im not aware of any in the context of skewing votesbut there are certainly some networks that blatantly say other things that have similar implications of their "opposite" political parties...oh look, just a few threads downhttp://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=439728
10/20/2006 2:20:26 PM
that's a far more subjective observation than an anchor/pundit saying "hey dems, don't vote. it's hopeless"[Edited on October 20, 2006 at 2:23 PM. Reason : .]
10/20/2006 2:22:59 PM
yeah but they're basically saying "hey americans, bush and therefore all republicans caused the worst war ever, dont vote republican"was hannity blatant about it? suredo all the news agencies have a political agenda? you betcha
10/20/2006 2:25:58 PM
i don't think so. they may lean left or right, but not all have stated agendas. fox, from its inception, does.
10/20/2006 2:27:33 PM
stated or not, they all have agendasfox news, cnn, and the smaller ones as wellthere is hardly any non-biased, non-editorial, non-opinionated, strictly fact-based reporting news anymore...dont kid yourself
10/20/2006 2:29:27 PM
but there are levels of bias. and fox's is far more severe than most others.again: if you get your news from the television, you're asking for trouble.i can't really speak to cnn or msnbc, because i don't watch them. i don't really watch foxnews much either. but when i have watched any of those networks, fox's bias is obvious constantly. CONSTANTLY. rubbing it in your face. it's entertaining in a way in small doses. the most tv news i'll watch is maybe the abc nightly news sometimes. but generally i read print or web news because it is more detailed and less biased (and i can choose what i read in-depth about).
10/20/2006 2:33:47 PM
i personally like to watch a small mix of cnn, fox news, msnbc, abc, cbs, nbc and even some bloomberg and cspan haha, again, small doses...and hell even though they're both "fake news," the daily show and colbert...i think the more news you watch (not more hours on one station, but more stations), the better overall news scape you can absorb, seeing the flaws and strengths of all sides...imo
10/20/2006 2:37:34 PM
television news is too sensationalist for me.
10/20/2006 2:38:34 PM
10/20/2006 2:39:09 PM
ah shit, didn't realize this was so many pages [Edited on October 20, 2006 at 2:44 PM. Reason : ]
10/20/2006 2:44:41 PM
10/20/2006 2:51:37 PM
^so watching all ends of the spectrum is a sad world view? i guess i should just stick to air america and bbc and nothing else to have your world view?
10/20/2006 3:32:06 PM
getting your news from television is a mistake in the first place. it's been shown in more than one journal that people are better informed of domestic and world events if they don't get their news from television.
10/20/2006 3:35:46 PM
newspapers and internet news sources are also biased
10/20/2006 3:38:55 PM
where did i mention anything about bias in that statement?
10/20/2006 3:40:03 PM
you didnt...but so what...the point is wherever you get your news...if its not firsthand, its probably got some bias
10/20/2006 3:42:06 PM
naturally. but television news is sensationalist, watered-down crap overall.
10/20/2006 3:44:37 PM
truei think the internet is worse though
10/20/2006 3:46:12 PM
I'd watch US house and senate sessions if they were as entertaining as British House of Commons. Some of the funniest shit on tv.
10/20/2006 3:48:44 PM
10/20/2006 3:52:35 PM
agreed, but i mean firsthand, as if you yourself saw it...then any bias is your own bias, but you yourself would still have a firsthand account of it
10/20/2006 4:22:00 PM
Gotta love this guyhttp://mediamatters.org/items/200610230007
10/23/2006 9:55:41 PM
[Edited on October 24, 2006 at 12:21 PM. Reason : fuck it, lets make a new thread...]
10/24/2006 12:20:27 PM
Yea, that was a nice post. New thread!
10/24/2006 12:24:38 PM