The Right's "bias" charade
At the end of the 1992 presidential campaign, there was a flurry of news reports about the possibility that the media had favored Bill Clinton over incumbent George H.W. Bush, and that the media's coverage of the race helped Clinton win.
Such complaints might seem a little odd, given the media's relentless focus during that campaign on Clinton's alleged relationship with Gennifer Flowers, his youthful marijuana use, and his purported "draft-dodging."
Still, complaints from conservatives about the media's coverage of the 1992 campaign worked to their benefit by complimenting their campaign to undermine Clinton's "legitimacy" as president. And they caused reporters, always sensitive to (typically bogus) charges of biased reporting, to bend over backwards to disprove their critics -- an instinct that, no doubt, contributed to the absolutely brutal media coverage Clinton received almost immediately upon his election.
How brutal? How quickly? The Los Angeles Times explained in a 1993 look back at the earliest days of the Clinton presidency:
Twelve days after President Clinton took office -- with only 1,448 days left in his term -- Sam Donaldson of ABC News was on a weekend talk show, saying, "This week we can talk about, 'Is the presidency over?' "
That same day, a Page 1 story in the Los Angeles Times warned, "The President must tighten his grip or risk disaster."
Later that week, a Page 1 story in the New York Times said, "The President desperately needs a victory, as soon as possible."
And that was barely six months in to Clinton's first term. Sure, by then reporters had suggested Clinton's presidency was over before it reached the end of its second week and inaccurately obsessed over his Air Force One haircut. But they were just getting started; the wall-to-wall coverage of Whitewater and countless other trumped-up faux scandals was still to come.
But no matter how hostile, how relentlessly negative, how scandal-obsessed the media were in their coverage of Clinton, conservatives kept right on going with their complaints of liberal bias. On October 26, 1996, The New York Times reported:
Sounding like a crusader, Bob Dole implored his audiences today to "rise up" against the nation's news organizations, which he said were protecting the Clinton Administration ...
"We've got to stop the liberal bias in this country," he declared ... "Don't read that stuff! Don't watch television! You make up your mind! Don't let them make up your mind for you!"
[...]
At another point he asked: "When do the American people rise up and say, 'Forget the media in America! We're going to make up our minds! You're not going to make up our minds!' This is about saving our country!"
Singling out The New York Times for the second straight day, Mr. Dole went on: "We are not going to let the media steal this election. We're going to win this election. The country belongs to the people, not The New York Times."
[...]
Mr. Dole's complaints against the news media -- reminiscent of those by President George Bush in the waning days of his losing 1992 campaign -- are greeted with wild cheers. Mr. Dole said today that President Clinton would be losing the election if he was not "getting propped up by the media."
A Nexis search yields 539 hits for "Clinton and Whitewater" in the The New York Times between January 1 and October 26, 1996 -- nearly two per day. And that focus hardly let up as the campaign reached the home stretch; there are 42 hits for "Clinton and Whitewater" in the Times from October 1-26. Nor was the Times alone in hammering away at Whitewater during the fall campaign: Expanding the search to all news organizations yields 2,412 hits for the month of October alone.
And that's to say nothing of the relentless media focus on Democratic fundraising controversies. Or the various other Clinton "scandals," most of which turned out to exist only in the fevered imaginations of the news media. Or the fact that the news media, having obsessed for years about Clinton's infidelity, buried a story about an alleged Dole affair that his campaign aides considered a "mortal threat" threat to his candidacy.
Let's stop there for a second: Just weeks after The Washington Post, which had reported on allegations of infidelity on Clinton's part, spiked a story about an alleged Dole affair, Bob Dole was running around accusing the media of being in the tank for Clinton. That's awfully reckless behavior -- if Dole actually believed the media were against him. Sincere or not, Dole's complaints ring hollow; I can't think of a presidential candidate whose alleged "scandals" received more election-year coverage than Clinton's in 1996. Such coverage isn't the whole story, of course, but it's awfully hard to justify claims that the media were in the tank for Clinton when they were running so many reports about Whitewater and other such nonsense.
