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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 15 Jul 2004 08:38:49 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: CBS & NBC Skip Kerry & Edwards Absence on Same-Sex
    Marriage Vote

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
    11:35am EDT, Thursday July 15, 2004 (Vol. Nine; No. 126)
 The 1,763rd CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> CBS & NBC Skip Kerry & Edwards Absence on Same-Sex Marriage Vote
> Newsweek on Edwards: "He Speaks to the Crowd, They Speak to Him"
> ABC: "Sharply Personal Attacks" on Kerry, NYT: "Fierce Attack"
> Couric Poses Some Tough Questions to Edwards, But Also Softballs

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1) Senate Republicans put a constitutional amendment on same-sex
marriage on the agenda this week, in part, so they could put the
Democratic presidential and vice presidential candidates on the
record on the issue. But after the vote took place on Wednesday,
the CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News didn't even mention how
John Kerry and John Edwards were the only two Senators to not vote
on the issue, nor did a story carried on FNC's Special Report with
Brit Hume. ABC's World News Tonight and CNN's NewsNight did note
the absence of Kerry and Edwards from the roll call vote, but only
late in their stories.

2) Just a few days after Newsweek Assistant Managing Editor Evan
Thomas declared that the media "wants Kerry to win" and so
"they're going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and
dynamic and optimistic" and "there's going to be this glow about"
them, Newsweek's Web site posted an article by one of Thomas'
colleagues, Richard Wolffe, who raved about how in the last few
days John Edwards, "the redneck son of a mill worker from rural
North Carolina morphed into an almost-perfect candidate." Wolffe
saw nirvana ahead since "the America that Edwards dreams of is a
place where there's no crime, no poverty and no pushing. That
place, of course, just happens to be John Kerry's America."
Wolffe soon oozed: "He loves the crowd, and the crowd loves him.
He smiles at the crowd, and they smile at him. He speaks to the
crowd, and they speak to him."

3) Update: ABC's Terry Moran and Adam Nagourney of the New York
Times think alike. To Moran, Bush's remarks at a speech in
Michigan on Tuesday were "sharply personal attacks" on John Kerry.
In Wednesday's New York Times, Nagourney called Bush's approach "a
fierce attack on Senator John Kerry."

4) Kudos to NBC's Katie Couric for asking John Edwards a few tough
questions about the inconsistencies shown by him and John Kerry on
the Iraq war and questioning some of his shots at the Bush-Cheney
record, but her quizzing of Edwards in a taped interview aired on
Wednesday's Today came no where near how Matt Lauer painted Dick
Cheney as in extremist in 2000 by incessantly grilling Cheney over
his conservative positions. Other than Couric referring to Kerry
as a "liberal Democrat from Massachusetts," ideology never came up
during Couric's session with Edwards and his wife. Couric asked
Edwards: "Do you concede that you have a bit of a problem voting
for a war and being one of four Senators who voted against the
funding necessary to wage it?" But she treated them as victims of
hostility from society: "Why do you think there's so much animus
against lawyers?" Couric also cued up the Edwards duo with anti-
GOP Democratic talking points: "Do you think the Governor [of
Florida] decided the election last go around?"


Clarification: The July 12 CyberAlert stated that Keith Olbermann,
"who has been fired within a few months or years by every TV
employer he's ever had, complained that Murdoch fired him from Fox
Sports because he had reported something Murdoch didn't want
disclosed." That was a possible mis-characterization of
Olbermann's other career moves. The intended point was that
Olbermann never seems to last very long in any job as he has
bounced amongst the TV networks in recent years -- from ESPN to
MSNBC to CNN to Fox Sports back to CNN and back again to MSNBC.


    > 1) Senate Republicans put a constitutional amendment on
same-sex marriage on the agenda this week, in part, so they could
put the Democratic presidential and vice presidential candidates
on the record on the issue. But after the vote took place on
Wednesday, the CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News didn't even
mention how John Kerry and John Edwards were the only two Senators
to not vote on the issue, nor did a story carried on FNC's Special
Report with Brit Hume. ABC's World News Tonight and CNN's
NewsNight did note the absence of Kerry and Edwards from the roll
call vote, but only late in their stories.

    The 50-48 vote came on a motion to invoke cloture so the
Senate could proceed to the amendment. All but six Republicans
(McCain of Arizona, Collins and Snowe of Maine, Chafee of Rhode
Island, Sununu of New Hampshire and Nighthorse Campbell of
Colorado) voted to proceed to consider the constitutional
amendment. All but three Democrats (Byrd of West Virginia, Nelson
of Nebraska and Miller of Georgia) voted to not consider the
amendment. Proceeding required 60 votes. Any eventual vote on an
actual constitutional amendment would require 67 votes to pass.

    The July 14 CBS Evening News carried only a short item read by
anchor John Roberts who suggested to viewers that those in favor
of barring same-sex marriage lost big, but he didn't note that
success required a super-majority:
    "Supporters of a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex
marriages conceded in advance they would lose an attempt to get it
passed in the Senate and they were right. The vote wasn't even
close. But they did vow to keep the measure alive as an election
year issue."

    Over on the NBC Nightly News, anchor Brian Williams announced:
"In Washington, as expected, the gay marriage ban is dead for now
at least. Considered a defeat for President Bush, a proposed
constitutional amendment got only 48 votes, losing on a procedural
maneuver that showed it was far short of the votes it would have
needed to pass. But the issue is not going away. Even as the
amendment died in the Senate today, over in the House
Republicans started pushing new legislation that would make it
illegal for a federal court to order any state to recognize same-
sex marriages performed in other states."

    ABC's World News Tonight led with the Senate vote. Peter
Jennings intoned: "Good evening, everyone. We're going to begin
tonight with that ever-contentious subject in America today --
same-sex marriage. The Senate has failed, as predicted, to pass
constitutional amendment to make it illegal. But in the process,
Republicans, for the most part, have given the debate a fresh
airing in the middle of a political season. President Bush said he
was deeply disappointed and the defenders of traditional marriage,
in his words, should not flag in their efforts to keep it that
way. We're going to go first to ABC's Linda Douglass who is on
Capitol Hill. Linda?"

    Douglass explained: "Peter, Republicans couldn't even muster
enough support in their own party, to bring that amendment,
banning same-sex marriage, to a vote."

    After reporting reaction from Democrats, Douglass noted that
"five Republicans voted against their party by refusing to bring
the amendment up for a vote."
    John McCain on the Senate floor: "Many, if not most Americans
have reasoned that there is no overriding urgent need to act at
this time. And they are right to do so."
    Douglass: "McCain and most Democrats say they oppose same-sex
marriage, but do not want to amend the Constitution to ban it.
Senators debated that for hours."

    Following a bunch of clips from the floor debate, Douglass
pointed out how Republicans said they succeeded in making the
topic an issue and then, over video of Kerry on a bike, she
relayed: "Democrats Kerry and Edwards skipped today's vote. Both
oppose the amendment. Democrats concede that could hurt them in
the South, but they dispute the significance of this week's
debate. Republicans say they plan bring this up again and again,
but Peter, they do concede that it is dead for this year."

    In the cable world, in a story on Special Report with Brit
Hume, FNC's James Rosen didn't mention how Kerry and Edwards
didn't vote.

    At the very end of his story for CNN's NewsNight, Ed Henry
related the non-votes of the Democratic presidential ticket:
    "Senators John Kerry and John Edwards were absent, saying
their votes would not have changed the outcome but Edwards did put
out a statement charging that Republicans were trying to use the
Constitution as a political tool. A Bush-Cheney campaign adviser
responded by saying, in part, 'It takes a special kind of Senator
to attack others over a vote that they don't show up for.'"



    > 2) Just a few days after Newsweek Assistant Managing Editor
Evan Thomas declared that the media "wants Kerry to win" and so
"they're going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and
dynamic and optimistic" and "there's going to be this glow about"
them, Newsweek's Web site posted an article by one of Thomas'
colleagues, Richard Wolffe, who raved about how in the last few
days John Edwards, "the redneck son of a mill worker from rural
North Carolina morphed into an almost-perfect candidate." Wolffe
saw nirvana ahead since "the America that Edwards dreams of is a
place where there's no crime, no poverty and no pushing. That
place, of course, just happens to be John Kerry's America."

    Wolffe soon oozed: "He loves the crowd, and the crowd loves
him. He smiles at the crowd, and they smile at him. He speaks to
the crowd, and they speak to him."

    In a story carrying Wolffe's byline in this week's issue, the
cover of which featured "The Sunshine Boys?" headline over a
picture of a smiling Kerry and Edwards, Wolffe, along with Howard
Fineman, gushed: "Indeed, Edwards's ingratiating incandescence has
already brightened Kerry. The two became a buddy-buddy act,
hugging and whispering like Starsky and Hutch after consuming the
evidence."

    "John Edwards has morphed into an almost-perfect candidate.
And his sunny outlook is infecting Kerry, too," trumpeted the
headline over the July 14 "Web exclusive commentary" by Wolffe.
An excerpt:

It's hard to put your finger on the precise moment. It could be
when he steps to the front of the stage, raises his arms in the
air and simply basks in the cheers of thousands of adoring fans.
Or it could be when he stops in his tracks, shrugs his shoulders
and modestly tells the crowd they don't really need to listen to
him talking about their lives. But by the time John Edwards
reaches the climax of his new stump speech, the realization dawns.
The senator who just joined the Democratic ticket is not just
good. He's the Stepford Veep.

Somewhere along the way, the redneck son of a mill worker from
rural North Carolina morphed into an almost-perfect candidate.
Someone streamlined the senator, overhauled every physical flaw
and created a paragon of presidential campaigners. And like
Stepford itself, the America that Edwards dreams of is a place
where there's no crime, no poverty and no pushing. That place, of
course, just happens to be John Kerry's America. "We believe, the
two of us, in our hearts, to our core, that tomorrow will be
better than today," Edwards says, winding up to his grand finale.
"That in America, if we put our minds to it, if we are willing to
work for it, anything is possible."

It's as if Edwards's main message is his positivity. He loves the
crowd, and the crowd loves him. He smiles at the crowd, and they
smile at him. He speaks to the crowd, and they speak to him. As he
nears his introduction of Kerry (delivered with atomic timing in
every stump speech), he becomes almost unbearably upbeat, a
near-parody of optimistic campaigning. "I'll tell you something
that's going to happen in this campaign—it'll be a wonderful thing
for America—between now and November: the American people are
going to reject the tired, old, hateful negative politics of the
past," he explains. "And instead the American people are going to
embrace the politics of hope. The politics of what's possible.
Because this is America, where everything is possible … I give you
the man who represents hope. Hope for you, hope for me, hope for
our children, hope for your children, hope for the future of
America!" Bill Clinton may have been the boy from Hope, but John
Edwards has bought the whole town of Hope and is shipping it brick
by brick to the Democratic convention in Boston.

This kind of campaigning is infectious, and John Kerry seems to
have caught the bug. Where the senator used to punch his fists
toward the crowd, he has now adopted Edwards's favorite gesture:
the thumbs up....

Through his troubled primary campaign, Kerry proved he was a quick
study, shaping up his stump speech and mastering the town hall
meeting. Now he needs to study his running mate's style and make
it his own in the few weeks left before the general election gets
underway. Kerry's challenge this summer is to step into Stepford
without surrendering his brain.

    END of Excerpt

    For the Web-posting in full:
http://mrccyberalert.c.topica.com/maacr3jaa8qYGbn2mYPb/

    On Inside Washington last weekend, a weekend discussion show
taped at and run by the Gannett-owned CBS affiliate in Washington,
DC, WUSA-TV, and carried by many PBS stations across the country,
Thomas pointed out the boost to the Kerry/Edwards ticket provided
by the press corps:
    "There's one other base here: the media. Let's talk a little
media bias here. The media, I think, wants Kerry to win. And 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
some, is going to be worth, collectively, the two of them, that's
going to be worth maybe 15 points."

    See view a RealPlayer clip of that, as posted by the MRC's Mez
Djouadi:
http://mrccyberalert.c.topica.com/maacr3jaa8qYHbn2mYPb/



    > 3) Update: ABC's Terry Moran and Adam Nagourney of the New
York Times think alike. To Moran, President Bush's remarks at a
speech in Michigan on Tuesday were "sharply personal attacks" on
John Kerry. In Wednesday's New York Times, Nagourney called Bush's
approach "a fierce attack on Senator John Kerry."

    The July 14 CyberAlert reported: Arguing they "show how much
trouble the President's in politically," ABC's Terry Moran on
Tuesday night contended that, in a visit to Michigan's Upper
Peninsula, President George W. Bush delivered "sharply personal
attacks" on Democratic contender John Kerry. But the two
soundbites from Bush at a rally which ABC played hardly matched
Moran's description as particularly sharp personal attacks.

    Moran featured these soundbites from Bush:
    -- "We stand for institutions like marriage and family which
are the foundations of our society. [edit jump] Yet on these
positions that so many Americans share, my opponent is on the
other side."
    -- "Members of Congress should not vote to send troops into
battle and then vote against funding them and then brag about it."

    For the MRC's TimesWatch.org site, Clay Waters on Wednesday
wrote up this item about a July 14 New York Times story. The
TimesWatch item in full:

Nagourney vs. "Fierce" Bush

Adam Nagourney is apparently very sensitive to any sign of Bush
campaign rhetoric. Reporting Wednesday from the campaign trail in
Minnesota, Nagourney notes: "President Bush swept across three
states that he narrowly lost in 2000 on Tuesday with a vigorous
defense of his record and a fierce attack on Senator John Kerry,
his Democratic rival. Mr. Bush portrayed Mr. Kerry as a liberal
Washington insider who voted against paying for troops in Iraq and
supported Hollywood entertainers out of touch with 'the heart and
soul' of America...The burst of activity occurs as Mr. Bush's
aides prepare to lose the spotlight to Mr. Kerry, who heads to
Boston for his nominating convention as Mr. Bush heads to his
ranch in Crawford, Tex. With the president's aides worried that
Mr. Kerry would enjoy a large increase in popularity, Mr. Bush
went to lengths and used often harsh language in trying to
discredit Mr. Kerry in what will be one of his last swings before
the convention."

Just what was Bush's harsh language? This apparently, from
Nagourney's next paragraph: "'He voted for the Patriot Act,' Mr.
Bush said. 'He voted for NAFTA. He voted for the No Child Left
Behind Act and for the use of force in Iraq. Now he opposes the
Patriot Act. He opposes NAFTA. He opposes the No Child Left Behind
Act and the liberation of Iraq.'" Nagourney then gave the Kerry
campaign two paragraphs to rebut Bush.

Nagourney fretted in similar terms back in March: "With a fierce
campaign of attacks led by President Bush, an orchestrated barrage
of criticism by Republican elected officials and an imminent sweep
of hard-hitting television advertisements, the White House is
moving with unusual speed and force to try to discredit John
Kerry, the president's likely Democratic challenger."

For the rest of Nagourney on the "fierce" Bush:
http://mrccyberalert.c.topica.com/maacr3jaa8qYIbn2mYPb/

    END Reprint from TimesWatch

    For a daily update on bias in the New York Times:
http://mrccyberalert.c.topica.com/maacr3jaa8qYJbn2mYPb/



    > 4) Kudos to NBC's Katie Couric for asking John Edwards a few
tough questions about the inconsistencies shown by him and John
Kerry on the Iraq war and questioning some of his shots at the
Bush-Cheney record, but her quizzing of Edwards in a taped
interview aired on Wednesday's Today came no where near how Matt
Lauer painted Dick Cheney as in extremist in 2000 by incessantly
grilling Cheney over his conservative positions. Other than Couric
referring to Kerry as a "liberal Democrat from Massachusetts,"
ideology never came up during Couric's session with Edwards and
his wife.

    Couric asked Edwards: "Do you concede that you have a bit of a
problem voting for a war and being one of four Senators who voted
against the funding necessary to wage it?" She also raised how the
high cost of medical malpractice insurance is preventing doctors
from practicing, but she began with a very open-ended question:
"There's been a lot made of the fact that you've made a lot of
money on personal injury lawsuits. And trial lawyers, sort of, has
become a dirty word or two dirty words in some circles. Why is
that?" Turning to Mrs. Edwards, Couric treated them as victims of
hostility from society: "Why do you think there's so much animus
against lawyers?"

    Couric also cued up the Edwards duo with anti-GOP Democratic
talking points, something Cheney did not get in the opposite
direction in 2000. Couric, for instance, wondered: "Do you think
the Governor [of Florida] decided the election last go around?"

    Back in 2000, on the July 27 Today, Dick Cheney wasn't given
such softballs. Amongst Lauer's inquiries in the form of mini-
polemics:

    -- "People are talking about your conservative record while a
Congressman from Wyoming and saying that perhaps that conservative
record will not help to attract swing voters like minorities and
women. Let's talk about some of those votes you took on abortion.
You were opposed to federal funding for abortion even in cases of
rape and incest. Do you still feel that way?"

    -- "On the subject of equal rights, you voted against the
Equal Rights Amendment. You consistently opposed funding for Head
Start programs and I read something yesterday and this was not a
bill, this was a resolution. But you voted against a resolution
that would have recommended freeing Nelson Mandela from a South
African prison. Why'd you do that?"

    -- "You have opposed almost all gun control measures. You were
one of only 21 members of Congress in 1985 to vote against a ban
on the so-called 'Cop Killer' bullets. Can you explain that for
me?"

    For a complete rundown of all the questions posed to Cheney on
the July 27, 2000 morning shows, including a RealPlayer excerpt
from the Lauer/Cheney session:
http://mrccyberalert.c.topica.com/maacr3jaa8qYKbn2mYPb/

    Now, to Wednesday's Today which featured two segments of
Couric's session with John and Elizabeth Edwards taped Tuesday in
a living room setting. The MRC's Geoff Dickens put together the
transcript.

    Couric set up the playback run in the 7am half hour of the
July 14 program: "On Close Up this morning John Edwards. I sat
down with the Democratic vice presidential candidate and his wife
Elizabeth on Tuesday for an exclusive interview. Despite a
nationwide bump in the polls after John Kerry picked Edwards as
his running mate I asked the North Carolina senator why a new poll
in his home state shows the Kerry/Edwards campaign down by as many
as 15 points there."
    John Edwards: "I'm no poll expert, I'll tell you that. I've
seen, I've also seen a number of polls that show the race is
basically a dead heat in North Carolina. What I do know is that,
as we move forward, and as people in North Carolina, I believe
embrace the idea of me being on a national ticket, somebody who's
represented them and, and they feel a real closeness and affinity
to. And as they know more about John Kerry I think they'll embrace
this ticket."
    Couric: "Really? A liberal Democrat from Massachusetts?"
    John Edwards: "Good try," a "hero in Vietnam."
    Couric: "Florida with its 27 electoral votes was the epicenter
of the election, of course back in 2000. Do you have a Florida
strategy?"
    John Edwards: wife's family lives there
    Couric: "That's 20 votes for you...In fact I know Mrs. Edwards
you have made a point of saying that you were born, I guess, in
Jacksonville, your parents were married in Pensacola, they live in
Sarasota now. You have a sister in Bradenton. Did I do my homework
or what?"
    Elizabeth Edwards: "You did."
    Couric: "You have family all over the state. Family ties are
great but doesn't George Bush have the ultimate family tie, with
his brother, the Governor?"
    Elizabeth Edwards: That helped last time.
    Couric: "Do you think the Governor decided the election last
go around?"
    Elizabeth Edwards: Had a pretty big role.
    Couric: "Do you agree with that?"
    John Edwards: Yes.
    Couric: "On Monday Vice President Dick Cheney said, 'When
Congress voted to authorize force against Saddam Hussein Senator
Kerry and Senator Edwards both voted yes. Now it seems they've
both developed a convenient case of campaign amnesia.'"
    John Edwards: VP wrong. Give authority was right vote, Saddam
gone is good, but authority abused by Bush and that hurt us around
world.
    Couric: "Well let me go back for a minute, Senator, if I could
because you knew that, that the coalition wasn't that strong when
you voted. You knew that there wasn't a firm exit strategy in
place and yet you still authorized the United States to invade
Iraq. Don't you have a responsibility when you vote yes to make
sure those things are in place? I mean how can you look back and
say, 'well this wasn't happening, this wasn't happening, and this
wasn't happening, but I voted yes, anyway?'"
    John Edwards: I didn't have control over what Bush did, didn't
do the planning. Wanted President to have authority, but Bush
responsibility to implement policy.
    Couric: "Let's talk about the $87 billion appropriation bill
which you voted against along with Senator Kerry. There's been a
change of tactic on the campaign trail. Senator Kerry is now
saying he's proud that the two of you voted against this because
you knew the policy had to be changed. In the past Mr. Kerry said
he voted against the bill because he thought it should be financed
by rolling back the Bush tax cuts. So which one was it? Was the
policy problematic or the financing of it? And, and do you concede
that you have a bit of a problem voting for a war and being one of
four senators who voted against the funding necessary to wage it?"
    John Edwards: "No Mam. I did what I think was right." On $87,
no allies, no plan to win peace, vote would have been stamp of
approval, stood up to say we have to change course.
    Couric: "What would be the exit strategy in a Kerry/Edwards
administration in Iraq?"
    John Edwards: Quicker training of Iraqis.
    Couric: "With all due respect, why would John Kerry be able to
do any better of a job than George Bush?"
    John Edwards: Because Bush team didn't plan.
    Couric: "Let me ask you about Dick Cheney. Do you know him
well?"
    John Edwards: "No."
    Couric: "What do you think of him?"
    John Edwards: Always been cordial and polite. Out of touch
with lives of most Americans, so hard to provide vision and hope,
I came from a mill, etc.
    Couric: "You don't think Dick Cheney wants to provide
opportunity-"
    John Edwards: Don't see any sign of it if it's true.

