CyberAlert -- 04/02/2001 -- McCain's "Monumental" Triumph
McCain's "Monumental" Triumph; ABC Mocked Bush's "Energy Crisis" Then Used Same Term; Bill Maher: Bush "a Lying Sack of..." 7) Letterman's "Top Ten Other Ways Mayor Giuliani is Cleaning Up New York." >>> April Fools warning: The April 1 edition of Notable Quotables sent to CyberAlert subscribers on Sunday was indeed an "April Fools Edition" as it was so labeled. We made up the quotes and hope they gave you a good chuckle. Those writing the all too believable quotes in addition to myself: Brent Bozell, Rich Noyes, Geoffrey Dickens, Jessica Anderson, Liz Swasey, Brian Boyd, Brad Wilmouth, Ken Shepherd and Tim Graham. <<< 1 -- On Fox News Sunday, Washington Post
reporter Ceci Connolly adopted liberal spin in referring to the "gag
rule" as she tried to get Senator Mitch McConnell to concede an
inconsistency in his reasoning: "Senator, may I ask you a consistency
question? You've been speaking a lot about the First Amendment,
something everyone on this panel's going to agree with you on and that
this is a free speech issue. But your party and President Bush have also
returned to the gag rule with respect to abortion counseling overseas. Is
that not a similar free speech issue?" -- Tim Russert to Senator John McCain on Meet the Press as he read from a Washington Post story [ellipses as shown on screen]: "There's a lot of concern amongst Democrats in the House now that the bill is coming their way. They had supported the bill in the past because they always knew it wouldn't become law. Let me show you a comment from Martin Frost, Chairman of the Democratic Caucus in the House: 'What we are doing is destroying the party system in America....The political parties will be neutered, and third-party groups would run the show.' What do you say to your fellow, uh, well not fellow Democrat, a Democrat, Martin Frost?" Later in the segment Russert relayed a Zogby/Reuters poll finding which showed he's not alone in confusing McCain with a Democrat. The survey question: "In the event of a dispute between Bush and McCain, who would you say is more likely to represent your views?" Amongst Democrats, 69 percent said McCain, just 17 percent named Bush. But with Republicans, while 72 percent answered Bush, only 21 percent named McCain. That result prompted Russert to wonder: "Senator, are you in the wrong party?" CNN Capital Gang's liberals, Margaret Carlson and Al Hunt, cheered McCain's impending success in campaign finance "reform." Carlson offered McCain "congratulations" for winning against the odds and Hunt trumpeted how "McCain and Feingold deserve enormous credit" for "a rare, monumental legislative achievement." Hunt also characterized the National Right to Life Committee as the "biggest hypocrites around." On the March 31 edition of the CNN show, Time columnist and reporter Margaret Carlson told Democratic Senator John Edwards, the guest panelist: "Congratulations to Tom Daschle and to John McCain, said not to be a legislator, a maverick that couldn't get along with his colleagues. He took the most difficult change, that might be political suicide for some of your colleagues, and got it through." Wall Street Journal Executive Washington Editor Al Hunt chimed in with his admiration: "I think that McCain and Feingold deserve enormous credit. This is a rare, monumental legislative achievement. I think there are other people, including our guest who I think was very involved in this, the lobbyists like Fred Wertheimer who's been at this for 15 years, but there was one person who was absolutely critical to success, it was Thad Cochran. When they got a conservative Republican from Mississippi that assured. And the biggest hypocrites around are the National Right to Life, who just assailed John McCain last year, with a pro-life voting record, for campaign finance reform. They brought up a mischievous amendment. Bob Smith, Rick Santorum voted for it. That would take Right to Life out of every campaign and it aint going to be done because they care more about money. Not sure I follow his attack on the National Right to Life Committee, but that's what he said. When someone is enraged by a conservative policy decision, to whom do they turn for advice on which left wing group they should help financially to fight back? National Public Radio's Nina Totenberg, as she recounted on Inside Washington over the weekend. During a discussion about the political wiseness of President Bush's decisions on Kyoto and arsenic in water, Totenberg volunteered: "I had somebody call me up this week, a business person, I never had any idea she has any interest in the environment whatsoever and she said 'who do I give a thousand bucks to, what environmental organization do I give a thousand bucks to?' I mean, it's sort of, it's striking, the enviro groups ought to be raking it in hand over fist at the moment." Thanks to distorted reporting on Kyoto and the arsenic standard I'm sure they already are. ABC mocked Bush's use of the term "energy crisis" only to employ it the next night to plug a story. On Thursday's World News Tonight White House reporter Terry Moran scolded President Bush for using the term "energy crisis," arguing that since "there are no gas lines and the price of crude oil is actually declining," he only engaged the term "in order to sell his energy agenda." The very next night, fill-in anchor Charles Gibson plugged an upcoming story: "When we come back, America's energy crisis. Gas prices are soaring and they'll get even worse this summer." The MRC's Rich Noyes alerted me to ABC's inconsistency. As reported in the March 30 CyberAlert, this exchange about Bush's press conference earlier in the day took place on the March 29 World News Tonight: Anchor Elizabeth Vargas: "Terry, some
