-Caveat Lector-

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 27 Jun 2003 08:24:28 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: 'Ferocious' Conservatives Block Equality,
     Limbaugh in 'Extreme'

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
     11:20am EDT, Friday June 27, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 120)
  The 1,527th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> "Ferocious" Conservatives Block Equality, Limbaugh in "Extreme"
> ABC, NBC, NY Times & Wash Post All Find Unsatisfied Seniors
> NBC's Drug Price Victim Really a Lobbying Group's Operative
> MRC's "DisHonors Awards" on C-SPAN Saturday Night, June 28
> "Top Ten Perks of Being a Member of the Blue Angels"

    #### Distributed to more than 14,000 subscribers by the Media
Research Center, bringing political balance to the news media
since 1987. The MRC is the leader in documenting, exposing and
neutralizing liberal media bias. Visit the MRC on the Web:
http://www.mediaresearch.org. CyberAlerts from this year are at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/welcome.asp
For 2002: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive02.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC donations page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030627.asp ####

1) Where have all the liberals gone? In relaying reaction to the
Supreme Court's 6-3 decision on gay rights, the broadcast network
evening news shows contrasted those "in favor of gay rights" with
"conservatives." ABC's Cynthia McFadden complained about derisive
attitude of conservatives: "Gays and lesbians are clearly
encouraged, but given some of the ferocious language on the other
side, full equality may be a good ways off." NBC's Roger O'Neill
tagged Rush Limbaugh as an "extremist" for daring to cite Justice
Scalia's dissent. O'Neill charged: "On the extremes, talk show
host Rush Limbaugh lambasting the court, agreeing with Justice
Anthony Scalia's dissenting opinion that the court has taken sides
with gays in America's cultural wars."

2) ABC, NBC, the New York Times and Washington Post on Thursday
delivered another round of complaints that the proposed new
Medicare prescription benefit doesn't go far enough. ABC's Linda
Douglass decided that "many will be disappointed" since "many
seniors will be surprised to learn how much they will still have
to pay out of pocket." On Today, Matt Lauer grilled Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist from the left, pressing him about "this
donut hole in coverage." Lauer demanded: "If I'm a senior and I'm
paying my, my monthly premium why should I have to then fork over
all the money during that, that gap period?" Front page New York
Times and Washington Post stories relayed whining from selfish and
ungrateful seniors who want others to pay their expenses.

3) More evidence that the supposedly typical victims of high
prescription costs featured by the networks are hardly average
seniors. They are really political activists who are part of a
political lobbying campaign by a liberal group, the AARP, which
consistently pushes for ever bigger government and more spending.
NBC's Norah O'Donnell highlighted this victim: "77-year-old Pat
Roussos of Connecticut, who suffers from arthritis, diabetes and
high blood pressure. Her out-of-pocket drug costs now, as much as
$6,500 a year." But, Roussos is really a top dog in an AARP state
chapter.

4) Tomorrow night, Saturday June 28, C-SPAN will air the MRC's
"DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal
Reporters of 2002."

5) As read by ten Blue Angel pilots, Letterman's "Top Ten Perks of
Being a Member of the Blue Angels."


    +++ Correction: A June 26 CyberAlert item about a CBS Evening
News story on Alabama Governor Bob Riley stated: "CBS has found a
Republican it can admire: One who wants to raise taxes and spend
more." Reporter Mark Strassmann summarized Riley's plan: "His plan
is heresy to many conservatives. He wants the poor to pay less and
the rich to pay more as a matter of Christian conscience." While
Riley's plan does raise the income tax "from 5 percent to 6
percent for individual incomes over $75,000 and family incomes
over $150,000" (see:
http://www.governorpress.state.al.us/pr/pr-2003-05-20-03-gr-summar
y.asp ), he is not increasing spending and has cut it by about
$200 million according to Mobile Register columnist Quin Hillyer.
See Hillyer's May 29 column:
http://www.al.com/opinion/mobileregister/qhillyer.ssf?/xml/story.s
sf/html_standard.xsl?/base/opinion/1054199997287710.xml
A press release on the Riley's Web site also boasts of the cuts:
http://www.governorpress.state.al.us/pr/pr-2003-05-20-01-gr-cuts.asp


