CyberAlert -- 12/01/2000 -- NBC Tied Gore to "Honesty"
NBC Tied Gore to "Honesty"; GOP Absentee Felony; Thomas Grudge Against Gore?; Kaplan Angry About Missing Big Story >>> Now up on
the MRC home page: The November 27 edition of Notable Quotables, a bi-weekly
compilation of the latest outrageous, sometimes humorous, quotes in the
liberal media. Amongst the quote headings: "Decisive 'Tax
Dodgers'?"; "W Stands for Wallace"; "Partisan Hack with
Bad Makeup"; "Haranguing Hardline Harris"; "Republicans
Tried to Snow Us!"; "Boisterous Boosting of Boies"; "The
Florida Supreme Court, 'Moderate to Conservative'?" and "Help!
James Baker Might Hit Me With His 'Fear Stick.'" Go to where it's
been posted in HTML format by the MRC's Andy Szul and Kristina Sewell: Correction: The November 30 CyberAlert referred to "Leon County Judge Sanders Saunders." His name is Sanders Sauls. CBS and NBC delighted Thursday night in the political controversy the Florida legislature would cause if it moves ahead to select electors. Dan Rather stressed how the "Republican-dominated legislature is moving ahead" to give the state's electors to Bush "no matter what" and NBC's David Bloom oddly reported that by supporting such an action George W. and Jeb Bush were "dropping any pretense of neutrality," as if either should be neutral. Rather introduced the November 30 CBS Evening News story: "Florida's Republican-dominated legislature is moving ahead in its own way to insure that it will be all over for Gore. CBS's Jim Axelrod reports that the Florida legislature is planning a special session to guarantee the state's decisive 25 electoral votes go to Bush no matter what." In an NBC Nightly News story on how Joe Lieberman
condemned the idea of the legislature stepping in, David Bloom asserted: Out of touch Bush laughing inappropriately? The broadcast networks Thursday night all showed the photo-op at Bush's ranch of Bush with Colin Powell, but all also focused on whether Bush has been "out of touch." ABC and NBC both highlighted Bush's response to NBC reporter David Gregory's question about being out of touch with Gregory himself noting how Bush laughed while ABC's Dean Reynolds intoned: "That was a serious question and I'm not sure that Bush really thought it was all that funny." Picking up on his own question, on the NBC Nightly
News, David Gregory observed: "Today Bush laughs in the face of
questions that he's appeared out of touch lately by delegating so much
of the transition work to his running mate Dick Cheney." ABC's Dean Reynolds wrapped up his World News Tonight piece on the Powell trip to Crawford: "When Bush was asked if his brief public appearance today was a response to stories that he'd been out of touch at his ranch and overshadowed by Al Gore's media blitz this week, he just laughed." After a couple of seconds of video of Bush laughing, Reynolds told Peter Jennings: "But you know what, Peter, that was a serious question and I'm not sure that Bush really thought it was all that funny." On the CBS Evening News, Bill Whitaker began: "Like reinforcements Dick Cheney and General Colin Powell rode up to George Bush's Texas refuge for a well-orchestrated photo-op, elder big guns adding credibility to his presidential claims....They came to talk transition. Bush seems to want everyone to know he wants Powell for Secretary of State, but with the election in limbo, so is Powell's future." Whitaker outlined the strategy, as transcribed by
MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth, but stressed concern about it: "The
pilgrimage to this remote ranch is part of the strategy to keep Bush above
the fray, away from ugly legal wranglings, leaving the dirty work to his
Florida big gun James Baker, who's calling the shots for the Bush-Cheney
team there. It's a hands off approach put in place right after election
day that even has some GOP insiders asking who's in charge. Today the