But Dole's wasn't the most absurd conservative claim of media bias during the Clinton years. For that, we have to look to the pro: Brent Bozell of the Media Research Center. On February 9, 1998, the Minneapolis Star Tribune ran an interview with Bozell in which he complained that the media weren't devoting enough coverage to the Monica Lewinsky story.
Given that most observers would likely agree that the Lewinsky saga involved the longest, most intense media feeding frenzy in modern American history, Bozell's claim should be self-evidently fraudulent.
On the off chance that it isn't: On February 9, the day the Bozell interview ran, there were 529 news reports mentioning "Clinton" and "Lewinsky," according to a search of the Nexis database. Those 529 hits include 59 television transcripts, eight hits in the New York Times folder, and 11 for USA Today. In just one day. And that was a typical day, not an unusual one.
Still, Bozell told the Star Tribune, apparently with a straight face, that the media had "stopped" covering the story -- "as they always do." Five hundred news reports a day, and Bozell thought the media had stopped covering the story. This is up-is-down, black-is-white, the-moon-is-made-of-green-cheese stuff. And it is typical of conservative media criticism.
Why do they make such absurd claims? Because it is clear that it works. (If, unlike many journalists, you understand what the goal is.)
Which brings us to 2008.
John McCain's campaign, and its conservative allies, have spent much of the year attacking the news media. No surprise there; that's what conservatives do, even conservatives who have been the beneficiaries of a decade of glowing, fawning coverage from swooning reporters.
McCain and his allies were attacking the media back in the Spring, when reporters were obsessively scrutinizing Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton -- and openly acknowledging that they weren't giving McCain similar scrutiny. They attacked the media in late summer, when the media were breathlessly touting the "authenticity" of a Sarah Palin speech that was filled with falsehoods. And they have attacked the media throughout the fall, even as it has become clear that the scrutiny reporters promised back in the spring that they would eventually give McCain isn't coming. It isn't a coincidence that scrutiny never came: it is, in part, an obvious and intended result of the attacks McCain and his allies have been leveling on the media all year.
But if, as the polls suggest, Barack Obama is elected next Tuesday, those attacks will have ultimately proven unsuccessful, right? Wrong.
First, that's a silly way to assess whether a strategy has "worked"; a candidate can derive benefit from a strategy without winning.
Second, it ignores the long-term goals of the attacks: to delegitimize an Obama presidency in the eyes of many Americans, and to browbeat journalists into covering an Obama administration much more critically than they otherwise would.
Whether those goals are met depends in part on whether journalists take the attacks seriously, or recognize them as the predictable continuation of a right-wing work-the-refs strategy that is so fraudulent it even involved claiming the media were devoting insufficient attention to Monica Lewinsky. And it depends in part on whether progressives push back on the bogus narrative that the media handed Obama the election, or simply ignore it.
Unfortunately, the conservative complaints got some superficial support from a recent study by the Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ) that claimed that John McCain has received much more "negative" coverage than Barack Obama during the campaign.
The PEJ study quickly got significant attention from the establishment media and blogs.
But while the study lends rhetorical support to the conservatives' arguments, it is nearly useless as an actual assessment of how the media covered the campaign.
First off, it is worth noting this little nugget about the study's methodology, buried at the end of the PEJ report: "Talk radio stories ... were not included in this campaign study of tone." PEJ offers no justification for the exclusion of talk radio. Not a word. In what surely must be a coincidence, talk radio skews further to the right than any other medium.
Now, here's PEJ's description of how it assesses whether a news report is "positive" or "negative":
To examine tone, the Project takes a particularly cautious and conservative approach. Unlike some researchers, we examine not just whether assertions in stories are positive or negative, but also whether they are inherently neutral. This, we believe, provides a much clearer and fairer sense of the tone of coverage than ignoring those balanced or mixed evaluations. Second, we do not simply tally up all the evaluative assertions in stories and compile them into a single pile to measure. Journalists and audiences think about press coverage in stories or segments. They ask themselves, is this story positive or negative or neutral? Hence the Project measures coverage by story, and for a story to be deemed as having a negative or positive tone, it must be clearly so, not a close call: for example, the negative assertions in a story must outweigh positive assertions by a margin of at least 1.5 to 1 for that story to be deemed negative.
