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1. NBC Showcases Anti-War West Virginian Over One Critical of Media At a forum with President George W. Bush Wednesday at the Capitol Music Hall in Wheeling, West Virginia, Gayle Taylor, the wife of a member of the military recently returned from Iraq, was drowned out by a standing ovation when she told Bush: "It seems that our major media networks don't want to portray the good. They just want to focus-" Neither the CBS Evening News or NBC Nightly News found the criticism of the news media to be newsworthy. NBC's David Gregory instead decided to assert that "in a state he won twice...many here now wonder whether the sacrifice of American lives has been worth it." NBC viewers then heard from one Mountain State resident, Donna Neptune, whom Gregory described as "a Republican." She maintained: "Those people don't want our help. Our people's being killed over there for nothing." ABC's World News Tonight, however, was unique amongst the broadcast evening newscasts and highlighted the contention from the woman anchor Elizabeth Vargas described as "the wife of a military journalist who was just back from Iraq." 2. Olbermann Raises McCarthy, Rails Against "Unforgivable" Ingraham In leading his Countdown show on Wednesday night, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann pegged "the day in 1988 when the first George Bush sandbagged Dan Rather during a live interview on CBS as the moment" when "the process of blaming the messenger became an essential ingredient in American politics," raised Joe McCarthy's name in noting the location of President Bush's criticism of press coverage of Iraq and railed against the "unforgivable" criticism of the media by radio talk show host Laura Ingraham, whom he described as someone "that I've known socially." And that was all before he brought aboard Helen Thomas. Olbermann asserted that the war of "the government versus the news has just escalated anew, and it is approaching a carpet bombing stage. Exhibit A, Wheeling, West Virginia, where Joe McCarthy started his string of the most memorable speeches, today's stop on the George W. Bush 'I am nothing if not deeply misunderstood ' Express." Video of Olbermann and BONUS VIDEO of the 1988 Bush 41-Rather confrontation cited by Olbermann. 3. Elvis Costello Attacks "Wrong Wars," Katrina Ravaging "Man-Made" VH-1 watchers enjoying the annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction concert aired on tape Tuesday night received some perhaps unsurprising political commentary along with the music. When rock singer Elvis Costello came on stage to perform with New Orleans music legend Allan Touissant, he took a few shots at the Iraq War and the Bush administration's apparent inability to handle Hurricane Katrina because of that war.
Over One Critical of Media At a forum with President George W. Bush Wednesday at the Capitol Music Hall in Wheeling, West Virginia, Gayle Taylor, the wife of a member of the military recently returned from Iraq, was drowned out by a standing ovation when she told Bush: "It seems that our major media networks don't want to portray the good. They just want to focus-" Neither the CBS Evening News or NBC Nightly News found the criticism of the news media to be newsworthy. NBC's David Gregory instead decided to assert that "in a state he won twice...many here now wonder whether the sacrifice of American lives has been worth it." NBC viewers then heard from one Mountain State resident, Donna Neptune, whom Gregory described as "a Republican." She maintained: "Those people don't want our help. Our people's being killed over there for nothing." ABC's World News Tonight, however, was unique amongst the broadcast evening newscasts and highlighted the contention from the woman anchor Elizabeth Vargas described as "the wife of a military journalist who was just back from Iraq." Vargas set up the brief soundbite: "There has been criticism from the Bush administration and others that the media has been ignoring the good news in Iraq, distorting what's really going on there."After the clip of Taylor, Vargas acknowledged that "it is certainly true that many of the stories from Iraq involve violence, and fear," but she argued "it is also true that we cover all kinds of stories in Iraq. The last story Bob [Woodruff] filed before" the attack which severely wounded him, "was about a Baghdad ice cream parlor" and "when I was in Iraq in December, we spent time at this ballet school for children." [This item was posted Wednesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To post your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ]
CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer held his coverage of the event to this short item:
The article posted on the WashingtonPost.com, by Bill Brubaker, at 4pm EST, "Bush Defends Iraq Decision, Addresses WMD Intelligence," ignored Taylor's remark: www.washingtonpost.com
An AP dispatch posted on Yahoo provided this quotation of Taylor, without identifying her:
The story on the event posted Wednesday afternoon by the New York Times, "Bush Says 'It's Time' for Unity Government in Iraq," by John O'Neil, provided this summary of the reaction Taylor generated: For the est of the NY Times story: www.nytimes.com The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video for the March 22 NBC and ABC stories:
Anchor Campbell Brown introduced Gregory's NBC Nightly News story:
George W. Bush clip #1: "The best way to protect the American people is to stay on the offensive."
Anchor Elizabeth Vargas began the coverage on ABC's World News Tonight: Next, ABC viewers saw a piece from Jake Tapper on a crew filming, on a Baghdad street, a comedy TV show who were devastated when they got a phone call telling them that their boss had been assassinated.
