NBC's Today Promotes Al Franken's Book About Lying Conservatives --8/27/2003


1. NBC's Today Promotes Al Franken's Book About Lying Conservatives
NBC's Today on Monday brought aboard left-wing "satirist" Al Franken for the second time in a week. Today's Matt Lauer read from Franken's book, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right: "'I wish with all my heart the President wasn't a liar or if he were that he was more like President Clinton.'" NBC posted a book excerpt in which Franken wrote that God urged him to take on "those sh***y books by Ann Coulter and Bernie Goldberg" which make "total bulls**t" claims about the media having a liberal bias. But NBC has yet to bring aboard Coulter this year to talk about her latest book and Goldberg only got onto Today last year by being paired with a left-wing author, Micheal Moore, and that occurred months after his book became a best-seller.

2. CBS's Bob Schieffer Apologizes for Offending Atheists
It's not unusual for journalists to offend religious believers, but when CBS's Bob Schieffer upset some atheists, he jumped to apologize. Recalling on Sunday's Face the Nation how the week before he had observed how "there are no atheists in foxholes," Schieffer reported that he heard from atheists, including two with the military in Iraq, who "reminded me that freedom of religion also means the right not to believe and they said my remark unfairly challenged the sincerity of their views."

3. ABC Revamps This Week by Amplifying Stephanopoulos/Reducing Will
A couple of years ago ABC News dropped the conservative Bill Kristol from the This Week roundtable. Now, in a revamping of the show prompted by plummeting ratings since George Stephanopoulos became the sole anchor, ABC has decided that the problem lies not with the ex-Clintonite Stephanopoulos, but with the airing of too much conservative opinion and so will end the roundtable altogether and thus shut down the outlet for George Will, the show's only conservative.

4. Sheen Defends Davis, Names Rob Reiner as Best Actor for Governor
Left-wing activist/actor Martin Sheen, appearing Friday night on CBS's Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn, denounced the recall election as "a Republican grab for power. They're trying to buy what they couldn't win," defended California Governor Gray Davis as he blamed Enron for his problems, predicted that "there will be no recall" since "I think the voters of California are smart enough and they're not going to be dazzled by this" and, after dismissing Arnold Schwarzenegger because he's not "a public servant," declared that "Rob Reiner is really the only qualified guy in our profession to go into politics."

5. FNC Shows Pick Up on CyberAlert Items on Cronkite and Olbermann
You read it here first. A couple of FNC shows picked up on items in CyberAlert last week. FNC's Fox Newswatch and Weekend Live with Tony Snow highlighted Walter Cronkite's defense of why reporters should be liberal and Fox Newswatch also noted Janeane Garofalo's liberal rants as co-host of CNN's Crossfire as well as how "media watchdog groups on the right" were "upset" by how MSNBC's Keith Olbermann plugged an upcoming segment: "Critics of the war said it would turn into a quagmire like Vietnam. Did today's events start to make them right?"

6. "Top Ten Things Overheard at Schwarzenegger Campaign HQ"
Letterman's "Top Ten Things Overheard at Schwarzenegger Campaign Headquarters"


NBC's Today Promotes Al Franken's Book
About Lying Conservatives

Al Franken NBC's Today on Monday brought aboard left-wing "satirist" Al Franken, for the second time in a week, to promote his new book and to talk about FNC's lawsuit against him for using the "fair and balanced" phrase in the title of his book, an unsuccessful legal effort which served only to publicize Franken's screed.

Today's Matt Lauer read from Franken's book, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right: "I wish with all my heart the President wasn't a liar or if he were that he was more like President Clinton. Bush lies about important things like the economy, his tax cuts, his education, our reasons for going to war and drunk driving. But I think he lies only when he feels he has to. He knows that most of the time Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and Rush Limbaugh are only too glad to do it for him.." Lauer wondered: "Do you truly think the President consciously lies about issues like the economy, tax cuts and things like that?" Franken affirmed his contention.

Lauer at least did raise how Franken himself lied to and tried to fool several conservatives with a serious letter to them asking them for details, for a non-existent book on the topic, about how they remained abstinent, a letter written on official Harvard University stationery which Franken was not authorized to use: "So when you come up with a book called, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, and then you go and do something like that, don't you see how you're critics can say, 'see, he's willing to break his own rules to, to further his own agenda?'"

