Sunday, 2. March 2008, 04:48:26
influence peddling, worthless Mass Media, New York Times, Widespread Genital Fixation
...
As if we haven't had
enough of these "straight-talking" "regular guys"...
Also, the Mass Media once again fails to see beyond its own collective penises...
from
ConsortiumNews.com:
In journalism, it’s a safe bet that if you write a story with the suggestion that a prominent male politician is bedding an attractive female lobbyist, whatever other point you hoped to make will be overlooked.
That appears to have been the case with the New York Times article on Feb. 21, which led with suspicions held by some McCain staffers that the Arizona senator had gotten too cozy with lobbyist Vicky Iseman. The Times story then veered off into a historical examination of McCain’s over-confidence about his own moral rectitude.
Yet, despite the Times’ best efforts to explore this complicated history of McCain as both ethics sinner and ethics reformer, the public and pundits never got much past the sex angle, an insinuation that McCain, 71, and Iseman, 40, both adamantly denied.
Thus, McCain succeeded in deflecting the story’s more significant question: Is McCain’s reputation as a straight-talking politician a sham?
Put differently, is the presumptive Republican presidential nominee – like Colin Powell – a media darling whose reputation for honesty is largely undeserved? The question is not an insignificant one.
In 2003, Secretary of State Powell exploited his sterling image to help mislead the nation into the Iraq War. Now, McCain hopes his “straight-talk-express” appeal will help keep U.S. troops in Iraq indefinitely.
So, there’s urgency for Americans to know whether John McCain is a sanctimonious phony and a self-assured liar, who’s just masquerading as the guy who tells it like it is and disdains the self-serving ways of Washington.
Friday, 15. February 2008, 04:18:04
worthless Mass Media, idolatry, America, world capitals
...
"I know they speak French there... Don't they?"Another child left behind:
for more on this subject, click
here
Sunday, 19. August 2007, 19:21:05
electoral system, Americans, just plain stupid, worthless Mass Media
...
...who are mystified at the American electoral system in general, and wonder how a nation could vote for--
much less re-elect-- an idiot like George Bush, here is a quick primer:
And this just in...
One in four adults say they read no books at all in the past year, according to an
Associated Press-Ipsos poll released Tuesday.
Monday, 13. August 2007, 19:09:52
worthless Mass Media, misplaced priorities
Our top story:
(
Stop the motherf#$%@!g presses!)
Monday, 9. July 2007, 23:35:47
narcissistic personality disorder, lip aging, misplaced priorities
"Have you ever carefully applied your favorite lipstick ... only to look in a mirror an hour later and discover that it's bleeding through the edges of your lips?
"There are ways to slow the signs of lip aging! Time and time again, I've encountered patients and friends who invest tons of time and money in skin care - only to virtually ignore their lips. Don't make that mistake."7 Steps to the Perfect Pouty LipsYa' can't make this up!
Saturday, 30. June 2007, 17:18:30
CNN, Senate judiciary committee, Evil Dick II, scandal
...
"...24 hours after Paris Hilton was released from a California jail, Us Weekly, the magazine I edit, made headlines for its decision to ban Hilton coverage from its current issue. Instead, the magazine made room for 12 pages of Hollywood baby pictures. In some ways, the decision to ban Paris was a pragmatic one: Her release occurred too late during our Monday night close for us to offer much reporting on it, and we hadn't landed a post-prison interview. (When Hilton's attorney asked Us to offer a bid to interview the heiress, our request to make it a charitable donation to an organization such as MADD was rejected.) But I also sensed an ever-mounting public frustration—'Please let me off this ride!'—with the Paris story. It's a feeling shared unanimously by the Us staff, and it led me to believe that—at least for this week and maybe for longer—the absence of Paris Hilton is, perhaps, the best way to reflect readers' interests.
"What I was unprepared for, however, was the apparent banning of Bush coverage from CNN. That day, as the Senate judiciary committee issued subpoenas to the White House, Vice President Dick Cheney's office, the Justice Department, and the National Security Council in its investigation of the wiretapping scandal, the cable news network that bills itself as 'the most trusted name in news' chose instead to devote two prime-time hours to the woman widely credited for inspiring Britney Spears to not wear underpants."