OK ... anyone want to guess what that means in practical terms?
Unfortunately, the few actual examples of "positive" and "negative" coverage PEJ offers do little to clarify its methodology, and less to inspire confidence. For example, PEJ notes:
Some of that positive coverage was related to evidence that the financial crisis was aiding Obama. "Recent economic woes have given Democrat Barack Obama a clear lead over Republican John McCain," declared a story posted on AOL News on Sept. 24, citing a 9-point lead for Obama in a new Washington Post/ABC News poll.
That's what counts as "positive" coverage of Obama? A fairly straightforward report that a poll finds Obama in a "clear lead" over McCain? And, it seems, much of Obama's "positive" coverage consisted of reports like that:
The data clearly point in this direction for some of the explanation. Of those stories that focused mostly on polls, a clear majority (57%) were positive for Obama, while less than a quarter (23%) were negative. Similarly, stories about the electoral map, swing states and campaign strategy were even more favorable (77% positive vs. 6% negative). These represent the most positive element of Obama's coverage.
So, if a candidate is winning, and the polls show that, and the media report that the polls show the candidate winning, that counts as "positive" coverage. Well, OK, it's true that such a story is "positive," but it tells us nearly nothing about the media.
Examples of "negative" coverage of McCain similarly fail to illuminate. Here's the first:
On Sept. 24, he announced he was suspending campaigning to return to Washington to work on a rescue bill and advocated delaying the first debate, scheduled two days away in Oxford Mississippi. ... [S]ome of the coverage depicted McCain's decision-making in an unflattering light, such as a Sept. 26 CNN.com piece stating that "some fellow lawmakers said McCain hadn't contributed much to the financial debate, and senior campaign advisors told CNN they believed it was politically crucial that McCain show up in Oxford, Mississippi."
Actually, that's the only example of negative coverage of McCain. As Bob Somerby noted, "According to Pew, McCain has been hit with a bunch of 'negative stories' in the six weeks under review ... But what do these 'negative stories' look like? In the age of the simple electronic link, it's incredible that Pew provides no examples."
To PEJ's credit, it says only that coverage of the candidates is "positive" or "negative," not "favorable" or "unfavorable" or that coverage is "biased" in favor of a given candidate. As a literal matter, describing news reports such as the CNN.com example as "negative" is defensible, though it doesn't really tell us much.
But many people interpret those descriptions as evidence of "bias" -- as PEJ must know they will do. Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz, for example:
Critics, including many conservatives, say the media have been too easy on Obama, and bias cannot be discounted as a factor. A study by the Project for Excellence in Journalism found that from the end of the conventions through the debates, McCain's coverage was more than three times as negative than Obama's.
Such interpretations are simply not defensible. PEJ's explanation of its methodology suggests that a purely factual news report about McCain trailing in the polls constitutes a "negative" report -- as would a report debunking a McCain lie. Again, such a report could defensibly be described as "negative" for McCain, but interpreting that as evidence of media bias is absurd. Debunking a lie isn't "bias," it's what journalists should be doing every day.
PEJ made no effort to assess things that actually could give some indication of whether media coverage has been unfair - whether news reports were more likely to uncritically report false claims from one candidate, or whether similar controversies surrounding each candidate received disparate coverage, for example. (Media Matters has documented several such examples of double standards that have benefited McCain.)
PEJ did offer this intriguing statement:
Much of the increased attention for McCain derived from actions by the senator himself, actions that, in the end, generated mostly negative assessments. In many ways, the arc of the media narrative during this phase of the 2008 general election might be best described as a drama in which John McCain has acted and Barack Obama has reacted.
That seems to support my observation that the media have covered precisely what McCain wants them to cover:
The truth is that when John McCain says "jump," the media still ask, "How high?" Think about this: When was the last time McCain or his campaign has wanted the news media to focus on something, and they have refused? From "lipstick on a pig" to Bill Ayers, the media have scampered after whatever mud McCain has flung, like a puppy dog chasing a stick thrown by its master. Sure, sometimes they have pointed out that McCain is lying -- and that's tremendous progress for a profession that has spent a decade flatly asserting McCain's honesty. But -- as I've explained in the past -- even as they've debunked McCain's claims, they've too often privileged the lie by allowing those claims to drive their coverage.
