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Open Thread

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Fox surpassed even its own standards for surrealism last Sunday, when all the Clowns at the Fox Circus shared a giant hanky about the White House Party Crashers and awful awfulness of our celebrity-sick culture.

Yes, that’s right: the degenerate sons of Mike Wallace and Irving Kristol…sitting on the set of their fake news show…collecting paychecks for telling lies to stupid people...pretending to be stunned that some fortune-seeking, second-generation, spoiled rich twat of a con artist would use his contacts and blond arm-candy to break the last, sacred seal -- the rules of Beltway party-going--to get his own teevee show.

The horror.

[Excerpted from here. Thanks Blue Gal for the graphic assist.]

Open Thread below...



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Video and more from Media Matters:

In a June 4 article headlined "Judge tosses school official's lawsuit against Fox News," the Associated Press reported on the dismissal of a school superintendent's lawsuit against the Fox News Channel and Fox & Friends co-hosts Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade for repeating as fact an online parody news report of a school prank that included fabricated quotes attributed to the superintendent. The judge called Doocy and Kilmeade "gullible," as the AP noted, and while he dismissed the lawsuit, the Fox & Friends segment in question marked at least the third time since 2004 that Fox News has issued a retraction and apology for airing a fake news report that repeated false information. In fact, the segment aired after Fox News' Vice President for News John Moody reportedly warned staff in January 2007 that "seeing an item on a website does not mean it is right. Nor does it mean it is ready for air on FNC." In dismissing the suit, U.S. District Court Judge D. Brock Hornby wrote:

The facts in this case -- a morning cable news show derisively reporting events and statements obtained unwittingly from an online parody -- should provide grist for journalism classes teaching research and professionalism standards in the Internet age. But First Amendment principles developed long before the Internet still provide protection to the gullible news program hosts against this public official's claims for defamation and false light invasion of privacy. Poetic justice would subject the defendants to the same ridicule that they accorded the plaintiff. But in real life, the aggrieved school superintendent must be satisfied with their later retraction and a professional reputation sullied less than theirs. Read on...

Somehow, this comes to mind.



Mike's Blog Roundup

at-Largely: John Ashcroft claims Japanese waterboarding is different from American waterboarding.

Comments from Left Field: Attention Men! Stay out of the Congo

Outside The Beltway: Land of the free ...uh, imprisoned

Hello, Negro: "It is absolutely critical that Obama's negatives go up with Republicans." So says, the Republican marketing man behind the infamous 1988 Willie Horton ad.

Bats Left Throws Right: Goin' Medieval

ANNALS OF JOURNALISM: Networks win Pennsylvania in a landslide!...Murdoch's Newsday deal is bad news for New York...What election sexism?...Villagers still pedaling 'maverick' baloney...There's the truth, and there's NPR truth...Two 'blue collar' media big shots put their heads together...Why the Pentagon talking heads piece in the NYT had no legs. But then, why would we expect Fake News programs to report on their fake news? At least, not everyone went along with the sham...FCC chief says Comcast's network practices need scrutiny...Terry McAuliffe fluffs Fox...Michelle Malkin and warbloggers get everything wrong -- again



Mike's Blog Round Up

Mike's Blog Round Up
One of America's great moral and religious leaders, William Sloane Coffin, died Wednesday. "People in high places make me really angry — the way of corporations now are behaving, the way the United States government is behaving," Coffin says."What makes me angry is that they are so callous, really callous....When you see uncaring people in high places, everybody should be mad as hell."

Brad Delong considers the difference between real and fake newspapers

Happy Furry Puppy Story Time with Norbizness: Another installment in his series on the crimes of The Left. This week, The Left Irradiated My Nether Regions!

Shakespeare's Sister: The Question of the Day illicits a strong response. Go add your two cents.

Speaking of religion and morals, don't miss Jesus Bitch Slaps Teen Agents of the Radical Homosexual Agenda

Sy Hersh names some of President Strangelove's advisors. Naturally, the military professionals arebeing ignored but the usual chuckleheaded cheerleaders are on board. What exactly does it take to get a rise out of the Media Industrial Complex these days?


