Showing posts with label Media Bias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media Bias. Show all posts

Sunday, November 22, 2009

The Cool Media Views Obama



Have you been wondering why the media has been cool about Obama's China trip. Actually, The Mahablog has pondered, How the Liberal Media Behaves With Abject Obsequiousness to Barack Obama.

By James Fallows, who lived and worked in China and Japan for many years: “Barack Obama’s recent swing through Asia was a relative success, and certainly nothing like the disaster that most U.S. coverage implied.” And in a more recent post, Fallows says the press corps is guilty of distorting reality by “compressing every complex issue into the narrative of the DC-based ‘horse race.’”

Fallows quoted Alexandra Fenwick in the Columbia Journalism Review:

In almost every analysis of the trip, Chinese officials were portrayed as optimistic and newly emboldened to stand up to American interests and Obama was cast in the role of the meek debtor, standing with hat in hand. The line is that little was achieved and Obama was stifled, literally by state television and figuratively by the Chinese upper hand in the power dynamic.

… that negative narrative failed to take several things into account: the strict Chinese image control that doesn’t allow the sort of media celebrity that Obama enjoys elsewhere in the world; progress made in backroom diplomatic discussions; Obama’s stated objectives; and his quiet diplomatic style that doesn’t produce the kind of sound bytes that a scorekeeping-focused press Washington press corps feeds on.

Fenwick interviewed former New York Times Shanghai bureau chief Howard French, who basically said the reporting on the Asian trip sucked out loud. “Everything is shot through this prism of short-term political calculation as opposed to thinking seriously about stuff,” he said.

See also Trish Durkin at The Week. In brief, she says the idea that Obama somehow failed to obtain anything was based on the erroneous idea that there was anything that could have been obtained on one trip.

Last but not least, there is the bupkuss factor: the consenus that Obama, poor jerk, has come away with nothing. No breakthroughs. No deals. Not even an Oprah “a-ha” moment. It’s as if everybody thinks that some concrete public concession on at least one of the biggies — carbon emissions or political reform or North Korea — is something a U.S. president just can’t leave China without, like a silk robe or a ceramic tea set.

But in reality, it’s not like that. Every key element of the Sino-American relationship is too big and too convoluted for the thumbs-up/thumbs-down approach to apply.

So, relax, everybody. Obama came, he charmed, he left. And for now, that’s perfectly fine.

It is truly interesting how journalism has become a showcase for mediocre. If any of these "news folks" did a little bit of homework and looked at the reality of the politics then maybe another viewpoint would rise above the underlying right-wing hype of putting down Obama.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

The Palin Whine

I've said it before and I'll say it again, Sarah Palin does a disservice to herself when she whines about the media attacking her unfairly.

Crooks and Liars points out that she is holding herself to a different standard.

One day after her rambling resignation speech in Wasilla, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin was a no-show for July 4th events in her state. But that didn't stop her from issuing yet another statement on Facebook, attacking the media for the "different standard [it] applies for the decisions I make." As it turns out, it is Sarah Palin who is holding herself to a different standard; in March 2008, she slammed Hillary Clinton for whining about her own treatment at the hands of the press.

In her statement, she labeled the press reaction to her cutting and running "predictable," adding:

"How sad that Washington and the media will never understand; it's about country. And though it's honorable for countless others to leave their positions for a higher calling and without finishing a term, of course we know by now, for some reason a different standard applies for the decisions I make."

During a Women and Leadership event back in March 2008, Governor Palin was asked about Senator Clinton's response to media scrutiny - and criticism - she received on the campaign trail during the Democratic primaries. Palin made it clear to moderator Karen Breslau of Newsweek that she considered Clinton's conduct unbecoming. Hillary, she insisted, needed to just "plow through":

"Fair or unfair, I think she does herself a disservice to even mention it...When I hear a statement like that coming from a woman candidate with any kind of perceived whine about that excess criticism or, you know, maybe a sharper microscope put on her, I think, man, that doesn't do us any good. Women in politics, women in general wanting to progress this country. I don't think it's, it bodes well for her -- a statement like that...It bothers me a little bit hearing her bring that attention to herself on that level."
Palin needs to take her own advice.

Friday, June 12, 2009

The Absurdity of Sarah Palin

In the Spring of 2008, Alaska governor Sarah Palin spoke at a Newsweek forum on Women in Leadership. She was asked if she thought Hillary Clinton was being treated unfairly in the press.

This interview took place before she was chosen as GOP Vice Presidential candidate. WATCH:


"Fair or unfair, [Hillary Clinton] does herself a disservice to even mention [the more concentrated criticism that she gets]. I mean, you've got to plow through that. You have to know what you're getting into.... When I hear a statement like that coming from a woman candidate with any kind of perceived whine about that excess criticism, or maybe a sharper microscope put on her, I think, 'Man, that doesn't do us any good, women in politics, or women in general, wanting to progress this country.' ... I mean, work harder! Prove yourself to an even greater degree, that you're capable, that you're going to be the best candidate.... So, it bothers me a little bit, hearing her bring that attention to herself on that level.
Sarah Palin has recently been in the news upset over a joke that David Letterman made regarding her daughter. Palin has been criticizing Letterman and called his remarks inappropriate regarding her 14 year old daughter, Willow.

Letterman claims that when he said in a recent joke — that Palin's "daughter was knocked up by Alex Rodriguez," he was referring to her older 18 year old daughter, Bristol.

Letterman has responded to Palin's criticism by saying that he admits that he is guilty of "poor taste."

Lawrence O'Donnell on The Ed Schultz Show wanted to know why nobody is upset about Letterman's comment regarding Alex Rodriquez.

Palin said that her children should be off limits.

I agree.

But, it was Sarah & Todd Palin who thrust their then pregnant unwed daughter into the national limelight. Also Bristol has placed herself in the media with interviews on TV and magazines promoting teen abstinence. She has experience on this topic because at 17 she wasn't abstinent, ergo baby Tripp.

Now Palin is demanding that David Letterman apologize to her daughter.

Why isn't anybody demanding that Letterman apologize to Alex Rodriguez? Why shouldn't Palin apologize to Letterman for accusing Letterman of raping her 11 year old daughter and therefore being a pedophile.

There is a relevant issue of bias against women somewhere in this mess. But let's be real. Letterman is a comedian. He made a joke.

If Palin wanted to raise this issue honestly without making outrageaous , ridulous comments about David Letterman, then she would have a point.

"I say this with all due respect," Sarah Palin needs to drop the double standard whine.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

The Sunday Morning Line-Up

It's the GOP 'Where Are They Now' Sunday.

ABC, This Week: Gen. David Petraeus, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)

CBS, Face The Nation: Former VP Dick Cheney

CNN, State Of The Union: Gen. David Petraeus

Fox News Sunday: Gen. David Petraeus, former Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA)

NBC, Meet The Press: Hamid Karzai, President of Afghanistan; Asif Ali Zardari, President of Pakistan

Why is the media giving former VP Cheney a platform? Where are the Democrats?

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Who's Winning the Media War?

January: The GOP Still Controls the Media

GOP Lawmakers Outnumber Democratic Lawmakers 2 To 1 In Stimulus Debate On Cable News.

The major cable networks invited far more Republican lawmakers to talk about the legislation than Democratic lawmakers. Indeed, Think Progress found a 2-to-1 margin in the GOP's favor.

Fast Forward...February: The GOP Still Controls the Media

ThinkProgress reports that during the deliberations in the Senate, "Republican lawmakers outnumbered Democratic lawmakers 75 to 41 on cable news interviews by members of Congress.


The question is who's responsible for the heavy Republican tilt of the coverage, and what do the Democrats plan to do about it. The Dems know they are badly outgunned on the talk shows. "[W]e are aware of the problem and are taking steps to fix it."