Unfortunately, PEJ did not explain its assertion that "the media narrative ... might be best described as a drama in which John McCain has acted and Barack Obama has reacted." Examining that idea more fully could have actually told us something useful about whether the media have favored one candidate or the other, in effect, if not intentionally.
PEJ's analysis may have only limited academic value. But there's nothing academic about the need to rebut its flawed conclusions. If the media themselves perceive that Barack Obama benefited from favorable media coverage -- as is suggested by their uncritical citation of the PEJ study -- that perception could have ominous implications for the coverage he will receive if he becomes president.
As a 1993 Christian Science Monitor op-ed by a University of California-Irvine professor noted:
[H]ow the media treat a new president may have less to do with personality, personnel, perks, or pessimism than it does with how the media treated that president as a candidate. Treatment of a new president may be inversely related to their coverage of the president as a candidate for office. The easier the media's treatment of a presidential candidate during the campaign, the harsher will be their treatment once the candidate has become president. Conversely, harsher treatment of a presidential candidate during the campaign may precipitate a much longer media honeymoon for a new president.
















More media bias whining again. Whether it comes from the right or the left, it's nothing more than one giant colossol back and forth, finger pointing vintage whine.
The fact is all the players that do it for their own reasons, to push their own agendas, and to promote themselves.
The right does it to feel into their loyalist's notion that everything wrong with them and their futility these days is the fault of the media, blame the big bad faceless media and you come out looking like the injured pup struggling to survive. Seen it for years, meh.
And the left, specifically this website, does it to enhance their own relevance. To give purpose and necessity for their existence, to show donors how the corporate rightwing media is growing and gaining in clout and influence. Forgive me MMFA, but that's the way I see it, my opinion.
It's basically a wash, there is no such thing as the "media", there are thousands of "medias", and to paint them with one ideological brush just to advance your own agenda is pitiful.
As I have said before, the media is more interested in tearing down who is on their way up, and building up who is down and out. It's far more about the story and the scoop, and the bullet headline, than promoting some political party. When those that whine so often and so loud finally admit that, we can all stop wallowing in the charade of "media" bias.
Here's the deception/misdirection by MM:
Just because a Nexis turns up 'X' number of hits on "Cliinton and Whitewater" does not mean the outlet was "hammering away" at the issue. Those terms could have been used to disparage the Republicans for even bringing up the issue. They could also have been used to defend Clinton on this issue. MM does not provide any context.
In other words, MM's "Nexis" figures are simply useless and don't tell us anything about bias!
-
Ironic isn't it? Displaying bias in a piece complaining about bias.
Ah yes, I fondly remember all of those positive stories about Whitewater. All those puff pieces saying what a great deal it was and how clear it was the Clintons did nothing wrong. They were all over the place... oh wait, no they weren't. I mean really, what planet were you on in the 90's?? Are you really trying to sell the fact that the papers were defending the Clintons on Whitewater? Really? I know some people have short memories, but I'm not one of them. I did not follow politiics then like I do now, but come on! Even I remember all of the Clinton/whitewater stories and they were not as you decribe them.
what i recall were all the stories implying that the clintons had done something, but what it was i never figured out. and then you had the first whitewater special prosecuter saying nothing illegal happened, and the republicans didn't like that so they got ken starr appointed.
MH, I see you've met Shoes. Don't even bother, it's a hit & run wingnut with no visible means of logical support, and an even flimsier grasp on reality.
Military_Husband,
You'll have to forgive shoes89... he comes in here every so often with a lame attempt at trying to make the obvious, not seem so obvious...
Don't be angry with him... he's only doing what he thinks he must.
Of course... it would be interesting once in a while if shoes89 would offer up a link or two defending his assertions... in this case... even one story that actually defended Clinton and WhiteWater or Monica or FileGate or Vincent Foster or Jennifer Flowers back from those days that are from what was considered 'main stream'?
