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Mo Rocca has appeared on a bunch of shows, including 'The Daily Show,' 'I Love the 80s,'...

New York Times Building Just a Giant Ladder

Posted Jul 9th 2008 10:50AM by Ada Calhoun
Filed under: New York Times, Activism

Now a third man has climbed the new New York Times building, reports the New York Times, although not with the exasperated C'mon, you guys! Stop it! tone you might expect.

Instead, they're going the uhh...oops route, and acknowledging that the decision by architect Renzo Piano to encase the building in a gazillion horizontal ceramic rods (intended to let in sunlight and keep out heat) might not have been 100% thought through.

It may be eco-friendly, but it's also just a little too convenient for all the activists out there who want nothing more than an iconic building from which to unfurl spray-painted banners.

Brian Williams: Hypocrite or Heartthrob?

Posted May 1st 2008 11:45AM by Ada Calhoun
Filed under: Media, New York Times

It is our professional opinion that Brian Williams is a stone-cold fox who can do no wrong, but the site Crooks and Liars disagrees.

In a recent post, they accuse him of slamming the New York Times for being shallow, and then hypocritically running a fluff piece that night about Miley Cyrus's photogate (a segment you can watch here).

So, is Williams throwing rocks from glass houses? Or is his show's coverage of Miley Cyrus totally different from the Times coverage of nudist colonies? More importantly, if we were both single, do you think he'd date us?

Bullied Kid Makes Front Page of NY Times

Posted Mar 25th 2008 8:25AM by Ada Calhoun
Filed under: New York Times, Children

Yesterday, the New York Times ran a front-page article (with photo, at right) about Billy Wolfe, a boy in Fayetteville, Arkansas, who has been tormented by classmates since puberty. What he's been through sounds truly appalling.

And yet, there has been some sniping about the boy's story being worthy of the paper's front page. Gawker, for example, said, "Exhaustion with scandal and financial ruin are the most charitable explanation for [Dan] Barry's piece today on 'A Boy the Bullies Love to Beat Up, Repeatedly.'"

Sex Scandal at the New York Times

Posted Feb 24th 2008 7:18PM by Dinesh D'Souza
Filed under: Scandal, John McCain, New York Times, Sex

Imagine reading an article that began like this: "The New York Times has been rocked by reports that its coverage of the 2008 election has been sorely compromised by an alleged homosexual relationship between executive editor Bill Keller and liberal columnist Paul Krugman.

"Waves of anxiety have swept through Times staffers who have been concerned about Krugman routinely showing up by Keller's side. Convinced that the relationship had become romantic, some senior staff at the paper have been trying to keep the two apart. These staffers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said they warned Keller not to keep his office door closed especially when Krugman was inside.

"Concerns that Krugman's strong support for the Democrats have shaped New York Times coverage of the upcoming election underscore a paradox. The newspaper is widely suspected of tailoring its news coverage to support its political ideology--'all the news that fits'--even though the Times likes to portray itself as objective: 'all the news that's fit to print.'

"Both Keller and Krugman have denied the allegations although such denials are to be expected in such situations. Now some staffers are worried that Keller's coverage of the election may be influenced by his feelings for Krugman. 'We're worried that Krugman is threatening to break it off,' one reporter noted, 'if Keller doesn't give favorable treatment to his candidate and stick it to the Republicans.'"

Incredible? Absurd? Actually, this fictitious article is very, very similar to the actual article that the New York Times ran on John McCain. The key phrases in my made-up account are directly lifted from the Times' actual account. In that story, the newspaper alleged that McCain was having an affair with a 40-year-old lobbyist, naming her as Vicki Iseman. The Times also suggested that McCain gave special treatment to Iseman's clients.

What evidence that the newspaper produce for these explosive allegations? None, and this is after months of investigation by a whole team of reporters. It cited unnamed McCain staffers who said they had become concerned about appearances of impropriety. (None alleged any actual impropriety.) It cited two former McCain staffers who were by their own admission disenchanted with McCain, although even they refused to give their names.