O'Reilly vs McCain via The Daily Show

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More must see TV from Comedy Central. Let's see who shall we believe when it comes to torture and it's effectiveness. A man and his falafel or a POW who spent five years being tortured?

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It's a new segement called " The Less you Know." Why-oh-why must a fake news program do the real reporting?



High standards for movies, low standards for presidents

Guest Post by The Carpetbagger:

It was a banner year for fake news in 2004, and not just because of the success of The Daily Show. For those willing to play fast and loose with the public trust and embrace fraud, there was a national television-viewing audience that could be misled. Some, but not all, of these sham artists have been held accountable for deceiving the public, but seeing who got away with the deception tells us a great deal about the nation's priorities. First up is the entertainment industry, which was embarrassed recently by a report that Sony Pictures Entertainment made up critical praise for some of its movies.

Sony Pictures Entertainment must pay $1.5 million to settle a class-action lawsuit accusing the studio of citing a fake critic in ads for several films. Moviegoers who saw the films Vertical Limit, A Knight's Tale, The Animal, Hollow Man or The Patriot during their original theater runs must file a claim to be eligible for a $5 per ticket reimbursement, lawyer Norman Blumenthal said Tuesday. He represented a group of filmgoers who sued Sony Pictures in 2001.

In this case, two California moviegoers bought tickets to see A Knight's Tale after seeing an ad that quoted "David Manning of the Ridgefield Press" calling star Heath Ledger "this year's hottest new star!" An add for The Animal quoted the same critic saying, "The producing team of Big Daddy has delivered another winner!" As it turns out, the Ridgefield Press, a small weekly newspaper in Connecticut, did not have a movie critic named David Manning. Sony had simply made up the ad copy and hoped the public wouldn't know the difference. When taken to court, Sony accepted the $1.5 million settlement to make the fiasco go away. Presumably, with the shame fresh in executives' minds, the studio will hesitate before doing this again.

Notice, however, how this contrasts with the executive branch of our federal government. The Bush administration, like Sony, has adopted a simple strategy to spin the public: create fake news and hope Americans don't notice. Indeed, the practice has become a staple of the administration's approach to public communications. During the debate over the Central American Free Trade Agreement, Bush's Department of Agriculture produced misleading video segments praising the legislation, repeating White House talking points, and challenging criticism offered by labor unions and other opponents. Bush officials did the same thing with the president's Medicare plan and his No Child Left Behind initiative...read on to continue!



Town Hall Meetings with the  Samantha Bee Effect

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The Daily Show lampoons President Bush's fake Town Hall meetings, and uses republican strategist Frank Luntz as the go to guy.

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The truth revealed once again by the fake news show that exposes fake town hall meetings!



Stop Fake News

via Josh Marshall:

www.stopfakenews.org

On Sunday, March 13th, The New York Times broke a major story outlining how the Bush administration has used millions of dollars of taxpayer money to produce and disseminate fake news programs that support a partisan political agenda.

These government-produced segments have frequently aired on broadcast TV stations across the country without proper disclosure.
Not only is this unacceptable, it is also illegal.

Fill out the form.



Craig Crawford on GOP TV

On Connected today, Craig Crawford debates Terry Jeffrey, editor from Human Events about the staged Townhall meetings President Bush is staging for his Social Security tourand the fake news that the White House is producing.

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What Crawford calls questions to Bush, Jeffrey calls hecklers.



Fake reporters

via Buzzmachine

In her column yesterday, Maureen Dowd said that even Nixon didn't do what Bush is doing with fake news:

Even the Nixon White House didn't do anything this creepy. It's worse than hating the press. It's an attempt to reinvent it.

Ah, well, actually, Nixon did it, too... I have a story to tell I don't think I've told here before...

When I finished my freshman year at Claremont in California and before transferring to Northwestern to go into journalism, I was told that someone was hiring young reporters to cover the presidential campaign. Spending the summer in California covering an election -- who could pass that up? So I went on the interview.

It turned out that it was the Committee to ReElect the President, aka CREEP, that was trying to hire young "reporters" carrying credentials for a made-up news agency to get press access to all of the other side's campaign appearances; they were to record the speeches and events and report back to the Nixon campaign.

Of course, I said no.