    > 1) Where have all the liberals gone? In relaying reaction to
the Supreme Court's 6-3 decision announced on Thursday which,
based on privacy rights, invalidated state laws barring consensual
homosexual sexual relations, the broadcast network evening news
shows contrasted those "in favor of gay rights" with
"conservatives." Surely some conservatives agreed with the
decision, since keeping government out of the bedroom is a leading
strain of libertarian thought, and all of the "gay rights"
spokesmen are themselves liberals.

    ABC's Cynthia McFadden didn't hide her personal angst over
impediments ahead for the gay rights cause. She concluded her
World News Tonight story: "Gays and lesbians are clearly
encouraged, but given some of the ferocious language on the other
side, full equality may be a good ways off."

    NBC's Roger O'Neill tagged Rush Limbaugh as an "extremist" for
daring to cite Justice Scalia's dissent about how a federal court
has no business telling a state which types of sex it must
approve. O'Neill charged: "On the extremes, talk show host Rush
Limbaugh lambasting the court, agreeing with Justice Anthony
Scalia's dissenting opinion that the court has taken sides with
gays in America's cultural wars."

    A quick rundown on those themes on the June 26 ABC, CBS and
NBC evening newscasts:

    -- ABC's World News Tonight. Cynthia McFadden's labeling.
Leading into a clip from Matt Coles of the ACLU, she asserted:
"Initial reactions to the opinion were swift and predictable.
Those in favor of gay rights considered the opinion a triumph."

    On the other side, she saw conservatives: "While on talk radio
conservatives called the decision a travesty."
    Caller: "Once again our Supreme Court has proved how un-
supreme its wisdom is."
    Sandy Rios of Concerned Women of America: "I thought it was a
raw act of judicial tyranny, the very reason why we are fighting
to get good justices in the Supreme Court."

    McFadden concluded, however, by expressing fears about the
attitudes of conservatives: "Listening to reactions today, there
is one other thing, Peter: Gays and lesbians are clearly
encouraged, but given some of the ferocious language on the other
side, full equality may be a good ways off."

    "Ferocious"? The only critical comments she aired were the
ones from the talk show caller and Rios. In a previous story,
Jackie Judd had cited how Scalia complained that the court had
"signed on to the so-called homosexual agenda," "taken sides in
the culture war" and predicted the ruling would mean "the end of
all moral legislation."


    -- CBS Evening News. Richard Schlesinger, referring to the two
gay men in Texas whose arrest led to the Supreme Court case, said
"they became reluctant symbols in this case for gay rights
activists who are ecstatic with the decision."

    Following a clip of Patricia Logue with th Lambda Legal
Defense and Education Fund, Schlesinger labeled the other side as
he led into a soundbite from Richard Lessner of the Family
Research Council: "Conservative groups quickly condemned the
decision."

    In a second story, CBS's Bob McNamara cited radio talk show
host Marlin Maddoux who "has championed conservative causes for
years." McNamara concluded his reaction story by warning: "Already
conservatives are promising state capitals, including Texas, a
flurry of bills in coming sessions to try to undo the
controversial ruling."


    -- NBC Nightly News. "Gay rights groups were jubilant over
today's sweeping decision," Pete Williams announced before a clip
from Ruth Harlow, identified on screen as a "gay rights advocate."
Williams then introduced a soundbite from the Family Research
Council's Peter Sprigg: "Conservative groups today roundly
criticized the ruling as overreaching."

    Next, Roger O'Neill took the pulse of America, but found only
one extremist, Rush Limbaugh:
    "From Main Street to Wall Street, the Supreme Court's two big
decisions this week leave regular Americans with plenty to ponder.
Are American values under assault? Or were the rulings on sexual
privacy today and affirmative action three days ago lessen the
divide in the nation? On the extremes, talk show host Rush
Limbaugh lambasting the court, agreeing with Justice Anthony
Scalia's dissenting opinion that the court has taken sides with
gays in America's cultural wars."
    Limbaugh, on the radio, via streaming video: "'I don't
understand why we the Supreme Court can decide. It's a cultural
question and the people of Texas are the ones who decide this, not
us.'"
    O'Neill: "But Stuart Taylor, who's followed and written about
the Supreme Court for 23 years, says the justices have a long
history of judicial activism...."