Stung by criticism that followed this irresponsible piece, Keller told the public editor of The Times, "If the point of the story was to allege that McCain had an affair with a lobbyist, we'd have owed readers more compelling evidence than the conviction of senior staff members. But that was not the point of the story. The point of the story was that his close aides felt the relationship constituted reckless behavior and feared it would ruin his career."

I can testify from personal experience that this sort of weasel-behavior is entirely in keeping with the way the New York Times does business. Note that in the episode that follows I am giving actual names and not citing any anonymous sources.

Several years ago one of the paper's leading reporters Fox Butterfield did an article on The Dartmouth Review, which I edited as an undergraduate in the early 1980s. Seeking to discredit me, Butterfield quoted me as having written in the paper, "The question is not whether women should be educated at Dartmouth. The question is whether women should be educated at all."

A witty line, perhaps, only I didn't write it. The line was actually written by another student, Keeney Jones. When I called Butterfield to point this out, the man insisted, "No, you wrote it." So I demanded, "Where did I write it?" Butterfield pointed out that I had written an article about the Dartmouth Review in another magazine where I had quoted the line. I protested, "But I was merely citing controversial lines that had appeared in the student paper. How can you say I wrote that line when I made it very clear that Jones wrote it?"

To this Butterfield responded, "But by quoting it you have made it your line." I was dumbstruck. The best I could say to him was, "And I guess that since you have now quoted the line yourself, it has now become your line." The important point here is that we are dealing not with some dimwit but with a Pulitzer-prize winning reporter for America's leading newspaper. Yet apparently such dishonesty is the way they operate at the Times.

Some critics have been calling for Keller to be fired but I suspect that a much wider fumigation is required to clean house over there. The Times has long become a liberal rag and as incidents like these pile up, more and more people will recognize that the New York Times is no longer the great newspaper it once was.

NY Times Held McCain Story Because of Republican Intimidation

Posted Feb 21st 2008 1:32PM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Young Turks, John McCain, New York Times

Conservatives are trying to spin the latest McCain scandal -- which by the way has a lot more to do with his hypocrisy on campaign finance reform than it has to with the possible sexual infidelity -- as a NYT hit job on McCain.

That's ridiculous on so many counts. First, the New York Times endorsed John McCain. Second, they couldn't have released it at a better time for him -- after he has basically won the nomination but many long months before the general election. Third, it's just not supported by the facts. In fact, the opposite conclusion is true -- they were intimidated by McCain's campaign into holding the story for as long as they did.

They would have never held this story if it was a Democratic nominee. They would have went to the presses instantly. But they're scared of conservatives because of decades of right-wing whining about the "liberal media."

In this article on our website, I detail three different instances when the New York Times held stories that would have hurt Republican candidates because of political considerations. They only run the stories after the elections or if a rival paper is about to out the story, as happened in this case.

The New York Times and the rest of the media has to find the courage to get beyond this constant belly-aching by the right-wing. If you have a story you believe is true and that you have the facts to back up, it's crazy to get bullied into not running it. The right time to print a story is the minute you have it confirmed. Holding the story makes your actions more political, not less.

To paraphrase Nike: Just run it!

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The Reach of War: A Deadly Search for Missing Soldiers

Posted Oct 9th 2007 4:32AM by Jeff Hoard
Filed under: Iraq, Video, Documentary, New York Times

Here is an incredible tale from inside Iraq from Michael Kamber of the New York Times. It was first aired in May 2007, but I hadn't seen it before today, so thanks to farhad on videosift.


MAHMUDIYA, Iraq, May 22 - The ground exploded under an ashen sky at dawn. Dust, dirt, blood and military equipment filled the air, clearing after several seconds to reveal a frenzied scene of horror....Read More

The New York Times' $77,000 Mistake

Posted Sep 28th 2007 1:54AM by Dinesh D'Souza
Filed under: Media, Cultural Left, New York Times, Controversy

Now here's the official story. The liberal group Moveon.org approached the New York Times about running a full-page ad on Monday, September 10. This date was chosen because it was right before the September 11 anniversary, and just about the time that General David Petraeus was testifying to Congress on progress in Iraq. An ad salesperson for the Times somehow charged Moveon.org $66,575 for the ad. This was less than half the actual price for a full page ad that is placed to run on a specified date. Eventually this clerical error was discovered, and the New York Times reported on Wednesday that Moveon.org cut the paper a check for the remaining $77,508.

