Ok, what would some of you like to se happen, the obama administration shut them down or force them out of business?
Oh, spare me!
I wouldn't like to see them do either one of those things (shut them down or force them out of business), but since they clearly aren't TRYING or PLANNING to do that, it's a ludicrous premise to start a discussion with.
As for jasonk's assertion how everybody knows that most news media are liberally-biased, this is a report worth reading:
http://mediamatters.org/reports/200602140002
Excerpt:
"If It's Sunday, It's Conservative: An analysis of the Sunday talk show guests on ABC, CBS, and NBC, 1997 - 2005
February 14, 2006 9:30 am ET
Executive Summary
The Sunday-morning talk shows on ABC, CBS, and NBC are where the prevailing opinions are aired and tested, policymakers state their cases, and the left and right in American politics debate the pressing issues of the day on equal ground. Both sides have their say and face probing questions. Or so you would think.
In fact, as this study reveals, conservative voices significantly outnumber progressive voices on the Sunday talk shows. Media Matters for America conducted a content analysis of ABC's This Week, CBS' Face the Nation, and NBC's Meet the Press, classifying each one of the nearly 7,000 guest appearances during President Bill Clinton's second term, President George W. Bush's first term, and the year 2005 as either Democrat, Republican, conservative, progressive, or neutral. The conclusion is clear: Republicans and conservatives have been offered more opportunities to appear on the Sunday shows - in some cases, dramatically so.
Among the study's key findings:
* The balance between Democrats/progressives and Republicans/conservatives was roughly equal during Clinton's second term, with a slight edge toward Republicans/conservatives: 52 percent of the ideologically identifiable guests were from the right, and 48 percent were from the left. But in Bush's first term, Republicans/ conservatives held a dramatic advantage, outnumbering Democrats/progressives by 58 percent to 42 percent. In 2005, the figures were an identical 58 percent to 42 percent.
* Counting only elected officials and administration representatives, Democrats had a small advantage during Clinton's second term: 53 percent to 45 percent. In Bush's first term, however, the Republican advantage was 61 percent to 39 percent -- nearly three times as large.
* In both the Clinton and Bush administrations, conservative journalists were far more likely to appear on the Sunday shows than were progressive journalists. In Clinton's second term, 61 percent of the ideologically identifiable journalists were conservative; in Bush's first term, that figure rose to 69 percent.
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It's a hell of a report, even though it only goes up to '05. I've very recently seen a comparative listing of Dem vs. GOP guests on the Sunday morning politics talk shows, and it too showed that the GOP guests outnumbered the Dem guests by a sizeable margin. I can't recall where I saw it, though; if I can find it I'll post it here...
Someone should also note that comparing FoxNews to MSNBC (e.g. "Fox is the right-wing news place, and MSNBC is the left-wing news place) is fairly absurd, considering that MSNBC gives us 3 hours every morning of Joe Scarborough who, while not as far-right as Limbaugh or Hannity and the like, he's still a conservative Republican.
Fox promotes a narrow band of conservatism, and not only in its opinion shows. For example, that segment with Baier (sp?), and Fox & Friends clearly have an axe to grind against anyone to the left of Atilla the Hun.
MSNBC's news programs don't contain nearly the amount or the DEGREE of bias as Fox's do, and the opinion shows are a mixed bag. There's nobody on FoxNews who is as far to the left as Scarborough is to the right.