    If Limbaugh quoting Scalia makes puts him on the "extreme,"
doesn't that mean O'Neill is denigrating three current Supreme
Courts justices as extremists as well as the majority of the 1986
court which upheld state sodomy laws?



    > 2) ABC, NBC, the New York Times and Washington Post on
Thursday delivered another round of advocacy stories or interviews
complaining that the proposed new prescription benefit in
Medicare, the biggest ever expansion of an entitlement program,
doesn't go far enough.

    All the stories focused almost exclusively on how the program
will not begin until 2006 or doesn't cover enough of the
prescription costs, only as an afterthought getting to how a
federal entitlement may lead employers and private insurance
companies to drop the prescription coverage plans they now offer.

    ABC's Linda Douglass decided that "many will be disappointed"
since, she warned on World News Tonight, "the plan does not take
effect for two-and-a-half years" and "many seniors will be
surprised to learn how much they will still have to pay out of
pocket for their medicines, roughly $700 before the insurance
kicks in, another $1,000 to $3,000 for those who fall through the
gap in coverage that effects seniors with higher drug bills."

    Thursday morning on Today, Matt Lauer grilled Senate Majority
Leader Bill Frist from the left, pressing him about "this donut
hole in coverage." Lauer pleaded: "But if I'm a senior and I'm
paying my, my monthly, you know, premium why should I have to then
fork over all the money during that, that gap period?"

    How about some concern for taxpayers having to be burdened by
another giveaway program?

    New York Times reporter Sheryl Gay Stolberg began a one-sided
front page story with whining from one senior citizen: "After 85
years on this earth, 36 of them as a schoolteacher, and more than
60 as a taxpayer, Vela Fox figures the government ought not forget
her in her old age. Asked about efforts by Congress to give older
Americans some relief from the high cost of prescription drugs,
the normally mild-mannered Mrs. Fox lets loose with a tirade that
could shake the magnolia blooms off the trees."

    Fox demanded: "I would fix it to where senior citizens had
their prescription drugs paid for. Not partial, but all of it."

    Similarly, in a front page Washington Post story on Thursday
Ceci Connolly focused on some selfish and ungrateful seniors:
"They were disappointed that in most cases, benefits would not
begin until a person spent nearly $1,000 a year on prescription
drugs. And they were annoyed -- but not totally surprised -- that
the program would not begin until 2006."

    Now, more details about those three stories and one interview
session, all from June 26:

    -- ABC's World News Tonight. Linda Douglass began, as taken
down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "House Republicans were already
celebrating their prescription drug legislation today even though
it had not passed yet."
    Rep. Tom DeLay, House Majority Leader: "Our seniors deserve a
viable, reliable Medicare program for the 21st century, and we're
going to give them one."
    Douglass: "Yesterday the President promised Congress that
passing this bill will pay off politically."
    George W. Bush: "We can all go back to our districts -- in my
case, tour the country -- and say we have accomplished a major
objective, together we worked together."
    Douglass countered from the left: "But health experts say the
politicians haven't leveled with seniors about what they will
really get in this plan. Many will be disappointed."
    Drew Altman, Kaiser Family Foundation: "It's quite important
that our national leaders begin to talk about what this
legislation will and won't do, begin to lower expectations."
    Douglass: "First, the plan does not take effect for two-and-a-
half years."
    Al Shapiro, senior: "I am 86 years old, this gentleman is 87
years old. We're all in our eighties. So that 2006 is a long, long
way."
    Douglass: "Many seniors will be surprised to learn how much
they will still have to pay out of pocket for their medicines,
roughly $700 before the insurance kicks in, another $1,000 to
$3,000 for those who fall through the gap in coverage that effects
seniors with higher drug bills. And retired workers who now get
prescription drug coverage through their company plans may lose
those benefits as employers push them into the government program.
Retired textile worker Bruce Dunton is worried."
    Bruce Dunton, retired textile worker: "Whether it be the union
or a private employer, they'll just take the benefit away."
    Douglass: "Congress will continue hammering out the fine
points of this legislation over the summer. America's seniors will
be watching. Linda Douglass, ABC News, Capitol Hill."


