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Quote:

britneyspearsatemyshorts said:
why do people get their panties in such a bunch over wise cracks about moore? he's made a career out of making absurd comparisons of people he disagrees with, and when he gets cracked on you always have people chiming in your not fair!




Quote:

D. McDonagh said:
I don't give a shit about that, to be honest. I was just pointing out that he isn't a communist and anyone who thinks that he is probably doesn't have any business talking about politics until they've worked out how socialists differ from liberals. Clear now?






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Quote:

D. McDonagh said:
I don't give a shit about that, to be honest. I was just pointing out that he isn't a communist and anyone who thinks that he is probably doesn't have any business talking about politics until they've worked out how socialists differ from liberals. Clear now?




I know exactly what the difference is.

A communist knows what he's doing and admits what he's up to.



BTW, if you're going to be anal retentive about political labels, should you be using socialist and communist interchangably?

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Quote:

the G-man said:
Seriously, however, Moore has admitted to being very, very, liberal.

So his idea of "conservative" is not the typical definition of conservative.




That doesn't follow. Just because you swing to an extreme either way doesn't mean you can't recognise the spectrum on the other wing.


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Snopes says:

http://www.snopes.com/message/ultimatebb.php?/ubb/get_topic/f/37/t/000755.html

Quote:


I'm confused. The article says:


Quote:

The first version published of yesterday's Note included what was intended as a SATIRICAL report of a fictional ABC News/Washington Post poll. No such poll was conducted. The questions and results listed were not from a real poll.




Does this statement refer to the text that follows it (i.e., about liberal bias in the media), or does it refer to something else that has since been removed (or appeared on a different page)?

- snopes




Looks like it was satire, folks.


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I think the message board people at Snopes are misreading the intro.

I think that what happened is that an ABC commentator published a satirical piece about an imagninary poll, as part of making a point of admitting their biases. Unfortunately, some readers took the poll as real.

As a result, the next day, ABC printed an "editorial" saying, in effect, "the poll was a fake/joke, meant to illustrate our point. Here is our point...the press, like anyone else comes in to the game with certain biases, etc. Please don't cite the fake poll."

Furthermore, if ABC was only joking about being liberal, why not print a SECOND clarification?

After all, this editorial has now been cited all over the place (mostly by conservative comentators) as 'proof' ABC was admitting the press was liberal: Wall St. Journal, Rush Limbaugh, G. Gordon Liddy Show, NewsMax, etc. Why would ABC want to keep this up unclarified, and handing their detractors ammo, if the piece was a joke?

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Have they?

Can't be arsed running a Google search. There must have been some feedback from ABC if there was this consequential stir.


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I just went back to ABC site and couldn't find either a retraction or clarification.

And the Wall St. Journal, where I saw this linked to in the first place, is actually pretty good about running corrections when they receive them. And, so far, nothing has run to indicate this wasn't legit.

As such, I still think it was serious

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Oh, and just to get sort of off topic for a second...

Previously on this thread, there was a bit of side discussion about Al Franken and the veracity of his book.

Here is a web site that purports to documents distortions, inaccuracies, etc., in Franken's book.

http://www.frankenlies.com/

Judge for yourself.

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Quote:

the G-man said:
I just went back to ABC site and couldn't find either a retraction or clarification.

And the Wall St. Journal, where I saw this linked to in the first place, is actually pretty good about running corrections when they receive them. And, so far, nothing has run to indicate this wasn't legit.

As such, I still think it was serious




Its odd that such a piece was run with a "satirical poll" though. Maybe we should e-mail the ABC and ask them?


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It DIDN'T run with a satirical poll.

The satirical poll/piece ran THE DAY BEFORE.

The next day they ran a WHOLE NEW PIECE on the fact that the poll FROM THE PREVIOUS DAY was satirical and then explained how the previous piece was meant to illustrate that the press was liberal.

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Now I'm confused, and keep thinking about pole-dancers.


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Speaking of pole dancers:

Cornell Dormitory votes to purchase dancing poll

    "When people hear 'dancing pole' they think of stripping," says Nick James '04, explaining why the approval of a $324 free-standing dancing pole might raise some eyebrows on campus. Risley Hall's "Kommittee," the representative body that vets such purchases at Cornell's arts-themed dorm, approved the purchase at a Feb. 8 meeting.