Caution: Vulgarities ahead.

Today posted on its Web page an excerpt from Franken's book which makes clear that his two of his top targets are Bernard Goldberg and Ann Counter. Franken wrote that God urged him to take on "those shitty books by Ann Coulter and Bernie Goldberg" which make "total bullshit" claims about the media having a liberal bias.

But while Franken got two invites onto Today, NBC has yet to bring aboard Coulter this year to talk about her latest book (she was on last year about her previous book, but not until the 9:30am half hour) and Goldberg only got onto Today last year by being paired with a left-wing author, Micheal Moore, and that only occurred months after his book became a best-seller.

From the June 26, 2002 CyberAlert: Katie Couric argued Wednesday morning with author Ann Coulter who accurately quoted Couric as having opened Today in 1999 by trumpeting: "The Gipper was an airhead. That's one of the conclusions of a new biography of Ronald Reagan..." Couric took umbrage: "I'm just curious why you took it so out of context?" But Couric didn't interview the author, Edmund Morris, until two days later. Couric insisted that Today opened with the "airhead" insult just once. In fact, they did it two days in a row. See: www.mediaresearch.org

From the April 26, 2002 CyberAlert: Six weeks after Today showcased David Brock and his anti-conservative book before it made the New York Times best-seller list, the show finally got around to Bernard Goldberg, whose book Bias has been on the Times' best-seller list for 19 weeks. But instead of appearing alone as had Brock to discuss the substance of his book, on Thursday Today paired him with left-wing author Michael Moore for a segment focused on why both books have become popular. See: www.mediaresearch.org

Back to Franken, the MRC's Rich Noyes alerted me to how the Today Web page features this excerpt from Franken's new book, an excerpt properly proceeded with this warning: "This book excerpt contains graphic language that may not be appropriate for children." An excerpt of the excerpt, all caps as in original:

....I had my Nexis, I had my Google, I had my Harvard fellowship, and I had my fourteen research assistants. I sat down to write. Nothing.

So I got on my knees and prayed for guidance. "How, God, can I best do Your work through this book? Who, dear Lord, is the audience for a book like this? And what's a good title?"

God answered, "YOU KNOW THOSE SHITTY BOOKS BY ANN COULTER AND BERNIE GOLDBERG?"

"The best-sellers that claim there's a liberal bias in the media?" I asked.

"TOTAL BULLSHIT," God said. "START BY ATTACKING THEM. HE'S CLEARLY A DISGRUNTLED FORMER EMPLOYEE, AND SHE JUST LIES. BY THE WAY, THERE'S SOMETHING SERIOUSLY WRONG WITH HER."

"That's pretty obvious."

"SO GO AFTER THEM, THE WHOLE LIBERAL BIAS MYTH, AND THEN GO AFTER THE RIGHT-WING MEDIA. ESPECIALLY FOX."

"Okay, God, I'm writing this down."

"THEN USE THEM AS A JUMPING-OFF POINT TO GO AFTER BUSH. YOU KNOW, BIG TAX CUTS FOR THE RICH, SURGING UNEMPLOYMENT, IGNORING EVERYONE BUT HIS CORPORATE BUDDIES, SCREWING THE ENVIRONMENT, PISSING OFF THE REST OF THE WORLD. THAT STUFF. AND THAT'S YOUR BOOK."

"Got it. One last thing. Title."

"HOW ABOUT BEARERS OF FALSE WITNESS AND THE FALSE WITNESS THAT THEY BEAR?"

"Hmm. I, uh, I'll work with that."

END of Excerpt

Today posted the book excerpt at: www.msnbc.com

Lauer set up his August 25 session with Franken, as tracked by MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens: "A federal judge has refused a request by Fox News Channel to order changes to the cover of humorist Al Franken's new book called, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right. Fox had previously trademarked the phrase, 'Fair and Balanced,' but the judge called the case, 'wholly without merit.'"

After some discussion about the FNC lawsuit (Franken joked that "Joe Conason emailed me and said that should be their new trademark: 'Fox News: Wholly Without Merit'") and how Bill O'Reilly instigated it (Franken maintained: "I think they did it to satisfy someone who was having an, was in an infantile rage"), Lauer got to the book's content:
"Here's what you say, 'Yes lying is a serious matter and calling the President of the United States a liar is not something I say with relish or self-satisfaction. If he, I wish with all my heart the President wasn't a liar or if he were that he was more like President Clinton. Bush lies about important things like the economy, his tax cuts, his education, our reasons for going to war and drunk driving. But I think he lies only when he feels he has to. He knows that most of the time Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and Rush Limbaugh are only too glad to do it for him.' Do you truly think the President consciously lies about issues like the economy, tax cuts and things like that?"
Franken: "Oh yeah, absolutely."
Lauer: "For what purpose?"
Franken: "To get elected, to get power, to stay in office, to go to war."
Lauer: "Do you think that the, the intelligence gaffe at the State of the Union Address was a deliberate lie?"
Franken: "I think they knew that. You know, it's funny, they, they try to say things in a way that are technically correct. During the campaign he would say things, 'By far the vast majority of my tax cut goes to those at the bottom. By far, the vast majority of my tax cut goes to those-'"
Lauer prompted him: "And upon further investigation?"
Franken: "Well the bottom 16 percent got 13 percent of the tax cut you know? And the press said nothing about it. And it was, their thinking was, it wasn't that the press has a conservative bias is that the press basically, their idea was, 'Leave him alone, he doesn't know. Bush doesn't know, leave the man alone.' You know? But what they have done over, Karl Rove runs the, the whole White House is run by Karl Rove on, on, on policy, on domestic policy particularly. And they have gotten so used to parsing things so they think they're technically correct."
Lauer: "But that's not unlike any administration. Democrat or Republican."
Franken: "It is, it is, no it definitely is. Because you cannot say we, it's technically correct to say that Britain has learned that Iraq has tried to buy uranium from Africa when Britain didn't, you can't learn something that isn't true. And, so they were told by the CIA not to include this. And the NSA and the White House insisted on including it. And you don't, you know you can lie about certain things. President Clinton lied about having sex in the Oval Office. This is lying about sending our men and women to war. A war by, by the way, which I don't necessarily think was the wrong thing to do. The jury is out. It depends on what happens from now. I'm going on a USO tour to Afghanistan and, and Iraq. It's my fourth USO tour, I love our troops."
Lauer: "They're gonna kill me downstairs but I gotta ask you, I don't want you to go without asking about an apology you were forced to issue in, in a recent, I guess it was last week. You sent a letter to John Ashcroft, the Attorney General of the United States."
Franken: "I sent it like to 27 people."
Lauer: "And you basically said, 'look I'm doing a book on, on abstinence and, and I've gotten positive responses from other key administration officials.'"
Franken: "Yeah, can I, can I read it real quick."
Lauer: "No, no, I don't have time for that. But you sent it on Harvard letterhead, the Shorenstein Center for Press, Politics and Public Policy. They didn't know anything about this."
Franken: "Yeah. Right, right."
Lauer: "You had not, in fact, received positive responses from these..."
Franken: "Right."
Lauer: "So, in, in effect, you misled or lied."
Franken, unashamed: "Exactly."
Lauer: "So when you come up with a book called, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, and then you go and do something like that, don't you see how you're critics can say, 'see, he's willing to break his own rules to, to further his own agenda?'"
Franken: "Yeah I handed them something. But the thing is it's a, it's a letter saying, the point of the letter was to show the hypocrisy of people who are, in this administration, who are advocating abstinence-only education, which mounting evidence shows it does not work. And all and the American Medical Association, the National Institute of Health all say-"
Lauer: "Get back to the issue. The issue is you falsely represented yourself."
Franken: "Yeah it was a letter saying, I want, I'm doing this book called, Saving It, and part of it is a chapter called Role Modeling It, and don't you think it's time that kids got, had role models, abstinence role models-"
Lauer: "So you think they should've seen the wink-wink in this letter?"
Franken: "I think so. And if you read the letter, in context, in the book you'll see that it, it was pretty clear what it was. And what it was about that these people that are pushing abstinence-only education which it is an appeal to the Christian right, it, it doesn't work and it, abstinence works. If you're abstinent, it works. Abstinence education doesn't work. So it was about the hypocrisy of people that are pushing this, who, listen, I sent it to 27 people. No one wrote me back a letter telling me their abstinence story."
Lauer: "And if you want to know what all this has done, you're book was in the 400s on Amazon.com before the lawsuit. It's now number one on Amazon.com."
Franken: "Yes, thank you Fox."

