| The
Battle Against Right-Wing Media Bias
by Lisa Fabrizio
In
support of their holy crusade to defeat the vast right wing conspiracy,
liberals have rolled out the third wave of their three-pronged attack
on what they comically perceive to be conservative media bias. 
The
first salvo was the light assault of Air
America, launched last month to "give voice to what millions
of Americans are thinking, but can't hear on radio." Sadly
many of those millions will have to look elsewhere, at least in
major markets like L.A and Chicago which pulled the plug on it just
weeks into its run. Not to worry though; eleven whole stations still
carry them.
And
it's only getting worse for Al Franken and friends. In the past
fortnight alone, four top executives including the program manager
jumped ship, and it was reported that this week's payroll checks
were not, as they say, in the mail. Not a good sign for a company
that actually pays for broadcast time as opposed to the other way
round.
It's easy to lay the blame for this turkey at the
feet of whoever is now responsible for the broadcast content. In
addition to fabulist Franken, the roster boasts frowsy feminist
Jeanane Garofalo, rapper Chuck D and a host of other folks you never
heard of. The show titles are equally impressive; "The O'Franken
Factor" joins "Morning Sedition" and the deliciously
named "Bring The Noise."
Talent aside, the reason for its impending implosion
is a simple fact of American life. Liberalism is a medicine which
must be induced without the knowledge of the patient, like when
mom crushed your aspirin and mixed it with orange juice. Americans
have been getting their doses for years in dribs and drabs, primarily
through the public school system and from the idiot box.
Except for their radical base, not many people can
take the left wing's mantra straight up. Recent polls on gay marriage
and abortion show that most of America disagrees with the two main
pillars of their agenda. To succeed they must cloak their message
in pleasant euphemisms like 'choice' and 'equal rights'. Conversely,
right wing radio flourishes by shouting its beliefs from the rooftops;
and it sells.
Phase
two of the liberal campaign was launched last week when ping-pong
pundit David Brock announced the rollout of his new website Media
Matters. Meant to compete with Brent Bozell's Media Research
Center which documents liberal journalistic bias, its mission statement
illustrates the difference.
In
defining the conservative disinformation they seek to expose and
uproot, it states: "Conservative misinformation is defined
as news or commentary presented in the media that is not accurate,
reliable, or credible and that forwards the conservative agenda."
Misinformation
in commentary? Were Mr. Bozell to tackle that job from
the right he would have to increase his staff by ten-fold. The truth
is, the site is no more than a chronicle of the evils of Rush Limbaugh
and other conservative entertainers and opinionists.
On the day of this writing, of the fourteen items
on the sidebar of Media Matters' main page, six of them involved
Limbaugh while another six zeroed in on Fox News talk shows. It
is interesting to note that the Fox hunters did not bag the network's
main news program except for the following tidbit:
"An unsubstantiated rumor about Senator John
Kerry's hair, originating with an April 27 Drudge Report Exclusive
that cited only anonymous "campaign sources," made its
way onto the April 29 episode of Special Report with Brit Hume on
FOX News Channel. In his "Political Grapevine" segment,
Hume reported the story without citing any sources."
Earth to David Brock: do you know the meaning of
the word "grapevine?"
Having invaded the Internet and talk radio, the
latest attempt by the left to break up the daunting control that
conservatives wield in the media (ask them) comes in the form of
a new TV station.
Al
Gore blew into New Orleans last week and announced that he and his
financial backers had purchased Newsworld International, a 24-hour
cable news channel, from Vivendi Universal Entertainment.
"This is not going to be a liberal network,
a Democratic network or a political network," said Mr. Gore
with a straight face. The news content will continue to be supplied
by the Canadian Broadcasting Company--not exactly a bastion of fair
and balanced American reportage like say, CBS.
The best thing to come out of Gore's announcement
was this propitious statement: "I don't ever expect to be a
candidate for office again. I'm not being coy. I'm really enjoying
life after politics."
Just goes to show that good news is good news no
matter what its source.
Lisa
Fabrizio is a freelance columnist from Stamford, Connecticut.
|