    "[Students] began researching this years ago, when there were other students in Risley who did performance art involving a pole," Kommittee chair David Schoonover '05 said.

    Robin Liu '07 thought the pole, like "make your own sushi at Appel Commons," would draw students to attend Risley events.

    "I guess it will be okay because it will draw people to Tammany on Friday," Liu said, referring the dorm's regular entertainment program.

    Spalding Warner '07 agreed. "Curiousity itself will draw people in," he said.

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Quote:

the G-man said:
Oh, and just to get sort of off topic for a second...

Previously on this thread, there was a bit of side discussion about Al Franken and the veracity of his book.

Here is a web site that purports to documents distortions, inaccuracies, etc., in Franken's book.

http://www.frankenlies.com/

Judge for yourself.




You might want to check this out before coming to a conclusion...

http://frankenlies.blogspot.com/


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Today's Wall St. Journal has a column that questions whether the media bias towards Kerry had the effect of defeating him:

    ..once Mr. Kerry won the nomination, he had--or seemed to have--something else going for him: the support of the liberal media, which loathed President Bush and yearned for his defeat. "The media, I think, wants Kerry to win," Evan Thomas of Newsweek said last July. "I think they're going to portray Kerry and Edwards--I'm talking about the establishment media, not Fox--but they're going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and dynamic and optimistic and all. There's going to be this glow about them . . . that's going to be worth maybe 15 points." Mr. Thomas later revised his estimate downward, to five points.

    If Mr. Thomas was right, then, Mr. Bush would have won re-election with a popular-vote margin of between 7.5% and 17.5% of the total vote--rather than the 2.5% he actually got--but for the liberal media. Yet there's a case to be made on the other side: that the liberal media actually helped President Bush, rendering the Kerry campaign ineffective by telling Democrats what they wanted to hear rather than what was true.

    [For example] Mr. Kerry's ... Vietnam story was, to say the least, complicated. He first rose to public prominence not for his exploits in combat but for his leadership of the radical Vietnam Veterans Against the War.

    These calumnies left many veterans angry and resentful, and they made it likely that Vietnam would prove to be the candidate's Achilles' heel rather than his silver bullet. One veteran quoted in "Unfit for Command" summed things up pointedly: "In 1971-72, for almost 18 months, [Mr. Kerry] stood before the television audiences and claimed that the 500,000 men and women in Vietnam, and in combat, were all villains--there were no heroes. In 2004, one hero from the Vietnam War has appeared, running for president of the United States and commander in chief. It just galls one to think about it."

    The Kerry camp evidently hoped the media would gloss over the candidate's antiwar activities, and for the most part, for many months, they did. One exception was ABC's Charlie Gibson, who in April 2004 confronted Mr. Kerry about the 1971 medal incident. Mr. Kerry answered evasively, then muttered into a live microphone that Mr. Gibson was "doing the work of the Republican National Committee." This was a telling comment. Mr. Gibson was, in truth, doing the work of a journalist: asking a politician tough questions. But Democrats expect the mainstream media to treat them sympathetically--an expectation that has ample basis in experience.

    Yet it's far from clear that such sympathy serves the Democrats' interests. Suppose that, once Mr. Kerry secured the nomination, the media had aggressively investigated and reported on his antiwar activities. The candidate would have been forced to respond. If he had been smart, he would have delivered a major speech in which, without renouncing his opposition to the Vietnam War, he repudiated and apologized for his decades-old slanders against fellow veterans. He might have concluded by saying of the Vietnam conflict, "I hope and pray we will put it behind us and go forward in a constructive spirit for the good of our party and the good of our country"--the words with which he ended a February 1992 Senate speech criticizing fellow Vietnam vet Bob Kerrey for trying to make Bill Clinton's draft avoidance an issue in that year's Democratic primaries.