    -- NBC's Today. MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens caught Lauer's
liberal agenda push in Lauer's interview with Senator Bill Frist:

    Lauer assumed passing a bill is desirable: "I guess it's safe
to say that the House and Senate are both going to pass their
versions of this Medicare legislation. The real problem is gonna
occur when you try to bridge the gap or the differences in those
plans. How hard is it gonna be?"

    Next, Lauer painted conservatives as an annoying impediment:
"But conservatives in the House want to get more seniors into
privately run, managed care programs. They want more free market
competition in this plan. They hate the sound of an entitlement
program. The Senate version seems to be more of an entitlement
program. How many concessions are you gonna need from
conservatives?"

    Lauer then got to the big government plan's shortcoming, not
spending enough: "Let me ask you about this donut hole in
coverage. And it, it's complicated and let me try to explain it.
People who need prescription drugs perhaps the most are gonna
reach a point in their coverage at about $4,500 over the course of
a year where they're going to have to take on all the expense of
those drugs until they reach perhaps $5,800 in expenses where the
catastrophic side of this plan kicks over, kicks in. Why is the
need there for that donut hole?"
    Frist: "Well first of all remember the gap with the donut hole
is complete now. It's 100 percent gap. Seniors do not have access
to prescription drugs through Medicare today. So it's a 100
percent gap. We're gonna take that gap down to about three
percent. In other words only three percent of people will fall in
that gap."
    Lauer argued: "But if I'm a senior and I'm paying my, my
monthly, you know, premium why should I have to then fork over all
the money during that, that gap period?"

    Lauer warned that not all are aboard the great new idea: "Let
me, let me read you something from the Wall Street Journal today.
They cite a recent poll taken by Zogby International. After
hearing details of the Senate plan now in the works 74 percent of
seniors with drug coverage said that it wouldn't be better than
what they have. 16 percent said it would be better and of those
seniors without the coverage only 16 percent said they'd be very
likely to buy the new policy. Do you have some selling to do
here?"


    -- Front page New York Times story, "New Drug Plan Far From
Cure-All, Retirees Find," by Sheryl Gay Stolberg. An excerpt:

NASHVILLE, June 24 -- After 85 years on this earth, 36 of them as
a schoolteacher, and more than 60 as a taxpayer, Vela Fox figures
the government ought not forget her in her old age. Asked about
efforts by Congress to give older Americans some relief from the
high cost of prescription drugs, the normally mild-mannered Mrs.
Fox lets loose with a tirade that could shake the magnolia blooms
off the trees.

"If you want to know my opinion," she said on Monday, taking a
break from her work teaching ceramics at a center for retirees
here, "up in Washington, D.C., I don't think they care a rip about
the senior citizens. If I went up there and had that bill written
tomorrow, I would fix it to where senior citizens had their
prescription drugs paid for. Not partial, but all of it. Now
that's Vela's opinion."

Mrs. Fox's opinion, passionate though it may be, will not become
reality for her and countless other elderly people who have spent
years waiting for a Medicare prescription drug benefit.

In Washington, President Bush and Congressional leaders praise the
Medicare legislation as historic. But here, as elsewhere in the
country, retirees are experiencing what Robert J. Blendon, a
health policy expert at the Harvard School of Public Health, calls
"sticker shock" -- the realization that, after so many promises,
the proposed drug benefit will look nothing like what they
expected.

They are confused by the complex structure of the plans, and upset
that the coverage will not begin until 2006; Mrs. Fox said she did
not expect to live that long. They do not understand why the
proposals have a "doughnut hole," a gap in coverage.

