in 2006 enormously overstating the numbers of civilian deaths in Iraq.  As it turns out, this was funded by Mr. Soros, weathly benefactor of his orchestrated monetary manipulation.

      http://news.nationaljournal.com/articles/databomb/index.htm

      Imagine if a conservative had financially directed a study that implied that we had only lost 1/10th the number of soldiers as the 'official' record.  Imagine if that was put forth just before elections to influence voters to believe a lie.  Imagine further, if just about every media outlet was more than happy to continue to perpetrate that lie.

      Well, that certainly happened with Lancet's report except that it overstated deaths by 1000%!  We now find out that financial support came from the Open Society Institute.  I am pleased that MM has taken this falsehood strait on and will look into the false reporting of civilian deaths.....what....oh...This is actually about some whinning about the rough and tumble of polictics....Not about the Lancet article?

      Nevermind.

      Emily Latella

      Report Abuse

my.MediaMatters.org

Login  Sign Up

Connect

  • Email

    Receive Jamison's column by email.