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"Unforgivable" Ingraham In leading his Countdown show on Wednesday night, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann pegged "the day in 1988 when the first George Bush sandbagged Dan Rather during a live interview on CBS as the moment" when "the process of blaming the messenger became an essential ingredient in American politics," raised Joe McCarthy's name in noting the location of President Bush's criticism of press coverage of Iraq and railed against the "unforgivable" criticism of the media by radio talk show host Laura Ingraham, whom he described as someone "that I've known socially." And that was all before he brought aboard Helen Thomas. Olbermann asserted that the war of "the government versus the news has just escalated anew, and it is approaching a carpet bombing stage. Exhibit A, Wheeling, West Virginia, where Joe McCarthy started his string of the most memorable speeches, today's stop on the George W. Bush 'I am nothing if not deeply misunderstood ' Express." After playing clips of Ingraham on Tuesday's Today show urging reporters in Iraq "to actually have a conversation with the people instead of reporting from hotel balconies about the latest IEDs going off," Olbermann presumed that meant she had no concept of journalists who have given their lives: "That hotel balcony crack was unforgivable. It was unforgivable to the memory of David Bloom, it was unforgivable in consideration of Bob Woodruff and Doug Vogt..." After his rant against Ingraham, Olbermann's first question to his guest, Richard Wolffe of Newsweek, featured more insults: "With this frankly paranoid tone set by the administration and enacted by people like Laura Ingraham, is that what we're left with about Iraq, defending the actions conducted in this nation's name with desperation and stupidity?" [This item was posted, with video, late Wednesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org, where you can add your take by posting a comment: newsbusters.org ]
A video clip of Olbermann castigating Ingraham, and a little more of his insults, in both Real and Windows Media formats, as well as an MP3 audio clip, will be added by the MRC's Michael Gibbons to the posted version of this CyberAlert: www.mediaresearch.org BONUS VIDEO, of the 1988 Bush 41-Rather confrontation, cited by Olbermann, is also in the NewsBusters version of this item and will be added at the bottom of this posting.
Olbermann led his March 22 program, as tracked by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth: After playing the comment to Bush which the NBC Nightly News had ignored, as detailed in item #1 above, Olbermann, with "Attacking the Messenger" as the on-screen footer, ran clips of President Bush at his Tuesday press conference talking about media coverage of Iraq, Ingraham on Tuesday's Today, Ingraham on Tuesday's O'Reilly Factor ("hours later," after Today, "Ms. Ingraham sharing her thoughts with Ted Baxter himself, by which time some sane person had reminded her of the death of our own David Bloom at the war's outset"), how a CBS News poll last week found more believe media coverage of Iraq is accurate than think what Bush says about the war is accurate and finally a piece from NBC's Richard Engel, which aired on Wednesday's Today, about the dangers to journalists in Iraq.
For more on the CBS poll, check the March 14 CyberAlert: www.mediaresearch.org
With "Blame the Media Backlash?" as his new on-screen footer, Olbermann moved to his first guest: For a complete rundown of Ingraham's appearance on the March 21 Today and NBC's counter-story from Engel on the March 22 Today, see this March 22 MRC CyberAlert article with video of Ingraham, "To Gregory's Consternation on Today, Ingraham Scolds War Coverage." Go to: www.mrc.org After an ad break: Helen Thomas. BONUS VIDEO of the incident in which Olbermann claimed George H.W. Bush "sandbagged" Dan Rather, probably for this retort from Bush: "It's not fair to judge my whole career by a re-hash on Iran. How would you like it if I judged your career by those seven minutes when you walked off the set in New York? Would you like that? I have respect for you, but I don't have respect for what you're doing here tonight." From the MRC's archive, the infamous confrontation over the Iran-Contra scandal, on the Monday, January 25, 1988 CBS Evening News, during which Rather told the then-Vice President and presidential candidate: "You've made us hypocrites in the face of the world!" Video of the interview, joined a couple of minutes into it and running through the end of it, rendered at 100 kbps for Real (instead of MRC's normal 225 kbps) and 81 kbps for Windows Media (instead of MRC's normal 256 kbps rate) to make the file size reasonable for the lengthy clip (6:35): Real (4.9 MB) or Windows Media (4.2). Plus MP3 audio at 18 kbps (870 KB). Note: MP3 cuts off 30 seconds early.
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Katrina Ravaging "Man-Made"
VH-1 watchers enjoying the annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction concert aired on tape Tuesday night received some perhaps unsurprising political commentary along with the music. When rock singer Elvis Costello came on stage to perform with New Orleans music legend Allan Touissant, he took a few shots at the Iraq War and the Bush administration's apparent inability to handle Hurricane Katrina because of that war: [This item, by the MRC's Tim Graham, was posted Wednesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. See: newsbusters.org ] Is there a safer, more predictable retreat for an entertainer to make than the old saw that war is an unnecessary drain on resources that are supposed to be devoted to the needy? Hat tip to MRC's Michelle Humphrey, and to intern Matthew van de Crommert for the transcription.
-- Brent Baker ![]()
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