Wednesday, June 06, 2012

The worst night on cable news. Was it really?

I am curious, what exactly happened differently, to set this report at odds with a reality that most people have been familiar with since at least the Clinton administration. The bottom line is this. Fox News lead the ratings because they began doing what none of the others seemed capable of. Fox began abandoning the liberal love fest of mainstream media with liberal/socialist/democrats.

And as a result, the people responded. Americans are tired of being told that they are second rate and that they must apologize for success. Americans are tired of being bled dry by unions and leftist politicians and lobbyist.

So.....you want to know what happened in Wisconsin or why people are souring on Obama, then look no further than truth and reality. Look at the record, look at history. then see if MSNBC and Ed Schultz and the rest of the complicit clowns of leftist media could possibly put enough lipstick on the pig to make a difference.

they obviously couldn't. The people of Wisconsin weren't fooled and hopefully the people of America won't be fooled again come November.

So was it the worst night for cable news? Not really. None of them are real news or real reporters or real journalists anymore. It's all about glitz and ratings and rantings and who likes this version voer that.

The worst night on cable news

If ever there was a political event to lay bare the partisan ideologies of the cable news media, the Wisconsin recall was it.
MSNBC was blatantly rooting for Tom Barrett to defeat Gov. Scott Walker, even sending union champion Ed Schultz to cover an event with no apologies for the dog he has in the fight. (Earlier tonight, Chris Matthews even told Schultz that if he wasn't an MSNBC host, he could be head of the AFL-CIO.) When it became clear that Barrett would lose, Schultz looked almost teary eyed. Not long after, the network's contributors immediately began suggesting that this was, in fact, good news for Obama — who, after all, hadn't even set foot in Wisconsin — and began attacking Mitt Romney.
(Also on POLITICO: Supporter slaps Barrett after loss)

Meanwhile, Fox News was blatantly rooting for Gov. Walker, and the moment it became clear that Walker might win, host Sean Hannity called it "a repudiation of big unions," which did "everything they could do to demonize Scott Walker." Guest Hugh Hewitt then predicted that, five months from now, Romney would follow Walker just "as Reagan followed Thatcher." Fox's Greta Van Susteren later hosted what amounted to a victory celebration for the Republicans.

Given this blatant partisan coverage, it was absolutely impossible to watch either network and weed out any clear understanding of the actual significance of the event, much less what effect it would actually have on the 2012 presidential election.

No comments: