CyberAlert -- 09/11/2000 -- Cheney Hit at Emmy Awards
Cheney Hit at Emmy Awards; Clymer on Bush; Cheney = Bull Connor?; Ban SUVs 9) Areola alert. A final note about see-through dresses at the Emmy Awards during the family hour. Despite the domination of the Emmy Awards Sunday night by NBC's The West Wing, viewers of the awards broadcast on ABC only heard two presidential campaign jokes. Naturally, the biting one was aimed at the Republican ticket. Neither the name Bush or Gore were uttered. (Emcee Garry Shandling did open the show with some anti-Bill Clinton barbs.) Presenting the award in the "variety or music program" category, Bill Maher, host of ABC's Politically Incorrect, walked out on stage in a tuxedo and cracked: "How you doing? Like the tux? It's a Dick Cheney. The pockets are lined." Later, Shandling referred to The West Wing, quipping: "I read for the part of Vice President. They said 'too Jewish.'" And speaking of The West Wing, now that it has won the Emmy for the best drama series, maybe there's some renewed interest in past CyberAlert critiques and excerpts from the Wednesday night show starring Martin Sheen as Democratic "President Josiah Bartlet." Below is a rundown of some West Wing plot lines from the past season, its first. Several of these articles feature RealPlayer clips of the political agenda promoted by the series. -- May 17 CyberAlert: The West Wing took a bizarre
twist into very tolerant social liberalism with President Bartlet offering
to order the Attorney General to help a prostitute, who just earned a law
degree, gain admittance to the bar. Go to: -- May 10 CyberAlert: The show continued the
campaign finance reform cause and added replacing "mandatory
minimums" for drug convictions, which were repeatedly called
"racist," with more funding for drug "treatment." Go
to: -- May 3 CyberAlert: After some dialogue backing
school vouchers, NBC's West Wing went left wing on campaign finance and
gays in the military. Go to: -- March 22 CyberAlert: Left and Right West Wing.
NBC's The West Wing delivered scenes linking census sampling opponents to
the Constitution's definition of blacks as 3/5ths a person and aired a
candid admission that liberals don't trust people to spend their money
correctly. Go to: -- January 27 CyberAlert: NBC's liberal dream
State of the Union. On The West Wing the President abandons "the era
of big government is over" theme and agrees "government can be a
place where people come together and where no one gets left behind....an
instrument of good." Go to: -- September 29, 1999 CyberAlert: In the premiere,
viewers saw how the Hollywood Left views conservatives as the show
concocted a preposterous plot and series of scenes which portrayed leaders
of the Religious Right as anti-Semitic buffoons. The show culminated with
an angry Democratic "President Josiah Bartlet," played by Martin
Sheen, indignantly telling ministers: "You can all get your fat asses
out of my White House." Go to: The season finale repeats this Wednesday night at 9pm ET/PT, 8pm CT/MT, with a dramatic shooting outside the Newseum in Rosslyn, Virginia. We have to wait until after the Olympics to see who lives and dies. But the new season will bring a conservative
character, USA Today reported back on August 28 in an item I now have a
hook to which to peg it. The "Inside TV" column reported: Now that makes a lot of sense. A liberal Democratic President hires a conservative Republican for a policy position. And forget suggesting this matches Clinton hiring David Gergen. He was and is no conservative. Best
Line of the Weekend. In a segment on FNC's NewsWatch about George Bush
calling New York Times reporter Adam Clymer "a major league
asshole," syndicated columnist Cal Thomas suggested: If the New York Times assigned Adam Clymer to report on George W. Bush's assessment of him, he'd adopt the liberal spin that the "asshole" comment picked up by a microphone contradicts his promise to "restore dignity to the White House." Clymer was a guest on CNN's Reliable Sources
over the weekend. He claimed he voted for Bob Dole in 1996, though he
didn't say why. Clymer also maintained: Dick "Bull Connor" Cheney? Time columnist and reporter Margaret Carlson took Dick Cheney to task for how his former employer, Halliburton, provides separate restroom facilities abroad for U.S. and local employees. She equated the defense of the policy with how Mississippi once had "whites-only toilets." Carlson's overwrought blast came in her
"Outrage of the Week" Saturday night on CNN's Capital
Gang: The restroom policy sounds quite reasonable, if
Cheney even knew about it, when outlined in the context of preferred
defecation positions, as the Washington Post did on Saturday. Reporter