Lauer wrapped up by plugging the online excerpt: "Al Franken. Al good to have you here. If you'd like to read an excerpt from Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right, you can log onto our Web site at today.msnbc.com."
Franken: "You can also buy the book."

Franken can thank Fox AND NBC's Today.

CBS's Bob Schieffer Apologizes for Offending
Atheists

It's not unusual for journalists to offend religious believers, but when CBS's Bob Schieffer upset some atheists, he jumped to apologize. Recalling on Sunday's Face the Nation how the week before he had observed how "there are no atheists in foxholes," Schieffer reported that he heard from atheists, including two with the military in Iraq, who "reminded me that freedom of religion also means the right not to believe and they said my remark unfairly challenged the sincerity of their views."

Schieffer begged forgiveness: "To all of you who took offense, I can only say that none was intended and I regret a poor choice of words."

Schieffer delivered this commentary at the end of the August 24 Face the Nation:
"Last Sunday I took a swipe at the political leaders who were playing the blame game over who was at fault for the blackout, while the people who were caught in the blackout were putting politics aside and just helping each other cope. I remarked that a long time ago someone said that in wartime, there are no atheists in foxholes. And I reckoned that there were no partisan Republicans or partisan Democrats in a crowded subway car stalled underground in pitch-black darkness.
"Well, I did not hear from any partisan politicians, but I did hear from scores of atheists, two of whom said they were in the military serving in Baghdad. In various and in no uncertain terms they reminded me that freedom of religion also means the right not to believe and they said my remark unfairly challenged the sincerity of their views.
"I am a believer and that is central to my life, but they are correct. They have every right to their belief and I would never challenge their sincerity. On this one, we all come to the table with equal expertise. So to all of you who took offense, I can only say that none was intended and I regret a poor choice of words.
"Well, let me amend that slightly. I direct those words to all who wrote, except the guy who capped his criticism by calling me a 'doddering old retard.' He has my personal invitation to stuff it."

Wonder if that guy might be a CyberAlert reader?

ABC Revamps This Week by Amplifying Stephanopoulos/Reducing Will

A couple of years ago ABC News dropped the conservative Bill Kristol from the This Week roundtable. Now, in a revamping of show prompted by plummeting ratings since George Stephanopoulos became the sole anchor, ABC has decided that the problem lies not with the ex-Clintonite Stephanopoulos, but with the airing of too much conservative opinion and so will end the roundtable altogether and thus shut down the outlet for George Will, the show's only conservative.

The decision was made, the Washington Post's Howard Kurtz reported on Monday, by new This Week Executive Producer Tom Bettag. Last month, upon adding This Week to his portfolio, Bettag, who remains Executive Producer of Nightline, gushed over Stephanopoulos to the AP: "If you can help him get a dominant position on Sunday morning, he is in a position to be a journalistic leader for the next 30 years." For details: www.mediaresearch.org

If he doesn't take everyone else down with him.

Kurtz relayed how Bettag said that Will and fellow roundtable panelists Michel Martin and Fareed Zakaria "will still appear periodically -- by themselves -- for debriefing sessions with Stephanopoulos" and promised that Will "will join Stephanopoulos for some interviews with major newsmakers."

We'll see.

No word on the fate of Will's weekly commentary segment, but it sounds like it's gone.

Stephanopoulos, who was a political operative before joining ABC News and had never been a journalists, nonetheless told Kurtz, in a claim highlighted Monday night by FNC's Brit Hume, that "the whole notion of more facts, more analysis and less punditry is something I'm very comfortable with" since "it's sort of where my strengths have always been."

An excerpt from Kurtz's August 25 story about how This Week will "relaunch" with a new format on September 7:

...."You can now see roundtables 24 hours a day on three cable networks," Bettag says. "Whatever they're going to say, you've already heard a thousand times." The gabfests also encourage viewers to say that "these journalists just think they know everything. No wonder I hate them."