Mrs. Fox, for example, spends roughly $2,400 a year -- nearly one
fourth her Social Security check -- on medication, and under the
bills widely expected to pass the House and Senate this week, she
would still spend $1,400 to $1,750, including a $420 premium.

Those who already have benefits fear they will be forced into a
less generous government plan. And there is a strong sense that
Congress is all talk and no action, and that nothing will be
passed in the end.

Here in Nashville, some are directing their ire at a man they know
well: the Senate majority leader, Bill Frist, a Tennessee
Republican and doctor-turned-lawmaker who has made prescription
drug legislation his signature issue.

"Do you think anybody in Washington has any idea what people on a
limited income have to do to live?" asked Ed Human, 68, a diabetic
who said he voted Republican. Of Dr. Frist, who is independently
wealthy through his stake in a hospital corporation his family
founded, Mr. Human said: "He's a nice guy, that's fine. But he
doesn't have a clue."...

    END of Excerpt

    For the skewed story in full:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/26/politics/26VOIC.html


    -- "For Struggling Seniors, Medicare Drug Plan's Proof Is in
the Purse," announced the headline over a front page Washington
Post story by Ceci Connolly, who traveled to Cleveland to find
dissatisfied, low income seniors. An excerpt:

CLEVELAND -- As the Medicare drug package moving through Congress
takes on an air of inevitability, Washington politicians are
already jostling for credit. But in this working-class city 370
miles from Capitol Hill, prospects for the plan's eventual success
may lie deep inside the handbags of women such as Marie A. Urban.

Stashed in there are her monthly Social Security statement, a
half-dozen prescription discount cards and insurance letters
rejecting several recent medical claims. The scraps of paper --
creased and scribbled on -- document a life near the financial
edge.

After working 24 years as the secretary at St. Paul's Shrine,
Urban, 72, collects $843.70 a month in Social Security. After
housing and Medicare payments, she has $459 for utilities, food,
car insurance, taxes and medication. "Some months I have 87 cents
to live on," she said. With her drug bills this year already
exceeding $1,500, she said she probably will try to cobble
together the money to buy the prescription coverage that lawmakers
plan to offer Medicare recipients.

"I don't know," she said. "My finances right now are very tight. I
guess I'd have to go with it."

In interviews at two senior centers here, Urban and other retirees
expressed deeply mixed feelings about the voluntary prescription
drug benefit scheduled for votes in Congress as early as today.
They exhibited a visceral distrust of Washington, voicing
skepticism that elected officials would deliver a package that
fits their health needs and budgetary constraints -- in time for
them to use it. They were disappointed that in most cases,
benefits would not begin until a person spent nearly $1,000 a year
on prescription drugs. And they were annoyed -- but not totally
surprised -- that the program would not begin until 2006....

Both the House and Senate plans would require seniors to pay about
$35 in monthly premiums and an annual deductible of $250 to $275
before receiving any subsidy. The Senate plan would cover half of
a person's annual drug expenditures between $276 and $4,500. The
recipient would pay the next $1,300 in prescription costs. If the
person's total drug costs rose above $5,800 in a year, subsidies
would resume.

The House bill would offer retirees an 80 percent subsidy on drug
bills between $251 and $2,000 and no coverage for the next $1,500
worth of medications. The "catastrophic coverage" would begin when
costs reached $3,501.

Asked whether either plan was attractive, Emily Eckert pulled a
tiny notebook from her purse. It listed her daily medications: two
pills to control sugar, one for high blood pressure, another to
regulate potassium. Using her People's Drug Mart discount card --
also tucked in her pocketbook -- Eckert spends about $100 a month
on prescriptions, plus $22 for diabetes test strips....

At 79, she has outlived two husbands, but at a high cost. Caring
for her first husband, who had cancer, and the second, who had
diabetes, wiped out $7,000 in savings and two life insurance
policies valued at $3,000. Eckert has been in bankruptcy and
worries about helping her three children, 10 grandchildren and 10
great-grandchildren.

"If it wasn't for this center, I'd be starving," she said,
referring to the Senior Citizens Resources facility in the Old
Brooklyn neighborhood. She wants to buy the drug coverage proposed
for Medicare but isn't certain she will be able to pay the
premiums.