    This surely would have gone a long way to defusing the issue. Instead, Mr. Kerry bet that the media's silence would carry him through to the election--and he would have gotten away with it, too, if it wasn't for those meddling Swift Boat Veterans. A month after the Democratic Convention, they launched their first round of anti-Kerry ads, coinciding with the publication of "Unfit for Command." The claims that Mr. Kerry had falsified his heroics in order to win medals and an early end to his tour of duty were mostly unverifiable, and fair-minded Americans probably would have been inclined to give Mr. Kerry the benefit of the doubt. But the ads goaded Mr. Kerry into responding, which in turn forced the media to pay attention. Whereupon the Swift Boat Veterans turned their attention to Mr. Kerry's antiwar activities, on which they had him dead to rights.

    Then, in early September, CBS News aired its disastrous story on Bush's National Guard service. So eager were Mr. Kerry's supporters in the media to believe the worst of the president that Mr. Rather and producer Mary Mapes went to air with a report based on obviously fabricated documents, then stood by their story for an agonizing two weeks. Yet even if it had been true--or had gone undebunked--it's unlikely it would have made a difference. As the Washington Post's liberal TV critic, Tom Shales, acknowledged with hindsight in an Inauguration Day column, "It's common knowledge that Bush was a spoiled little rich boy who did not serve with any great distinction, so this story wasn't exactly a blockbuster."

    The CBS debacle marked the end of Vietnam as a campaign issue. In the remaining weeks before the election, Mr. Kerry talked a lot less about Vietnam and more about matters of contemporary concern. He performed adequately in the debates, and with the help of a massive get-out-the-vote effort he avoided a landslide defeat.

    After the Swift Boat Veterans and Rathergate, it must have been clear even to Mr. Kerry that campaigning on Vietnam had led him into a quagmire. If the media had treated his war-hero narrative with more skepticism in the first place, he might have reached this realization--and developed a better campaign strategy--much earlier. Conservatives love to complain about liberal media bias, and for the most part they're right. But they should count their blessings, too. Were it not for the media reinforcing the Democrats' spin, John Kerry might be president today.


This points out an interesting theory: the need for candidates of both parties to have both liberal and conservative media, not only to trumpet "their" side, but to help "test" them.

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I'm liberal (according to rex I'm a commie) and I don't see the media as being liberal at all. The reporters themselves may be but the guys up top with names like Disney, Eisner, Redfern, Welch, Hearst and Murdoch certainly aren't. And editors keep their jobs by seeing to it that the stories don't stray too far from world view of THEIR masters. Unless it will make lots of money.

I'd like to see a return to the days of yesteryear when the media outlets were highly partisan. Each city had a liberal paper and a conservative paper. If you wanted balance you could read them both. Let the reader decide whom to believe. Objectivety in media means bland stories without context. I'll take bias, thank you, preferably from both sides. Then you could see things on TV Bill Buckley getting angry and calling Gore Vidal a 'little faggot' on ABC.

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I like news that presents both sides. The I can look at the issue in its entirety and take a bias liberal stance.

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Quote:

Wednesday said:
I like news that presents both sides. The I can look at the issue in its entirety and take a bias liberal stance.




True. But sometimes I like to get REALLY pissed off, so I read the Op-Ed page of the WSJ. Then I come here and chew on Pariah for awhile


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I'm liberal (according to rex I'm a commie) and I don't see the media as being liberal at all.




Well, duh. Forrest through the trees and all that.


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there's no liberal bias, there's a money bias. All media is money-biased based on what will sensationalizeand sell. If it was Liberal Bias then there would've been no real Monica Lewinsky or Gary Condit coverage.

This whole Liberal Bias idea probably goes back to Nixon when he saw his poor ass being attacked for Watergate.

The only news outlet that I've ever heard of that was run politically was Fox. They're run by an ex-Bush sr. official, hire mainly conservatives, echo many White House policies overly-positive in their reports and trash a lot of Democrats. Watch Outfoxed. Even if you don't buy the testimony of ex-employees, look at the memos and the comiled news coverage, and listen to the opinion of Walter Cronkite in the movie of how reporting used to be done.


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The Press and The Public Are Worlds Apart

    The press and the public remain... "worlds apart."

    This split has been visible ever since a groundbreaking article 23 years ago in AEI's Public Opinion magazine. In it, academics Robert Lichter and Stanley Rothman presented results of a careful study of media elites. They discovered that from 1964 to 1976, 81 percent of journalists voted for the Democratic Presidential candidate.