Stephanopoulos says he's "excited" about a new approach that will stress reporting above all. "The whole notion of more facts, more analysis and less punditry is something I'm very comfortable with," he says. "It's sort of where my strengths have always been. We can really create something new here."

The dropping of the roundtable means Bettag has had to find new roles for house conservative George Will, the last remaining member of the original show launched by David Brinkley, and panelists Michel Martin and Newsweek columnist Fareed Zakaria. Bettag says the three will still appear periodically -- by themselves -- for debriefing sessions with Stephanopoulos that will stress their reporting and analysis, not opinion-mongering. Other ABC News staffers will also pop up for these chats -- including "Nightline" correspondents and, on occasion, Ted Koppel -- along with reporters from other news organizations.

In addition, Will, perhaps the show's best-known contributor because of his syndicated column and longevity on television, will join Stephanopoulos for some interviews with major newsmakers -- an approach that had been abandoned when Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts ran the show because it was considered too cluttered.

The program, which may get a new name, is obviously looking for a boost in the ratings one year after the former Clinton White House aide took the helm. "This Week" has slipped from second to third place this year, with 2.6 million viewers, trailing Tim Russert's "Meet the Press" on NBC (4.4 million) and Bob Schieffer's "Face the Nation" on CBS (2.8 million).

Stephanopoulos promises "more variety over the course of the hour," not just with his reports from the field but on topics ranging from "cultural issues" to "religion in politics" to "business and economics." For Bettag, the key is better production values -- from pictures and quotations of the week to glitzy graphics, even a female narrator instead of a booming baritone -- to avoid what he calls the "ponderously slow" pace of Sunday morning talk shows....

Bettag, 58, is a heavy hitter behind the scenes, having served as personal producer for Walter Cronkite, Dan Rather and Koppel. His goal, he says, is not just to revitalize the Sunday show but to groom Stephanopoulos, 42, as an ABC superstar for the coming decades.

"George Stephanopoulos is capable of addressing a different generation," Bettag says. "George unfortunately has been put in the position of doing a copycat show."

He recalls how the late ABC president Roone Arledge reinvented Sunday morning with the 1981 launch of "This Week With David Brinkley," but says the genre has grown stale over time. While professing great respect for Russert and Schieffer, he says the text-heavy graphics and lack of video make such programs sound like radio.

Bettag got his chance when he agreed to succeed the program's producer, Jon Banner, who is now executive producer of "World News Tonight."

The back story here involves "Nightline," which Bettag has produced for 12 years. He and Koppel signed five-year contracts in 2000 "to really build a succession and make way for another generation." This is beginning to happen, says Bettag, with the emergence of Chris Bury as Koppel's principal substitute, but the show -- especially after its near-death experience of almost being replaced by David Letterman -- has been looking for new sources of revenue through partnerships with other networks.

Putting the "Nightline" staff in charge of "This Week," Bettag admits, "has a lot to do with the Letterman thing" and impressing ABC's corporate owners at Disney. "If there's a question about the value of what 'Nightline' does, this makes 'Nightline' a more valuable unit to the corporation."...

END of Excerpt

For the article in its entirety: www.washingtonpost.com

Note to Bettag and Stephanopoulos: CNN already beat you on the idea of dropping the panel segment of punditry. A month ago, Late Edition eliminated its "Final Round" segment.

Sheen Defends Davis, Names Rob Reiner
as Best Actor for Governor

Martin Sheen Left-wing activist/actor Martin Sheen, appearing Friday night on CBS's Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn, denounced the recall election as "a Republican grab for power. They're trying to buy what they couldn't win," defended California Governor Gray Davis as he blamed Enron for his problems, predicted that "there will be no recall" since "I think the voters of California are smart enough and they're not going to be dazzled by this" and, after dismissing Arnold Schwarzenegger because he's not "a public servant," declared that "Rob Reiner is really the only qualified guy in our profession to go into politics."

Despite his hostility to Schwarzenegger's candidacy, in an interview aired on Friday's Access Hollywood, a bathrobe-clad Sheen, on the West Wing set, offered this assessment of Schwarzenegger: "He's more Democrat than he is, he's Republican in name only."