In other words, MM's "Nexis" figures are simply useless and don't tell us anything about bias!
And if anyone around here personifies uselessness, it's Shoes.
Tommy-
I think it's interesting that one of the campaigns continually rails against the 'liberal elite media' while the other campaign chooses to focus their scorn on Fox News, which is unabashedly biased towards one side of the issues.
I would hope that Obama leaves Fox alone and doesn't mention them at all. It only gives them fodder to loop it over and over and play the victim of truth and media justice, in what is in their best interest to keep saying they are the only media outlet not in the tank for Obama.
That's reasonable Tommy. Although I like Obama's occasional references to Hannity, they're good natured and dismissive of SH as a joke, Hannity is using these to portray himself as a victim. I don't know if it works on any but the Hannitized, but the Obama camp should resist hammering the point.
BTW,re: The Bias Charade, I pronounce "charade" to rhyme with "broad". Does that make me elite?
When you mention Sean Hannity in any interview you only elevate him. I always remember the Clintons, who never, ever, to my knowledge, ever mentioned Rush Limbaugh. They knew better. Just like they would never mention Dick Morris, which is probably one of the reasons he hates them so much.
Obama should leave the partisan stuff about the media out of any of his rhetoric, in my opinion.
When you mention Sean Hannity in any interview you only elevate him.--Tommy
I would imagine the purpose is in part to get the message to the Fox-only crowd.
When you mention Sean Hannity in any interview you only elevate him.
Elevate him to the level of the street curb??? That's moving up for him.
Tommy,
Didn't Bill blame Rush for the OKC bombing? I seem to remember a big stink about that. It's also been shown that coverage for BHO is more favorable than JM.
Media Coverage of the candidates
On some level this has to have an effect.
When you mention Sean Hannity in any interview you only elevate him.
On that basis, imagine how high Sean Hannity has elevated Bill Ayres, Jeremiah Wright, and Tony Rezko......
Ha ha, char-ahde you are, Col.!
As always Tommy misses a simple point.
When MMFA "whines", they tell the truth. When the right wing "whines", they lie.
"Whine" is a meaningless inflammatory word. "True" and "false" are less meaningless, but so seldom considered.
When the right wing lies, and then get busted for their lies, they yell "bias".
That, or they laughably whine that the First Amendment is in jeopardy.
"When they stop lying about us, we'll stop telling the truth about the,"
~Adlai Stephenson
"the truth about theM."
(where that edit feature?!) >:(
More media bias whining again. ...... And the left, specifically this website, does it to enhance their own relevance. To give purpose and necessity for their existence, to show donors how the corporate rightwing media is growing and gaining in clout and influence. Forgive me MMFA, but that's the way I see it, my opinion.---Tommy
Reality based whining. Do you ever listen to right wing radio? MMFA could do 10, 100, a 1000 times the stories they do if they wanted to on just the stuff that's put out to the confused masses listening to the radio. Forgive me MMFA, but that's just the way I see it, my opinion.
I don't think there's any question why the Troglodytes have invested thirty years and hundreds of millions of dollars in their attempts to discredit the News Media. We've seen those turkeys come home to roost after the Republicans took over the government in 2000. The Dan Rather incident is a perfect illustration, as well as the serial lies told before and after the Iraq Occupation.
Enough people distrust the News Media that President Numbnuts was able to lie us into an unecessary war and walk away with zero accountability. It's obscene.
Why do you think the right started all those "think tanks" in the sixties and seventies. So they could drive the narrative of the news. And unfortuately its worked very well.
if our media narrative is being driven by 'think tanks,' that means our media cant be much more than a propaganda delivery system . . . benefiting the ruling elite.
sounds about right.
Why do you think the right started all those "think tanks" in the sixties and seventies.
"Conservative think tank" is the supreme oxymoron.
Apparently Simple Sarah is joining the whinefest, claiming that those mean old media elites are somehow threatening her First Amendment Rights by pointing out her lies.
No surprise that she would be butt-ignorant about the First Amendment, too.