were surprised to hear President Bush say he thinks we're in the midst
of an energy crisis." Exactly 24 hours later, the March 30 World News Tonight featured this plug from anchor Charles Gibson: "When we come back, America's energy crisis. Gas prices are soaring and they'll get even worse this summer." The real "crisis" is a crisis of consistency at ABC News. Bill Maher, host of ABC's very politically correct Politically Incorrect, once again went over the line on this post-Nightline show in hurling derogatory insults. He denounced President Bush as a "lying bag of manure after what he did today with the Kyoto protocol," before adding: "I mean, he never ceases to disappoint me in what a lying sack of [bleep] he is." Though bleeped by ABC, any viewer could easily tell the bleeped word was "shit." Prompted by an e-mailed tip, MRC analyst Jessica Anderson found how Maher opened the Thursday night, March 29, program: Maher: "Well, listen, I certainly had
planned to talk about the Internet, and I want to do that, however, a
brief apology. Last week I called George Bush a bad name. I compared him
to a bag of manure -- I did. I said the only difference between George
Bush and a bag of manure is the bag." Sounds like he's a "Bush hater." Will we soon be hearing journalists dismiss such attacks on Bush as coming from "Bush haters" as they tried to undermine the credibility of Clinton's opponents by tagging them as "Clinton haters"? Maher's disdain for Bush hasn't been contained to his ABC forum. MRC accountant Cheryl Michener, who serves as our celebrity magazine analyst, noticed that a March 19 People magazine "Chatter" column asked Maher and several others to name the "luxury item" they'd take with them if they were one of the contestants on CBS's Survivor. Maher's reply: "A calendar, so I'd know when the Bush administration is over and it's safe to come back." Thursday's Politically Incorrect wasn't
the first time Maher had abused his position and gone over the line. Back
on November 30 he told this "joke" about murdering someone he
dislikes: To watch a video clip of Maher telling it, go to: http://www.mrc.org/news/reality/2000/Fax20001201qt.html A few months later Maher boasted that he was "proud" of that "joke" since it "hurt" Katherine Harris. The February 8 CyberAlert reported: During a January 11 Prime Time Thursday interview, Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris told ABC's Diane Sawyer: "Perhaps the most difficult moment was when one person said they were disappointed the Ryder truck, that everyone was watching on TV, that O.J. Simpson hadn't murdered me, or something like that." Sawyer then played a partial clip of Maher's joke: "And for a few brief moments, America held the hope that O.J. Simpson had murdered Katherine Harris." Harris commented: "That was not pleasant." Now to CNN last Friday night [February 2]. Wolf Blitzer asked Maher [on Wolf Blitzer Reports]: "Is it ever, do you ever go too far in your jokes on Politically Incorrect and you say to yourself: 'Well, maybe I pushed the envelop a little bit too much?'" Maher replied: "Yes. But, you know, that's what being on the edge
means. Unless you fall off a little once in a while, how do you know where
the edge is? I don't know if you're referring to, I saw Katherine Harris
on some, I think it was an ABC show a couple of weeks ago, complaining
that what hurt her most about the whole ordeal that she went through,
never mind that most of it was self-inflicted, was a joke that we did
here. And I must say I was proud." END CyberAlert Excerpt Bill Maher tapes his ABC show at CBS Television City in Hollywood, but not all in the Hollywood community are "Bush haters." An item in the "Who's Who" column by Lorrie Lynch in this past weekend's (March 30-April 1) edition of Gannett's USA Weekend newspaper supplement highlighted how one current cable TV series star is a proud Republican, though there was no hint of whether she's conservative. Answering a question about whatever happened
to Janine Turner, star of CBS's no longer airing Northern Exposure
series, Lynch explained that the 37-year-old actress is now starring as a
doctor in Lifetime's Strong Medicine and lives with her three-year-old
daughter on a ranch in Texas. Lynch then outlined her political
affiliation: Northern Exposure, the series about odd
characters in an Alaskan town in which Turner played the part of a pilot,
is re-run on A&E weekdays at 8am and 2pm EDT. Her new series, Strong
Medicine, airs at 8pm Sunday EDT/PDT and 12am midnight Saturday
night/Sunday morning EDT/PDT. To see if you recognize Janine Turner in a
photo, go to: She's the one on the right. I don't recall ever seeing Turner on Politically Incorrect. Now I know why. From the March 30 Late Show with David Letterman, inspired by New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani's efforts to get rid of porno video stores, the "Top Ten Other Ways Mayor Giuliani is Cleaning Up New York." Copyright 2001 by Worldwide Pants, Inc. 10. Fake Rolex salesmen must offer fake warranty information New Jersey already has enough problems. --Brent Baker >>>
Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon contributions
which make CyberAlert possible, by providing a tax-deductible
donation. Use the secure donations page set up for CyberAlert
readers and subscribers: >>>To subscribe to CyberAlert, send a
blank e-mail to:
mrccyberalert-subscribe >>>You can learn what has been posted each day on the MRC's Web site by subscribing to the "MRC Web Site News" distributed every weekday afternoon. To subscribe, send a blank e-mail to: cybercomment@mrc.org. Or, go to: http://www.mrc.org/newsletters.<<< |