That backs up actress Jamie Lee Curtis' characterization. On the August 7 Good Morning America, she argued: "I think he will make a fantastic Governor." She soon revealed her rationale: "I actually believe he's really, at his heart, even though he pretends to be a Republican, I think he's a social Democrat at heart." See: www.mediaresearch.org

MRC analyst Brian Boyd took down the relevant exchange between Martin Sheen and Craig Kilborn on the August 22 Late Late Show:

Kilborn: "Let me ask you, what is your take on the whole California recall? New Governor?"
Sheen: "I don't think it's a big secret, it's a Republican grab for power. They're trying to buy what they couldn't win."
Kilborn: "Does it make California look a little ridiculous?"
Sheen: "It's not over yet. I mean, a lot of the candidates look ridiculous."
Kilborn: "Right, right."
Sheen: "You have to remember how we got here, you know, it's not an accident. Governor Gray Davis was dealing with a power crisis when we weren't even aware of it. We had rolling brownouts here and rolling blackouts. He was like a surgeon in a trauma center trying to stop the bleeding. He wasn't trying to track down the perpetrator or the shooter. Now all the criticism has fallen on him and they're saying 'well, why didn't you go get the shooter?'"
Kilborn: "Yeah, right."
Sheen: "He was saying 'friends, you know, we didn't have any blackouts here. Did we?'"
Kilborn: "Yeah, yeah, yeah."
Sheen: "It's very clear now that the billings were Enron and all the other hustling of energy for California and they ripped us off."
Kilborn: "Yeah. What-"
Sheen: "But there isn't any point in running unless you got something very special to offer and I see that forthcoming."
Kilborn: "Have you worked with Arnold before?"
Sheen: "No. I've met him. No, I've never worked with him."
Kilborn: "Is that all you're saying on that, Arnold?"
Sheen: "No, I'll talk about Arnold. I'm very fond of him but I don't think he's a public servant."
Kilborn: "OK."
Sheen: "And I think, you know, it's a very serious matter and you can't jump into it overnight. There is one guy in our profession-"
Kilborn: "Coleman. Gary Coleman?"
Sheen: "No, no. Rob Reiner."
Kilborn: "Rob Reiner."
Sheen: "Rob Reiner is really the only qualified guy in our profession to go into politics. He's already in politics but he was qualified to run for Governor. The reason he wouldn't do it was there was no surplus. There was no point in being Governor and initiating programs you could never pay for and never get done because there was no surplus. Whoever is the Governor, if there is going to be a new guy, is going to have to slash and burn. He's not going to be able to initiate anything. So, that's really what's at stake.
"All these guys now have got the problems, you know, they know how to solve all the problems. Where were they when the problems were starting? They were off making their millions and, you know, enjoying themselves. They're not real public servants. They didn't make a contribution when it was necessary. Now they're all jumping on this bandwagon and they're going, it's going to get stuck in the mud."
Kilborn: "It's going to get ugly, people. Let's just keep watching the show."
Sheen: "No, it's going to real clear. There will be no recall. I think the voters of California are smart enough and they're not going to be dazzled by this."
Kilborn: "I hope you're right."
Sheen: "They're going to just say forget it. We voted for this guy and all these other guys had a chance. And-"
Kilborn: "Gray Davis is going to win again."
Sheen: "And Gray Davis won it and-"
Kilborn: "He's going to win it again is what you're saying."
Sheen: "He's going to win again. There will be no recall."

For a picture and bio of Sheen, check his page on the Internet Movie Database: us.imdb.com

Sheen's page on NBC's site for The West Wing: www.nbc.com

For the Internet Movie Database page for Rob Reiner, "Meathead" on All in the Family: us.imdb.com

For the Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn site: www.cbs.com

# Compilation of California recall coverage. The MRC's Tim Jones has put together a special section, on the MRC's Web site, devoted to all of the MRC articles about the recall. See: www.mediaresearch.org

FNC Shows Pick Up on CyberAlert Items
on Cronkite and Olbermann

You read it here first. A couple of FNC shows picked up on items in CyberAlert last week. FNC's Fox Newswatch and Weekend Live highlighted Walter Cronkite's defense of why reporters should be liberal and Fox Newswatch also noted Janeane Garofalo's liberal rants as co-host of CNN's Crossfire as well as how "media watchdog groups on the right" were "upset" by how MSNBC's Keith Olbermann plugged an upcoming segment: "Critics of the war said it would turn into a quagmire like Vietnam. Did today's events start to make them right?"