I heard the same thing, she said it today on some radio interview, the woman is categorically nuts. My god, is she that dumb? I am sorry, but to even think of this woman as being one heartbeat away from the presidency is scarier than any Halloween costume ever could be.
Go Obama, please!
Hey, thanks for reminding me Tommy. I'm off work today, and I'm supposed to be getting my costume together for a party tonight, and instead I'm mucking around here.I've got it narrowed down to Killer Space Robot or Billy Mays.

Which one do you think will reel in the babes more?
Robot. Chicks dig robots.
Joe the Plumber
His name is not Joe, and he is not a plumber. According to the local union chapters in his town, "Joe" hasn't even attempted to get training, nor does he have a license.
His name is not Joe, and he is not a plumber. According to the local union chapters in his town, "Joe" hasn't even attempted to get training, nor does he have a license.
He's a Republican, so he has a License to Lie.
Billy the Huckster. Women dig a good line, even though they know it may not be the whole truth. And he is more emotional than a robot, women love emotion.
HELLO! I'M BILLY MAYS AND I'M THE LOUDEST MAN IN AMERICA!
It is surprising that Pew didn't give more examples of what it considers positive or negative stories...
This does seem like a serious flaw in the study. The few examples given--as Jamison Foser points out-- do not inspire confidence in the study.
The other point is this: If McCain is constantly lying (which he has done) or smearing and making personal attacks on Obama then isn't it likely that he will have more stories of a negative tone about him?
i think it's clear that mccain is major league angry with palin. i've seen a couple photos where it's obvious that there's a chill between them. the polls are showing over half the country think she's unqualified. but as much as anyone can be critical of her, and she offers a ton of reasons to do so, in the end the blame is on mccain. he picked her without properly checking her out, when he had better choices, and that reflects on his judgement.
i'm assuming an obama victory, but i think it would have been a much closer race except for the erratic mccain campaign. i mean, what's up with dragging this fake tax dodging plumber out at rallies? as much hesitancy as i have to support the democrats at times, i look at who the republicans put up, and i say no way.
I hear that last paragraph. I'm 58 years old, and except for the Democratic Senator from my State, Ron Wyden, I can't remember a time when I voted FOR someone. I've almost always voted against the sociopath, or against the corporate welfare queen, or against the corrupted, or against the sexual deviant, or against the liar, or against the warmonger, or against the hatemonger, or against the racist. That of course necessarily means that I always vote either Democratic or third party. I'm sometimes accused of being too partisan, but I would argue that it isn't my fault that most Republicans are sociopathic, corrupt, perverted, lying, warmongering, hatemongering, racist, corporate welfare queens. That's just the luck of the draw.
Wow, no bias in that post.
I'm hardly a Democrat. I think that there's a TON wrong with that party. (VOted twice AGAINST Bush, and twice AGAINST Clinton. LOL) But I'm pretty much with you, webprogramer. The Republican's have lately put up one corporate crook and/or religious nut-case after another. I would NOT have included McCain in that light myself... at least until he picked Palin.
So I'd have voted FOR McCain, but I WILL NOT risk a Palin presidency under ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. But even so, I'll still say I'm voting FOR Obama, at least as much as I am AGAINST Palin. I do LIKE Obama. (Just as I used to LIKE McCain!)
the sociopath, or against the corporate welfare queen, or against the corrupted, or against the sexual deviant, or against the liar, or against the warmonger, or against the hatemonger, or against the racist.---WP
Or perhaps an enabler of the above.
I've almost always voted against the sociopath
Wow, a voter after my own heart. That's exactly what I did this election too. When I voted early, I voted for the same candidate I have voted for in each and every election - the lesser of the two evils.
When you voted for the lesser of two evils in 1992 and 1996, the country got much better.
I loosely define an "evil" candidate as someone who will leave the country worse than when (s)he started, or at least try to. Anyone who makes the country better is a good candidate.
I'm all for the leaser of two weevels.