Governor's spokesman had to respond." ABC Thursday night highlighted the Seminole County lawsuit over Republicans filling in voter ID numbers on absentee ballot applications which were accidentally printed without a space for the applicant to enter their ID number. Reporter Mike von Fremd ominously warned on World News Tonight: "Democrats say two Republican workers committed a felony when they added vote identification numbers to the applications after they had been received by the supervisor of elections." Von Fremd explained how election supervisor Sandra Goard said she would have allowed Democrats to do the same thing if they had asked, but he countered that a Democratic candidate for county commissioner, Dean Ray, maintained that Goard denied him access to correct application forms submitted by his supporters. Von Fremd concluded: "The lawsuit before Judge Nikki Clark asks that all Seminole County absentee ballots be disqualified. And if she agrees Al Gore could pick up more than 4,000 votes." More like Bush would lose 4,000 votes more than would Gore. Here's a thought for you propounded by NBC News reporter Roger O'Neill: "Mr. Gore probably prefers 'marked by impartiality and honesty.'" O'Neill provided a deep think piece for Thursday's NBC Nightly News about how both Gore and Bush "can't see the forest for the trees" as both think they are striving for fairness and he concluded without offering any judgment on who is correct, which in itself furthered the notion that both points of view are equally credible. After playing soundbites of each proposing a "fair" solution, O'Neill linked each to a specific definition: "In the dictionary, 'fair' is a word with several meanings. Mr. Gore probably prefers 'marked by impartiality and honesty.' But Mr. Bush might like 'conforming with the established rules.' Could both be right? Gore demanding every vote be counted, Bush answering they have been. Both men, though, unable to see the fairness of each other's point of view." Over a shot of a painting with a figure hidden in trees, O'Neill concluded: "As the election grinds to a conclusion, maybe, like in this painting, it's not the trees of Al Gore or George W. Bush, but the forest representing the democracy that's at stake. The fairness and the truth depend on how you look at it." Of all the Supreme Court Justices, only one, Clarence Thomas, has a personal conflict of interest in today's case, CBS's Eric Engberg implied in reminding viewers of how Al Gore voted against his confirmation. In anticipation of today's oral arguments, on the
November 30 CBS Evening News Engberg reviewed the inclinations of all nine
justices, dividing them into groups. Under "Dad's Picks,"
Engberg explained: CBS then played a video clip of the Senate clerk calling Gore's name during the 1991 voice vote on Thomas. Souter's "moderate votes"? We wish. Al Gore has spent weeks delaying the Florida result, but the Los Angeles Times on Thursday asserted that Bush had "stalled" the recount effort in the state. A headline in the paper proclaimed: "Gore Pushes Rush Recount as Bush Stalls." FNC's Brit Hume dissected the headline, explaining
on Special Report with Brit Hume: One liberal lost. Clinton-Gore operative turned ABC News analyst George Stephanopoulos conceded on Imus in the Morning on Wednesday that "I think it's almost impossible for Al Gore to become President." MRC analyst Paul Smith caught what Stephanopoulos
told Imus on his radio show simulcast on MSNBC: "Those a------s cost me one of the biggest stories of all time," an angry Rick Kaplan declared in denouncing his former employers at CNN. Kaplan, the ABC News veteran who was President of CNN until August, uttered the remark to New York Daily News columnist Mitchell Fink in an item highlighted Thursday by Jim Romenesko's MediaNews (http://www.poynter.org/medianews/) Fink reported, in his November 30 column, what Kaplan told him at a party for CNN entertainment reporter Laurin Sydney's new how-to book on entertaining, Why Bother? Why Not! An excerpt from Fink: Of all the times Rick Kaplan could have picked to be out of work... The former CNN President finds himself uncomfortably on the sidelines during this most historic of presidential elections, and he doesn't like it one bit. Does he miss being part of the 24-hour news cycle? "Big-time," was how he put it when I ran into him Tuesday at the upper East Side home of New York's Consumer Affairs chief, Jane Hoffman. "Don't get me started," Kaplan said. "I've been a good soldier (since his ouster at CNN in August). But those a------s (meaning his former employers) cost me one of the biggest stories of all time." Kaplan is nevertheless getting on with his life and will start teaching a course at Harvard in the spring. The subject, naturally, is journalism, and it deals "with privacy issues and whether the media's intrusion into people's lives has cost America in the talent pool of political candidates.".... END Excerpt Think there's any correlation between the MRC finding less bias in CNN coverage lately and Kaplan's absence from the CNN control room? -- Brent Baker
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