    A later survey by Freedom Forum found that 89 percent of Washington-based reporters voted for Bill Clinton in 1992 and only 7 percent for George H. W. Bush. Meanwhile, 59 percent viewed the 1994 Republican "Contract with America" as a "campaign ploy," while just 3 percent called it a "serious reform proposal." The public disagreed, and the GOP captured the House for the first time in four decades.

    Today, the media and the public are drifting even farther apart. In the new Pew study, 34 percent of national journalists describe themselves as "liberal," compared with 22 percent in 1995. Only 7 percent of reporters say they are conservative at present. For the general public, the results are again reversed: 33 percent of Americans call themselves conservatives; 20 percent, liberals.

    On social issues, the gap is even wider. For example, the national press states by a margin of 91 percent to 6 percent that "belief in God is not necessary to be moral." The general public says, to the contrary, that belief in God is necessary, by a margin of 58 percent to 40 percent.

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Quote:

the G-man said:
The Press and The Public Are Worlds Apart

    The press and the public remain... "worlds apart."

    This split has been visible ever since a groundbreaking article 23 years ago in AEI's Public Opinion magazine. In it, academics Robert Lichter and Stanley Rothman presented results of a careful study of media elites. They discovered that from 1964 to 1976, 81 percent of journalists voted for the Democratic Presidential candidate.

    A later survey by Freedom Forum found that 89 percent of Washington-based reporters voted for Bill Clinton in 1992 and only 7 percent for George H. W. Bush. Meanwhile, 59 percent viewed the 1994 Republican "Contract with America" as a "campaign ploy," while just 3 percent called it a "serious reform proposal." The public disagreed, and the GOP captured the House for the first time in four decades.

    Today, the media and the public are drifting even farther apart. In the new Pew study, 34 percent of national journalists describe themselves as "liberal," compared with 22 percent in 1995. Only 7 percent of reporters say they are conservative at present. For the general public, the results are again reversed: 33 percent of Americans call themselves conservatives; 20 percent, liberals.

    On social issues, the gap is even wider. For example, the national press states by a margin of 91 percent to 6 percent that "belief in God is not necessary to be moral." The general public says, to the contrary, that belief in God is necessary, by a margin of 58 percent to 40 percent.




that's implying that reporters (real reporters) can't distinguish between their feelings and their job.

Reporters will vote. It doesn't matter who they vote for unless they leak out their feelings on the air.

The President's "brain" leaking confidential information is news.
A bloody war that is opposed internationally and has a mounting death toll is news.
A blow job in the oval office? That's less relevant. But the "liberal media" put more into Monica Lewinsky than either of the other stories.


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I can agree with you that reporters are simpletons who will readily latch onto stories involving sex regardless of politics.

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Quote:

the G-man said:
I can agree with you that reporters are simpletons who will readily latch onto stories involving sex regardless of politics.




Remember guys, the only reason TV and news papers' have content is to get you to watch the commercials!


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Quote:

magicjay said:
Quote:

the G-man said:
I can agree with you that reporters are simpletons who will readily latch onto stories involving sex regardless of politics.




Remember guys, the only reason TV and news papers' have content is to get you to watch the commercials!




Agreed.


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Quote:

Remember guys, the only reason TV and news papers' have content is to get you to watch the commercials!




And remember that the majority of companies that pay for those commercials typically have conservative interests.


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Again putting the liberal media meme to death, right-wing loon Ann Coulter explains to fellow winger Brent Bozell on the 7/26 Sean Hannity Show that Bush should appoint a more extreme Judge than Roberts to the Supreme Court because “we have the media now”. Audio.

One more:

Bill O’Riley:
“One major casualty in the war on terror is the liberal press in the USA. Don’t believe the right-wing ideologues when they tell you the left still controls the media agenda. It does not any longer. It’s a fact.”

That's right-winger opinion, not lefties. Still, continuing to call the media "liberal" does help to further move the middle more rightward.


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Did she mean that "the media is all conservative" or did she mean "we have a conservative media (ie, talk radio, columnists and blogs) that stands side by side the liberal one (ie, NY Times and major networks)"? Knowing Ann she meant the latter, not the former.

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Knowing Ann she probably assassinated a moderate photojournalist in the parking lot on her way in.


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Hey, that's not fair.

Ann maims, she doesn't kill.