I'm for the lessee of two evils. It's always the underdog who has to pay the rent.
it's not even that i disagree with some traditional republican issues. i'm moderate to conservative on some issues myself. but the republicans just seem to think the answer to everything is cut taxes for the wealthy. it's irresponsible to spend money we borrow constantly. and even though i never voted for him, poppy bush was not that bad of a president, comparatively. far superior to his son. [and to be fair, obama needs to pay for any new programs also.]
As Saruman said of Theodin... "[He] is the lesser son of greater sires."
Ah, no. Not even close to the real story. All one has to do is look at the polls. You know, the ones that say Obama is going to obliterate McCain? According to a survey of American's, 70% believe the media has been biased favorably toward Obama. This should also remind everyone of how the media attacked Hillary to get out and let Obama win. This isnt a poll of conservatives. Yes, in the 1992 election it was not as bad - there was more balance. But even then the American people when polled said they saw more pro-bias for the democrat. What is confusing both sides are the people like Oreilly, Olbermann, Maddows, Hannity and now Matthews. They are taking the place of journalism and just straight up reporting. All in the name of ratings. I'd just kill for real journalism in America again. Is that too much too ask? MSNBC has gone the way of Fox and forsaken real journalism in doing so. CNN is the only somewhat respected news network anymore.
70% believe the media has been biased favorably toward Obama
So? That doesn't necisarily make it so! I'm guessing that a lot of those people are foucsing on the word "favorible" and not the word "biased" - which suggests that the reporting is somehow inaccurate or unfairly skewed.
Have we all noticed over the past several weeks, months, how seldom MMFA's definition of media mentions ABC, NBC or CBS???
Well Oscar, I don't think the networks lean left, do you? If you do I'd love some examples. They just seem superficial and into info-tainment.
Outside of political commentators with a specific agenda, Shamity, RashL, Michael the Dolt, Oldermann, Tweety, etc. I don't think there is intentional bias in the media as a whole, but we hear what we want to hear, we read what we want to read. If we are listening or looking for bias, we can find it. But what I perceive as bias, you may not and vice versa. This is a good site on which to vent for both sides as opposed to a lot of the other sites that treat the opposition as "worse than dirt" (again, probably a perceived bias). At the end of the upcoming elections, a lot of the country will be disappointed with the results, no matter what they are, but the country will go forward, the sun will continue to come up in the east and set in the west and although life may not be easy for us, we will, in all likelyhood, survive.
Hard to find bias in a half-hour of petty court cases, health reports, sports, and quick bland "candidate X spoke in state Y" stories.
Most of those broadcasts have a short commentary section at some point in the time period. It is during that period that we see/hear what we are conditioned to see/hear. Apparently, for the most part, MMFA feels those are neutral or bias to the left (which is not in their mission statement to report0.
Did you forget about "Travelgate" Imagine putting cronies in such a nationally important place as the travel office. The press was all over it!
Compare that to what was done to the Justice Department
He tried to do the same at the Supreme Court (Harriet Miers)
What about privatizing the military with war profiteers.
The list is endless for this loser prez (I actually feel sorry for his dad)
The press expressed little real interest until they couldn't ignore these issues anymore.
By then the damage was done
Wait...we should include talk radio in a study of news coverage? O...kay...
Does that mean we should include Hollywood too? Of course not, right? That isn't news. And since movies and TV reach a far bigger audience than AM radio....do any liberals want to trade?
Interesting how liberals were always so eager to dismiss conservative complaining about media bias and Hollywood....but then complain just as loud about Fox News and talk radio. Oh...complaining is ok for those, eh? Methinks someone just doesn't want to give up their advantage. (Who does?)
I won't be voting because both these candidates suck (like in almost every frigging election), but to not see the bias toward Obama is just not seeing what you don't want to see. (It's tough to see a bias that agrees with you. I doubt Sean Hannity listeners or Keith Oberman watchers see any bias at all.)
right, liberal hollywood. how many flag waving movies have we seen out of there? and what about "american carol", the right wing "comedy"? see far down you have to go on this list to find it two weeks after it's release, and doing a paltry $500 per theater.
http://www.movieweb.com/movies/boxoffice/weekly/?2008-10-17
and mel gibson, kelsey grammer, bruce willis, robert duvall [great actor btw], all those conservatives just can't get work, right?
Such an excellent essay that I was moved to register after lurking for years. You have well crystalized the dynamics of media intimidation. This year's version is particularly ironic in light of McCain's peronal relationship with media in the past (thanks, Ms. Reston). Perhaps there is spurned lover aspect to the GOP ticket's outrage.
If anything, I believe that McCain has received essentially a pass on issues from his resume that could bear on his fitness. He left military service upon learning he had no promotion prospects. His personal relationships hardly reflect well on him. He pals around with Gordon Liddy.
Whatever. Anyone can point fingers, but the wingnuts have made pointing fingers part of a religious ritual.
The media has worshipped the Bill Ayers myth as if under McCains instructions not to analyze the blank accusation he had anything to do with Obama.
Nixon Wrecking Era’s Ayers McCain’s Teflon Wunderkind
(...if you really thought there was something wrong with ‘appearances’...)
(Rove-style psych bomb deployed by McCain campaign a disaster like Ayer’s own Weathermen suffered–don’t play with Nixon Era dirty smear tactics.)
Major media have avoided high profile exposure of Ayers, probing questions and heavyweight legal expertise on the exact nature of how he never spent a day in prison for his alarming terrorism and accessory to triple capital murder.
NPR just keeps replaying the phone robot denouncing Obama with its freefall insinuation connecting the democratic candidate with Ayers, backed up by zip, nada, don’t go there just shovel the dirt and don’t ask where it’s from.
Why is loathsomely dishonest, deplorable news media infesting our university FM broadcast public radio? Where has the good music gone? Have they got us paying for their unconscionably profligate propagandizement over formerly FM music oases too!?
Is media monopoly privatization consolidating on public radio’s free ride with two fund drives a year?
The notion that the media have been anything but drooling over Obama is so preposterous and dishonest that I find it embarrassing.
Then your not watching what your comenting on, which should be embarrassing. I've seen a few embarrassed wingnuts, but it is a rare alment in Wingnutia.
The notion that the media have been anything but drooling over Obama is so preposterous and dishonest that I find it embarrassing.
Anyone who writes ignorant crap like that should be embarrassed, but is usually too stupid to be embarrassed.
Gov Schwarzenegger gave a speech in Ohio. What is interesting to me is that The LA Times report on the speech deletes two words at about the 11 minute mark. What was reported: "I think Americans, they will say, 'Our Democracy is not for sale'."
What was said: "I think Americans AND JEWS, they will say, 'Our Democracy is not for sale'."
The speech was sanitized by a "reporter".
Now the problem becomes lazy media and you find the LA Times article reprinted everywhere.
Changes things.
Mike
When Obama wins, it is going to get much much worse
What?? Are you on something? I mean really, do you listen to people like Hannity as they tell you that they deliver the best news and commentary on the radio. Most of these right wing talk radio shows pretend to be "news men". If you really think going to see a movie (that is clearly fiction) is the same as listening to someone on the radio who claims to be telling the 100% truth, you really need help.
I'm beginning to think that something I heard a while back (Daily Show??) about 'the facts being biased against the GOP' may be a factor here.
I don't know how I can possibly respond to such a judicious remark.
As others have already noted, the corporate press was in full "kill Clinton" attack mode through the whole of that "scandal"--it's unlikely there were 500 total stories defending Clinton and disparaging Republicans on the Lewinsky matter in the entire course of it.
You weren't paying attention to what Foser wrote, though. The same day those 500+ stories ran, Bozell--one of the biggest frauds in a right-wing political culture that spawns frauds like flies on fecal matter--was telling an interviewer that same corporate press had "stopped" covering the story, "as they always do." If he's serious, he's delusional. That sort of brainless carping has other purposes, though, just as Foser noted.
If PEJ followed their own past practices with this newest work (I haven't yet looked at it), they include all opinion pieces in their tally, and include opinion shows among the outlets they survey.
They can survey whatever they want, of course, but the reason it makes sense to include talk radio is that it's one of the major players in how people get their news; a bigger news outlet than the newspapers PEJ examines, and most of the cable news programs, as well.