Birdseye wrote: (by the way, you exercised a good argument tactic of the concession, something I rarely see here).
Really? I thought the quality of debate was a bit higher than that here. ... Maybe it's not, and I'm wrongly blaming the worst offenders for a disproportionate share.
Anybody who won't concede valid points is either an extremist in denial, or a partisan hack paid to stick to his talking points no matter what. Democracy does not thrive on special interests of ANY kind having the only say.
The part of FOX news with which I am least impressed is the part that features the partisan hacks from both sides in a "fair and balanced debate". It's one set of spin vs another, and none of it is trustworthy. But that's just politics. It's on the consumer, the American voter, to have the wits to tell the difference. Some won't, but that's part of the package. As long as most at least try, we will have a Republic here.
Birdseye wrote:I think the idea of trusting a specific news program or anchor is silly. To get the most viewpoints you need to watch multiple sources.
Reconsider. By trust, I don't mean blind faith. I mean trust. I don't mean all eggs in one basket. I mean "You tune in to this source because they have something useful (likely to be honest, even if biased) to show you."
Multiple sources are worth squat if the sources are not honest. In the blogosphere in particular, it is important to weed out sources who outright distort, on far left or far right or any other special interest. ... This is the chief reason I avoid the blogosphere in general. I don't really trust any of them and don't care to spend the time to figure out who is worth trusting.
Birdseye wrote:It's this particular point that had me extremely miffed, that nobody conservative could admit there are a whole slew of rah rah conservative anchors.
There's a much larger slew of rah rah liberals in the media, and folks on your side of the argument are blind to that in even greater numbers. ... You have a valid point, but it's nowhere remotely near "FOX takes it to all new heights." On the contrary. It is just more business as usual, except leaning the other way.
The thing is, there are good journalists out there. It really -is- important to figure out who you can trust and who you cannot.
Sticking a big (R) or (D) next to the name is not a solution. Firstly, these are not one size fits all labels. I'm an R, but I've voted for Democrats and Independents and minor party candidates. The vote is the only direct say we get in how things are run. It is too precious to squander without thought. I did not sell my soul when I signed up to be a Republican, though. That's where my thinking leans, and what use hiding that or lying about it?
Labeling journalists would be the worst thing that could be done, because it would encourage laziness on the viewer's part. D people would automatically dismess R reporters, and vice versa. This only further fragments our already divided society, and to no useful purpose. Luckily, you lack the power to enforce your idea, to get it in to use. Not that you aren't a bright guy -- I know better! -- but this is still a god-awful clunker of an idea. ... Coming up with good ideas is hard. Winning support for them is even harder. But that's good! Erring on the side of caution is how societies survive.
Have some faith in the people. We do learn from our mistakes -- enough of us do. It's slow, cumbersome, wasteful, and never fast enough for an idealist, but it sure beats any results the dictators and communists are churning out.
How much total blatant editorial do you think there is, how much total hard news, and how much blurred line editorial do you think there is (in vague percentages)?
The hard news is read in headlines every half hour. There is only an hour's worth of hard news in any given day, unless it's a breaking, powerful story like a storm, war, terror attack, etc.
EDIT: Clarification: there's only an hour's worth of hard news every day, but the daytime "FOX News Live" broadcasts are supposed to be hard news. They are the same hour of content over and over, revised as news breaks during the day. The best hour of hard news is the wrap-up, though, in the evening: the FOX Report.
Hard news is also when they show events live, without comment: political speeches and news conferences are particularly useful. The "headlines" from a speech are always misleading, no matter who reports them. (This is where the network news reports are far more baldly slanted! You won't -see- it until you watch enough news to catch a bunch of speeches live, though, then later check them against the reported clips and sound bites, and SEE the distortion!)
When there is significant hard news to report, that gets reported. The rest is news analysis, including all the punditry, all the mouthpieces for the parties, etc.
Steve Harrigan is FOX's best journalist. Watch for his reports. Steve is the man.
FOX has a number of liberal analysts and pundits. My favorites are the ones who will concede valid points, the way you praised me doing. These include Marc Ginsberg, Dennis Ross, Juan Williams, Mara Liasson, Ellis Henican, Susan Estrich, and Greta van Susteren. Liberal analysts I don't like because they won't concede (or can't see) valid points scored against their viewpoint include David Corn, Geraldine Ferraro, Ellen Ratner, and Eleanor Clift. I put Bob Beckel and Alan Colmes in a separate category. These guys are pretty hard left and tend to always be involved in the "fair and balanced" debates with hard right wingers opposite them.
The following conservatives are sometimes or always openly slanted: Stuart Varney (worst offender, but he's a business guy not a mainline news anchor), Steve Doocy (I like Steve, but really, he pushes too hard -- ED is the morning star -- and NONE of the Fox and Friends morning anchors except maybe Juliet Huddy holds a candle to Katie Couric in terms of slant!), Brigette Quinn, Jon Scott, Carol Iovanna, David Asman, Rick Folbaum, Jonathan Hunt, and the one who is most often over the top is Sean Hannity. Hannity really plays cutthroat with discrediting the opposition. I hate that! I disagree with him, and roll my eyes at his remarks, more often than any other conservative on the network. But... that's their show. Hannity and Colmes is one hour of unabashed partisan debate. Tune in to that if you want to hear the latest talking points from both sides -- and see these challenged.
Reporters and anchors I trust (some of whom are conservatives, but not all) include Brit Hume, Shep Smith, Fred Barnes, Tony Snow, Jim Angle, Bret Baier, Dana Lewis, Brian Wilson, Kelly Wright, Rick Leventhal, Orlando Salinas, Mike Emanuel, and Wendell Goler. Some of the reporters and anchors who slant conservative, to greater or lesser degrees include Carl Cameron, John Gibson, John Kasich, and Neil Cavuto -- guys I like, but whose views or reports I won't trust as an "only" source.
Conservative pundits to whom I pay attention include Mansoor Ijaz, Newt Gingrich, Tom McInerney, Bob Bevalacqua (seems to be gone from FOX recently, though), David Hunt, Bill Cowan, Bill Sammon, Charles Krauthammer, Mort Kondracke and Fred Barnes, Bill Kristol, Michelle Malkin, Michael Barone, Judge Napolitano, and the crusader himself, Bill O'Reilly. Dick Morris belongs in his own category, but he is must-hear.
I needed help from the FOX bios to remember some of these names and get the spellings right. If a name is missing from the list, I may have overlooked it, or else I don't have a firm opinion of the person as a source, one way or the other.
I don't take anybody's word as gospel. There's a clear difference between the lightweights and the heavyweights, and I think it is probably the lightweights that mostly offend you. (I could be wrong.)
Any opinions on that, Master Sirian?
Chris Wallace seems reasonably objective to me. (Compare to his Sunday Morning competitors if you want to criticize him. Who is doing it better?) The panel has two consevatives and two (centrist) liberals. The total lean is slightly right, but within the mainstream. (Certainly better balanced than This Week, as I cited earlier).
You will see Brit Hume at his -most- conservative, though. He's a pundit there, not an anchor. You have to watch Brit's show to contrast his performance as an anchor against his performance when he's an analyst. Brit will get in to it with Juan, too, but Juan occasionally deserves it! I think both are fair men, overall.
- Sirian