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The Wall Street Journal has taken a look on how the media portrays the economy.

    The paradox of the year is why so many Americans tell pollsters they feel bad about an economy that's been so good, with solid job growth and corporate profits, rising wages and home prices, and a huge decline in the budget deficit. Perhaps one reason is because the media keep saying the economy stinks.


That's the conclusion of a study to be released today by the Media Research Center, which finds that so far this year 62% of the news stories on the Big Three TV networks have portrayed the U.S. economy in negative fashion. The "negative full length TV news stories on the economy outnumbered positive stories by an overwhelming ratio of 4 to 1," the MRC reports

The Media Research Center conducted this study and alleges:

    The federal deficit is shrinking, unemployment has fallen, and America has seen more than two straight years of job growth. But broadcasters have been describing the economy as “dicey,” “volatile” and “slow.” A Free Market Project analysis of economic stories on network evening news shows since President George W. Bush’s second inauguration showed negative news prevailing 62 percent of the time (71 out of 115 stories). That number was deceiving, however, because even good news often was portrayed as bad. In 40 stories classified as good economic news, journalists undermined the good news with bad 45 percent of the time.

    Good news was relegated to short reports, or briefs, 68 percent of the time, while bad news was treated with full stories. When briefs on both sides were excluded, the comparison of full-length news stories showed an overwhelming ratio: negative stories outnumbered positive ones almost 4-to-1.


A similar study last year to contrast how the media presented the economy when there is a Democratic and a Republican president in office:

    When GDP growth is reported, Republicans received between 16 and 24 percentage point fewer positive stories for the same economic numbers than Democrats. For durable goods for all newspapers, Republicans received between 15 and 25 percentage points fewer positive news stories than Democrats. For unemployment, the difference was between zero and 21 percentage points. Retail sales showed no difference. Among the Associated Press and the top 10 papers, the Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Associated Press, and New York Times tend to be the least likely to report positive news during Republican administrations, while the Houston Chronicle slightly favors Republicans. Only one newspaper treated one Republican administration significantly more positively than the Clinton administration: the Los Angeles Times' headlines were most favorable to the Reagan administration, but it still favored Clinton over either Bush administration.

Is anyone surprised by all these results? I think these findings are too large to be due to mere happenstance. I'm not saying that the reporters get together and say, "Hey, a Bush is president; let's convince everyone that the economy is doing terribly." But that is the template through which they view the news. They don't look at economic results as a point on a graph but as part of an overall story about where the economy is headed. And they have made up their minds that policies such as tax cuts will trash the economy. So, they're ready with the gloom and doom. As the WSJ writes:

    Media coverage of President Bush's tax cuts has been particularly slanted. During the 2003 tax-cut debate, three of every four major TV network news stories were negative. The favorite criticisms were liberal echoes that it would bust the budget and favor the rich. Earlier this year, a news story on National Public Radio announced that "as everyone knows, the primary cause of the budget deficit was the Bush tax cuts." No word yet on whom NPR is crediting with this year's revenue surge of $262 billion.

NPR doesn't need to give anyone credit. They'll just downplay the story or not even report it. It will be a brief blurb in the roundup of headlines and they'll resist the opportunity to explain how the tax cuts have helped create a increase in revenue. That will fit their pattern of talking about the shaky, greedy economy of the Reagan economy, the sinking economy of the G.H.W. Bush years, the thriving economy of the Clinton years, and the fragile economy of the G.W. Bush years.

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Guess I don't see any big deal here. The Journal is also biased and has a slant. And when I personally start feeling the effects of this booming economy I guess I'd be more sympathetic. I'm guessing that wages in general have not kept up with inflation. I know mine haven't. I've been getting by with increased OT created by layoffs.


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CNN'er: Katrina Victims Better Off Beheaded

    CNN's "American Morning" host Soledad O'Brien said Tuesday that Hurricane Katrina evacuees housed at the Superdome were worse off than beheading victims in Baghdad.

    The normally mild-mannered newswoman offered the overwrought observation while speaking at Redbook Magazine's "Movers and Shakers" awards luncheon in New York.

    According to the New York Daily News, O'Brien blurted out:

    "It is a sad thing to watch military veterans cry as they tell you the beheadings in Baghdad were less horrific than what they saw as 30,000 people marched from the Superdome through a shopping mall and onto buses to who knows where."