Edward Walsh explained: "Prominent" versus "superstar." Not the most glaring instance of bias, but a subtle one picked up from Friday's New York Times by MRC Communications Director Liz Swasey. Compare and contrast these September 8 descriptions of those brought along to bolster the two party nominees: -- From a story headlined, "Bush Planning a
Tighter Focus on Real People," by Alison Mitchell: -- From a piece headlined, "Gore Gets
Powerful Help From Cabinet," by Katharine Q. Seelye: Bill Clinton breaks promises he makes in meetings and demonizes his opponents, turning policy disagreements into vendettas with lies -- recall Medicare and school lunch "cuts" -- yet the Washington Post wondered why would the "centrist" Clinton, "whose first instinct is to try to get along with everyone, inspire such hostility." The wonder of it. This formulation was delivered to readers on the
seventh page of a Sunday Washington Post Magazine treatise, "His
Final Run: Bill Clinton's Frenzied Bid for Redemption." Just
after recounting how friends say "it is nearly impossible to
overstate the sense of victimhood he feels," reporter John Harris
relayed: It probably didn't help "to get along wit everyone" to blame Republicans for inspiring the Oklahoma City bombing. To read the entire article, go to: Some more media bashing of Reagan prompted by the Firestone situation, along with some bashing of tort reform and SUVs. On weekend talk shows, Time's Margaret Carlson blamed the Firestone tire tread separations on Ford's Explorer SUV on Reagan cutbacks of the National Highway Transit Safety Administration (NHTSA); Al Hunt gratuitously demanded of those who back tort reform, "I hope they'll tell that" to the families of those killed by Firestone tires; and Evan Thomas declared SUV's "awful," insisting: "It amazes me that no one even contemplates getting rid of them." -- Time's Margaret Carlson on CNN's Capital
Gang, September 9: -- Al Hunt, Wall Street Journal Executive
Washington Editor, on the same Capital Gang: "I tell you
something else this does. I hope those politicians who rant and rave
about personal injury lawsuits and personal injury lawyers and all
that, I hope they'll tell that to the family of people like Kelly
Gilmore and people like Kathy Jackson who lost their lives or lost
their legs because of this corporate misconduct." -- Evan Thomas, Assistant Managing Editor of
Newsweek, on Inside Washington shown on many PBS stations: Oh, the terrible price of freedom. Geraldo Rivera "spoke passionately about uniting the city and pushing mostly liberal causes" during a restaurant sit-down with Al Sharpton to explore Rivera's run for New York City Mayor, "Rush & Molloy" relayed in a Friday New York Daily News item highlighted by Hotline and Jim Romensko's MediaNews. MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens first alerted me to this item in the September 8 Daily News: Geraldo Rivera is getting serious about this City Hall thing. The talk-show host who would be mayor of New York says he's buying an upper East Side townhouse to satisfy the residency requirement. (He's lived in New Jersey for the past 10 years.).... Wednesday night at Elaine's, he held his first debate. The topic was who'd be better at running New York, and his opponent was the Rev. Al Sharpton, his buddy.... Calling himself a "fusion candidate," Rivera promised to set aside $5 million of his own money to finance his potential run as an independent, adding that he would not run if Fernando Ferrero won the Democratic primary. Rivera spoke passionately about uniting the city and pushing mostly liberal causes, such as ending racial profiling and police brutality. He added that, if he does nothing more than register voters, especially Hispanics, he would have done something good, reports The News' Scott Shifrel. At one point, Rivera's passion got the better of him as he accidentally spilled a glass of water onto Sharpton. "Hey, I'm the only one who does the baptizing around here," snapped the Rev.... "I'm not asking people to marry me," said Rivera, a reference to his three failed marriages, the latest of which is in the final stages of divorce. "You may not like me or you may love me, but everybody knows who I am." END Excerpt Back to the Emmy Awards, an areola alert. Why did Halle Berry and Geena Davis bother with a dress? The ones they wore were quite obviously transparent and neither believes in undergarments. Davis, star of a new ABC sit-com, first appeared during ABC's 7pm ET/6pm CT pre-show, so ABC can no longer claim it hasn't displayed bare breasts in the family hour. Another barrier broken. -- Brent Baker
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