Red Cross Sued

Posted Aug 10th 2007 4:40AM by Jeff Hoard
Filed under: Video, New York Times, Health Care

Just when you thought there was no more room for evil in the world, one of the largest pharmaceutical companies has proved us all wrong. Although the profit made by Johnson & Johnson last year was well over $10 billion, this greedy company wants more.

The Red Cross has been using the Red Cross symbol for years but this week the charity was sued by Johnson & Johnson.

Johnson & Johnson Sues Red Cross Over Symbol - New York Times
Johnson & Johnson, based in New Brunswick, N.J., asked in the lawsuit that all the goods be destroyed and that all profits from the goods, along with costs and punitive damages, be awarded to Johnson & Johnson.
This is probably the worst PR move ever by a company. Two things you can do. Support the Red Cross by making a donation, and make note next time you go shopping what products to avoid. Watch this little video and make note of all the Red Crosses you see: how many of them will need to be "destroyed"? Maybe even the little plush teddy bear?

Four-Star Diners: Way Sleazier Than Rappers

Posted Aug 1st 2007 10:16AM by Ada Calhoun
Filed under: Scandal, Bizarre, New York Times, Sex, Food

Rappers are constantly being derided for their Cristal and stretch Navigators. If only they could sock some of that away for retirement and emulate the more refined lifestyle of the mega-rich saveur, goes the cry of the appalled blue-blood.

Well, well.

If Frank Bruni's New York Times article on bad behavior at four-star restaurants, "Fine Diner to Riffraff: Tipsy Tales of 4-Star Benders," is to be believed, R. Kelly and Eve have NOTHING on the foodies.

Young Americans: Optimistic On ... Iraq?!

Posted Jun 27th 2007 12:09AM by Mo Rocca
Filed under: Iraq, Politics, Hillary Clinton, Military, Abortion, gay marriage, Illegal Immigration, Mo Rocca, New York Times

Plenty of people will mock the headline of The New York Times' polling piece: "New Poll Finds That Young Americans Are Leaning Left." They shouldn't. What's laid out in the piece isn't all that obvious.

The results of the poll are interesting and confirm one thing I've learned from visiting lots of college campuses (other than that I didn't have nearly enough fun when I was actually in college): young adults are energetic, discerning, healthily skeptical, sometimes pessimistic - but not cynical. They don't skulk around with permanent sneers on their faces. They don't lack faith in anything higher than themselves. They don't automatically suspect that authority figures are motivated by the worst in human nature.

The poll jibes with much of conventional wisdom: On a host of issues, including immigration and universal health care, younger Americans are to the left of the country at large. They're already more favorable to gay marriage than the rest of America and moving steadily more so in that direction. (This makes sense since opponents of gay marriage have yet to offer any sensible objection beyond fear of cooties.)

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Almost two years ago we speculated on how Barack Obama's voice would change if he stopped smoking. ...

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Mo's Bio

Mo Rocca appears on a bunch of shows, including CBS News Sunday Morning (with the indescribably wonderful Charles Osgood), The Tonight Show on NBC, and NPR's Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! He's a sometime judge on Iron Chef and was featured on Telemundo's Amore Descarado. Last year he starred on Broadway in the 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. His expose "All the President's Pets" was published by Crown in 2004.



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News Bloggers

Mo Rocca appears on a bunch of shows, including CBS News Sunday Morning (with the indescribably wonderful Charles Osgood), The Tonight Show on NBC, and NPR's Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! He's a sometime judge on Iron Chef and was featured on Telemundo's Amore Descarado. Last year he starred on Broadway in the 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. His expose "All the President's Pets" was published by Crown in 2004.

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