Mon, Mar 13, 2006 10:33am ET

Send to a friend Print Version

O'Reilly attacks ... and attacks ... and attacks

At Media Matters for America, we monitor, analyze, and correct conservative misinformation in the U.S. media. Bill O'Reilly's steady stream of misinformation gives us plenty of material, and we thought it particularly noteworthy when he denied making personal attacks, given that he has such a long history of making them.

We encourage you to click here and tell your friends about this clip.

You can see more of O'Reilly's misinformation here.

Comments (0)
 
Post a new comment

You must be a registered user to post and flag comments on this site.

Please log in or sign up to post in this forum.

Video Clip

Trouble viewing clip? Download: QT | WMV

 
Take Action!

Contact information:

Bill O'Reilly
oreilly@foxnews.com

Fox News Channel
FOX News Channel
1-888-369-4762
Comments@foxnews.com
1211 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10036

The O'Reilly Factor
The O'Reilly Factor

The Radio Factor
Westwood One
Bart Tessler
Sr. VP, Network News / Talk Programming
202.457.7998

When contacting the media, please be polite and professional. Express your specific concerns regarding that particular news report or commentary, and be sure to indicate exactly what you would like the media outlet to do differently in the future.

Issues / Media Tags Help
Issue:
Media
Person:
Bill O'Reilly
Show/Publication:
The O'Reilly Factor
The Radio Factor
Network/Outlet:
Fox News Channel
Westwood One
Personalized Alerts
Show Your Support
County Fair
Media Matters Action Center - Make a Difference!
RSS Feeds

Media Matters uses a taxonomy structure to help readers find information on various subjects. You can view all items by issue (the broadest category), view an issue's subissue, and even drill down to a particular topic. You can also look at items according to the related media personality, show/publication and network/publisher.

Social bookmarking sites allow you to save links to interesting items and share them with other users. Some, like Digg.com, also allow you to discuss these items and promote them to wider audiences by "digging" the ones that you like. To start using these services, simply register with the site in question.