    Ms. O'Brien didn't identify the veterans who told her that Katrina victims would have been better off being beheaded.

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meanwhile...
Quote:

Bush's poll numbers are in free fall, but CNN's Malveaux claimed they are improving

On the September 12 edition of CNN's The Situation Room, White House correspondent Suzanne Malveaux claimed that "we have seen poll numbers improve" ...


Media Matters


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Washington Times:

    Former CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite, in an appearance Friday on CNN's "Larry King Live," said Americans are too dumb to vote for the right candidates. "We're an ignorant nation right now," Mr. Cronkite said. "We're not really capable, I do not think the majority of our people, of making the decisions that have to be made at election time ....in the selection of their legislatures and their Congress and the presidency, of course." ...... "I don't think we're bright enough to do the job that would preserve our democracy, our republic. I think we're in serious danger."

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I concur!


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It's just fortunate how most of those elections turned out in the end.


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It's probably true that the press is not intentionally biased, but naturally constrained by its own points of view and what it deems, based on its own beliefs, is "news."

Here's a fabulous analysis of how a good picture from an anti-war rally covers up the truth of the rally. Is the rally all about some young, compassionate teen, who chose to articulate the statement "People of Color say 'No to War!'" during an anti-war rally, or was that teen a pawn in a crass, juvenile, extremist and communist party organized event?

Check it out below. It pissed off the folks at the San Francisco Chronicle.






Anatomy of a Photograph






Anatomy of a Photograph





An analysis of a single seemingly innocuous photograph, and the pervasive media bias it reveals.





My photo essay of the anti-war protest in San Francisco on September 24, 2005 was not the only report done about the event. A few other outlets ran their own coverage. But the one photo from the rally that was seen by the most people was this:







Why? Because the San Francisco Chronicle, which had the only mainstream media coverage of the rally, published this photograph on the front page of its Web site as a teaser for their article about the event.




Now, let's take a closer look at this image.







By chance, I took a photo of the same girl just a few moments later. Looks practically identical, doesn't it?




But you might notice that my picture is lower resolution. That's because it's a zoomed-in portion of a much larger photograph. I cropped off the other parts of the picture to get a close-up of the girl.




But what would happen if I hadn't cropped off so much? Let's take a step backward and reveal what the San Francisco Chronicle didn't want you to see.






Here's the same photo without as much cropping, revealing more of the context. You can see that the girl's protest contingent also sported Palestinian flags and obscene placards.




Now let's take another step back.









Here's my full original photo, uncropped. Now we can see that the girl is just one of several teenagers, all wearing terrorist-style bandannas covering their faces.




But, as you'll notice, the bandannas are all printed with the same design. Was this a grassroots protest statement the teenagers had come up with all by themselves?




To find out, let's take a look at another photo in the series, taken at the same time:









Oops -- it looks like they're actually being stage-managed by an adult, who is giving them directions and guiding them toward the front of the march. But who is she?




The last picture in the series reveals all.









It turns out that the woman giving directions belongs to one of the Communist groups organizing the rally -- if her t-shirt is to be believed, since it depicts
the flag of Communist Vietnam, which has been frequently displayed by such groups at protest rallies in the U.S. for decades.






The San Francisco Chronicle featured the original photograph on its front Web page in order to convey a positive message about the rally -- perhaps that even politically aware teenagers were inspired to show up and rally for peace, sporting the message, "People of Color say 'No to War!'" And that served the Chronicle's agenda.




But this simple analysis reveals the very subtle but insidious type of bias that occurs in the media all the time. The Chronicle did not print an inaccuracy, nor did it doctor a photograph to misrepresent the facts. Instead, the Chronicle committed the sin of omission: it told you the truth, but it didn't tell you the whole truth.




Because the whole truth -- that the girl was part of a group of naive teenagers recruited by Communist activists to wear terrorist-style bandannas and carry Palestinian flags and obscene placards -- is disturbing, and doesn't conform to the narrative that the Chronicle is trying to promote. By presenting the photo out of context, and only showing the one image that suits its purpose, the Chronicle is intentionally manipulating the reader's impression of the rally, and the rally's intent.