The situations of Marie Urban and Emily Eckert may sound dire, but
in many respects they are typical for the millions of senior
citizens and disabled people who rely on Medicare for their health
care. Not poor enough to qualify for Medicaid, yet not fortunate
enough to have substantial savings or a lucrative retirement
package, such people have clamored for years for help with the
rising cost of medication....

    END of Excerpt

    For the story in full:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A33599-2003Jun25.html

     Connolly's story never noted that the type of seniors she
profiled, those with very low incomes, would get fuller coverage
than those at higher incomes. In Friday's Washington Times,
"Inside Politics" columnist Greg Pierce passed along:

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas, California
Republican, never afraid to pick a fight, accused The Washington
Post yesterday of misleading readers about his prescription-drug
bill.

A story in yesterday's Post featured low-income seniors struggling
to pay their prescription-drugs bills. Mr. Thomas said he read the
entire Post article and that "nowhere in that story" did it say
that his bill would actually cover such impoverished seniors.

The people in question would pay no premiums, no deductibles and
would not be subject to a gap in coverage, he said. All they would
have to pay is a $2 co-pay for generic drugs and a $5 co-pay for
prescription drugs.

So bad was the front-page story -- datelined from Cleveland --
that Mr. Thomas lumped the paper in with the New York Times,
recently exposed for printing outright fabrications. The "virus,"
he said during a press conference, that "attacked The New York
Times has apparently migrated down the coast."

    END of Excerpt

    For Pierce's daily compilation of political/media news:
http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/inpolitics.htm



    > 3) More evidence that the supposedly typical victims of high
prescription costs featured by the networks are hardly average
seniors. They are often really political activists who are part of
a political lobbying campaign by a liberal group, the AARP, which
consistently pushes for ever bigger government and more spending.

    NBC's Norah O'Donnell highlighted this victim: "77-year-old
Pat Roussos of Connecticut, who suffers from arthritis, diabetes
and high blood pressure. Her out-of-pocket drug costs now, as much
as $6,500 a year." But, the MRC's Tim Graham discovered, Roussos
is really a top dog in an AARP state chapter.

    This isn't the first time the networks have been sneaky in how
they use supposed victims. As reported in the June 19 CyberAlert:
What a coincidence. Two years apart CBS News and ABC News featured
the same elderly woman, in news stories about the need for a new
prescription drug coverage program in Medicare and the
shortcomings of Republican-pushed alternatives, as the poster
victim of high prescription prices.

    For side-by-side pictures of the woman:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030619.asp#5

    On Monday's NBC Nightly News, Norah O'Donnell asserted: "The
AARP argues the plan in Congress, backed by President Bush, will
short-change seniors."
    John Rother, AARP Policy Director: "People are disappointed
that there isn't more of a benefit here. And sometimes they're
mad. Sometimes they think, well, at least it's a first start. But
everyone is disappointed."
    O'Donnell found a victim: "Like 77-year-old Pat Roussos of
Connecticut, who suffers from arthritis, diabetes and high blood
pressure. Her out-of-pocket drug costs now, as much as $6,500 a
year."
    Pat Roussos: "It's only a start, and I'm not convinced it's
going to go very far."
    O'Donnell: "That's because the government will only pay for
half of drug costs up to $4500, and then there's a huge gap: no
coverage until drug costs exceed $5800."
    Roussos: "I can't imagine that working because those are the
people who actually need to have the help."

    So just who is Roussos? Graham discovered that she's the
"Connecticut Community Coordinator" for AARP who "oversees the
state's 72 chapters," according to an AARP newsletter. For a PDF
of it with a picture of her on page 3 behind an AARP labeled
lectern: http://www.aarp.org/connections/pdf/CT.pdf

    For more on the June 23 NBC story:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030625.asp#1



    > 4) Tomorrow night, Saturday, C-SPAN will air the MRC's
"DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal
Reporters of 2002."

    The C-SPAN schedule lists the awards (which they designate as
lasting an hour and 15 minutes) as running twice on Saturday
night, June 28.