    Back on the Today set, Couric previewed part two: "And you can
see more of my conversation with Senator and Mrs. Edwards later in
the program. Find out what he thinks about U.S. intelligence
failures, the economy and why lawyer has become a dirty word for
many people. Meanwhile, tomorrow, he and Elizabeth Edwards will
talk about their relationship, their children and the special way
they celebrate their wedding anniversary every year. You might be
surprised."

    Part two ran during the 9am half hour. Couric introduced it:
"Now more of my exclusive interview with vice presidential
candidate John Edwards and his wife Elizabeth. When I sat down
with them in Washington on Tuesday I asked the Senator about the
recent highly critical Senate report on intelligence failures
leading up to the invasion of Iraq."
    John Edwards: Bush administration never recognized problem
with intel.
    Couric: "Let's talk about the economy. The mantra of the
Clinton campaign as you remember was, 'It's the economy, stupid.'
But it seems like the economy is actually improving. Are you
concerned that if the economy does get better people will have
fewer reasons to vote for you and John Kerry?"
    John Edwards: Quality of jobs declining, new ones pay $9,000
less on average than jobs they are replacing. Families on edge of
"going off the cliff." We can do better.
    Couric: "How?"
    John Edwards: Job plan, strengthening middle class, improving
schools, helping people save, fix health care.
    Couric: "Since you're both lawyers let me ask you about the
whole trial lawyer issue. There's been a lot made of the fact that
you've made a lot of money on personal injury lawsuits. And trial
lawyers, sort of, has become a dirty word or two dirty words in
some circles. Why is that?"
    John Edwards: I am proud of fighting for kids and families.
    Couric: "But shouldn't the system be reformed in some way
though, Senator Edwards, because I know that, for example, there
are doctors who can't practice in some states because their
medical malpractice insurance has skyrocketed....and they have to
either move or they have to switch professions. I mean isn't
something wrong with this picture?"
    John Edwards: Yes.
    Couric: "Well isn't it because these big, huge, massive
lawsuits?"
    Elizabeth Edwards: No.
    John Edwards: Solution is to keep cases out of system, have
lawyers determine if case has merit.
    Couric: "Isn't that like the fox guarding the hen house?"
    John Edwards: No.
    Couric: "Or that it's frivolous."
    John Edwards: Vast majority should never have been in legal
system.
    Couric: "Why do you think there's so much animus against
lawyers?"
    Elizabeth Edwards: Just an easy target, driven by politics.

    Couric wrapped up: "And tomorrow we'll have much more with
Elizabeth and John Edwards. They'll tell us about their family,
the unique way they celebrate their anniversary and what their
kids think of their dad being voted People magazine's 'Sexiest
Politician.'"


    Sorry I missed that this morning.


-- Brent Baker


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