Such tactics -- in the no-man's-land between ethical and unethical -- are commonplace in the media, and have been for decades. It is only now, with the advent of citizen journalism, that we can at last begin to see the whole story and realize that the public has been manipulated like this all along.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




UPDATE: This essay has caused such an outcry that the San Francisco Chronicle has now (on October 2, 2005) run a column about zombietime and the controversy surrounding the photo, defending itself from charges of bias. You can read the column here. (Someone at the Chronicle also wrote to me directly and rather brazenly requested that I update my site with a link to their response -- which I have just done -- although they purposely did not include a link to "Anatomy of a Photograph" in their column. They insist that I allow my readers to see the Chronicle's side of the story, but they won't let their readers see my side of the story. Again, the whiff of arrogance.)




Some of the Chronicle's defensiveness is the result of the paper's having been barraged by emails from zombietime readers, some of whom slightly misinterpreted a couple of points in my analysis above. Please note that I do not claim that the Chronicle cropped its photograph, which is obviously a high-resolution close-up and thus not cropped much, if at all; I only discuss cropping my photograph. I also didn't say that the Chronicle ran the photo on the front page of its print edition, but rather on the front page of its online edition.




Part of the Chronicle's attempted rebuttal is the claim that, since some of my readers jumped to the conclusion that the picture was on the front page of the print edition, this somehow constituted an "error" on my part that I refuse to acknowledge. I think that it should be fairly universally understood that when a Web site provides a link to an article or photo it is discussing, it is referring to the online version. Blogs and media-related Web sites deal pretty much exclusively with information and links that are online.




The Chronicle also defends itself by saying that its article about the rally did mention a few of the controversial aspects of the event. A defense which, to me, misses the mark on two counts: first, "Anatomy of a Photograph" was specifically about the Chronicle's photo coverage (and the decision to highlight one specific photograph), not about the textual news article; and second, its article only very peripherally referred to a couple of radical elements, and glossed over almost all of the extremism that was manifested at the rally.




And lastly, the Chronicle claims that the photo was chosen because it was visually arresting, not for any political considerations. And of course the photo is a good image, based solely on stylistic characteristics: the girl is pretty, and her face is in sharp focus.




But this brings up a larger issue concerning media coverage of these events. Newspapers and other mainstream outlets run photos that almost always fall into these four categories:




a. Wide shots of the crowd at a distance, in which individual messages aren't clearly visible. A good example is this photo in the Chronicle (oops, I mean: on the Chronicle's Web page).




b. Close-ups of individuals' faces, with no message visible -- as in this example from the Chronicle.




c. Human-interest images of people, in which the political aspect is peripheral or cut off, as in this photo.




d. Mid-range shots of people displaying "safe," non-controversial messages, like the one visible here.






Now, there's nothing wrong with any of these kinds of photographs; each, in its own way, is a valid type of image. But what media outlets rarely publish are the kind of photographs that I feature on zombietime: mid-range images focusing on individual protesters displaying their heartfelt (and often intense) messages. And that's all a rally is really composed of: thousands of individuals, each with their own messages. By showing them as an overall group, or by showing the individuals without their messages, or by showing only non-controversial messages, media outlets (probably unconsciously) influence the public's impressions of such events as being somewhat less disturbing and less politically radical than they really are.




Yet the public is hungry for the type of uncompromising, in-your-face photography that can be found on zombietime and similar Web sites and blogs, since we show the kind of images that simply can't be found in mainstream media outlets. At least 170 Web sites linked to zombietime's photo coverage of the September 24 rally. How many sites specifically linked to the Chronicle's photo coverage?




If the Chronicle is truly unbiased in its coverage (which I doubt rather strongly: I know several Chronicle staffers, and have been in the Chronicle offices, and I can say that there is -- as there is at most major newspapers -- a overall left-wing/"progressive" atmosphere at the paper), and if it wants to increase readership, then it should take a close look at how it frames and reports on certain issues. Whitewashing potential controversies, or lazily presenting unchallenged the narrative of people or groups it is covering, only leads to a bland paper and a bored readership.








Return to zombie's main September 24, 2005 anti-war rally page.











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So the San Francisco Chronicle zoomed in to keep all the expletives on the poster out. What's the big deal?

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Quote:

Pariah said:




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