The August 19 CyberAlert reported: A couple of weeks ago Walter Cronkite started writing his new weekly column for King Features. In the first one, he claimed that "basically I'm a fiscal conservative and a social liberal" and went on to rationalize why journalists are liberals. In the second one, he outlined his recommended "basic goals" for the Democrats, ten liberal agenda items made to seen as innocuous as possible. Cronkite made clear that he thinks President Bush has lessened America's standing in the world, as argued why Democrats should follow his advice: "There is nothing impractical about seeking the best for this nation's people, and the restoration of America as a beacon of freedom for the world." See: www.mediaresearch.org

On Sunday afternoon, the MRC's Kristina Sewell noticed, Tony Snow observed on his August 24 Weekend Live show, as transcribed by MRC analyst Ken Shepherd:
"Finally, a closing diatribe. Walter Cronkite entered the column-writing business with a splash this week. He conceded up front that most reporters -- surprise, surprise -- are liberals. He also defended the fact, saying liberalism naturally grows within the souls of men and women who have to cover tales of misery and woe. The leftward leanings of the scribbling classes, he says, reveal warm and caring hearts. Well, no. Most reporters spend the days at desks, not in slums. And bias doesn't come from moral outrage but from the long practice of kissing up to people in power. Democrats dominated Washington between 1932 and 1994, which meant that reporters seeking access to the high and mighty had to cultivate Democrats. Well, along the way pressies came to treat Republicans as exotic decorations, pink flamingos on the lawn of American politics, and therefore they embraced liberal politics, not conservative. That's changed because the power equation has shifted. But don't be deceived. Liberal bias isn't a matter of ethical refinement nor a residue of intractable political bigotry, it's just kissin' up."

On the August 23 Fox Newswatch, host Eric Burns asserted: "Let me tell you what seems to me to be at least in terms of the reaction to it, the most controversial statement made by a journalist about the bombing. It was made by Keith Olbermann of MSNBC and this is a tease, meaning at the end of the segment on one of his shows, he was saying here's what's coming up next. He said: 'Ahead of us here tonight, critics of the war said it would turn into a quagmire like Vietnam. Did today's events start to make them right?' I'm sorry the it meaning the aftermath of the war, did the bombing make them right? Jane [Hall], then he went onto ask a retired general a question, which was virtually the same thing, using the words 'quagmire, Vietnam.' Some media outlets, some media watchdog groups on the right side of the political spectrum, very upset with this analogy."

Indeed, the August 21 CyberAlert reported: MSNBC's Keith Olbermann on Tuesday night raised the specter of Vietnam as he plugged an upcoming segment: "Critics of the war said it would turn into a quagmire like Vietnam. Did today's events start to make them right?" See: www.mediaresearch.org

For FNC's transcript of the August 23 Fox Newswatch: www.foxnews.com

"Top Ten Things Overheard at Schwarzenegger
Campaign HQ"

From the August 26 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Things Overheard at Schwarzenegger Campaign Headquarters" Late Show Web site: www.cbs.com

10. "It's pronounced 'Gu-ber-na-tor-ee-al'"

9. "Your wife called to say there's no way in hell she's voting for you"

8. "Kids don't need subsidized school lunches -- they need mass-building protein power supplements"

7. "Remember, when you're shaking hands, ease up if you hear cracking"

6. "Good news! Lou Ferrigno just endorsed us!"

5. "Don't worry -- Mars isn't close enough to hurt you"

4. "I'm not sure saying 'Hasta la vista, baby' constitutes an outreach to Hispanic voters"

3. "Who's the actor who plays Gray Davis?"

2. "Arnold got his head caught in the Soloflex again"

1. "You've lived here for 35 years. Why do you have an accent?"

That's a very good question.

-- Brent Baker, in New Hampshire being inundated by TV ads for John Edwards and Howard Dean