    By time zone:
EDT: 9:10pm and 12:40am
CDT: 8:10pm and 11:40pm
MDT: 7:10pm and 10:40pm
PDT: 6:10pm and 9:40pm

    Those times could change and C-SPAN times are approximate, so
tune in early. To check C-SPAN's Saturday schedule:
http://inside.c-spanarchives.org:8080/cspan/fullschedule.csp?timeid=211923530179

    C-SPAN's coverage should show all the award presenters, the
video clips of the nominated biased stories, and the remarks from
the acceptors.

    A summary of the MRC event:

On Thursday night, March 27, before an audience of more than 800
at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington, D.C., the Media Research
Center presented the "DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most
Outrageously Biased Liberal Reporters of 2002."

It was a humorous evening as the audience relished mocking the
media's anti-conservative agenda and promotion of ludicrous
liberal reasoning.

Winners were selected by a distinguished panel of 15 leading media
observers who served as judges -- including Rush Limbaugh,
Lawrence Kudlow, Steve Forbes, Cal Thomas, William F. Buckley Jr.,
along with Lucianne Goldberg, Michael Reagan, Kate O'Beirne, John
Fund, Robert Novak, Walter Williams, L. Brent Bozell III, William
Rusher, R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. and Stephen Moore. List of judges:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/dishonor/03/best.asp
#judges

Cal Thomas, a syndicated columnist and host of FNC's After Hours
with Cal Thomas, served as Master of Ceremonies. Sean Hannity,
national radio talk show host and co-host of FNC's Hannity &
Colmes, was the first presenter, followed by national radio talk
show host Laura Ingraham and columnist/author Ann Coulter. In
place of the journalist who won each award, a conservative
accepted it in jest.

Those standing in for the winners: National Review Editor Rich
Lowry, Club for Growth President Steve Moore, Judge Robert Bork,
columnist/author Mona Charen and, filling in at last minute for
Rush Limbaugh, whose plane was grounded by weather and so was
unable make what was planned to be a surprise appearance,
Washington Times editorial page editor Tony Blankley.

The five award categories:

-- Ozzy Osbourne Award (for the Wackiest Comment of the Year)

-- The I'm Not a Geopolitical Genius But I Play One on TV Award

-- And They Called It Puppy Love Award

-- Ashamed of the Red, White, and Blue Award

-- I Hate You Conservatives Award

    For more about the awards event, the list of judges and
RealPlayer clips of the event, see:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/dishonor/03/welcome.asp



    > 5) From the June 19 Late Show with David Letterman, as read
by ten Blue Angel pilots at the Stewart International Airport and
Air National Guard Base in Newburgh, New York, as they stood in
front of one of their planes, the "Top Ten Perks of Being a Member
of the Blue Angels." Late Show Web site:
http://www.cbs.com/latenight/lateshow/

10. While those Army guys are marching through the mud, I'm flying
around eating peanuts
(Major Ken Asbridge)

9. I get a 10% discount off any Blockbuster movie that has an
airplane in it
(Major Dave Morris)

8. Get to make extra money using my airplane to deliver
drycleaning on the weekends
(Major Chandler Seagraves)

7. Make a perfect landing, Uncle Sam buys you a Slurpee
(Lieutenant Craig Olson)

6. I get to say things like, "Bravo foxtrot alpha measured ceiling
is 4,000 broken," even if I have no idea what that means
(Major Len Anderson)

5. Ejection seat makes hilarious "boing" sound effect
(Lieutenant Commander Jerry Deren)

4. Once, I saw a cloud formation that looked like Richard Dreyfuss
(Lieutenant Commander Dan Martin)

3. You get really familiar with this sound (jet sound)
(Lieutenant Commander David Varner)

2. After three years, I have an option to buy my plane
(Lieutenant Commander Todd Abrahamson)

1. To hell with the Mile High Club, I'm a member of the Mach Two
Club"
(Commander Russ Bartlett)


    > Don't forget: MRC's "DisHonors Awards" on C-SPAN on Saturday
night.

-- Brent Baker


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