It is not the facts that are in question. It is the manner in which the main stream media which has been documented countless times as liberal bias, reports the news.
Stories are editorialized and packaged with a view point.
Editorial news boards often decide what is news and what is not.
What is labeled journalism now, is a mere shred of what it once was.
Nearly every story we see as reported by the MSM has editorial commentary or the writer/reporter him/herself has injected opinion into the story.
Because the liberals had owned the media for decades, the advent of Fox News which you view as biased,, is actually balanced. Factually, the network's talk shows feature conservative commentary. Your side confuses this with the Fox News division.
Because of this, and the fact that liberals had no competition in the news and commentary marketplace, your side is incensed.
in your opinion its a "liberal bias" simply because you disagree with the facts of matter.
i dont view fox news as "biased" i view them as liars since they went to court and won based on the fact that they do not have to tell the truth. so why would i pay attention to a "news" source who has already stated that they are unwilling to tell the truth?
As previously stated, it is not the facts of the story that are in question. It is the manner in which those facts are reported. Or more accurately, packaged.
If the news went untouched by ideology of the left, this discussion would be moot.
Anyway, a few links debunking your desperate attempt to protect the MSM from any criticism.
Quick question, why is it that most major publishers and editorial boards endorse democrat candidates? When is the last time the Publisher of USA Today for example, endorsed a non liberal for President?
Media Bias Basics
Oh, now Fox News is made up of liars...
Look genius, the fact that most main stream media "news" is affected by an editorial bias to the left is in no greater evidence than that of the tumbling ad revenues for most daily newspapers
In announcing pay cuts, reductions in health-care plan support and another buyout offer, the Newark Star-Ledger revealed that it now expects its advertising revenue for the year to be 48 percent less than it was in 2006.
A commenter on McClatchy Watch who appears to have some knowledge of what company management is thinking, says there are no more plans for staff cuts at the company. McClatchy realizes it cut too deeply in the last round of layoffs and has to focus on revenue growth instead of more cost reduction to dig out of its hole. Refreshing philosophy, if true.
The founders of Elauwit Media, a community media company based in Haddonfield, N.J. write of the decline of major metro dailies with not a small amount of pride. Their business is growing nicely, thank you, from $100,000 in revenue in 2004 to $2.4 million in 2008. The secret: “Everybody Gets It. Everybody Reads It.” In other words, stop charging subscribers. “Huge regional daily newspapers would do better to stop requiring people to subscribe and instead deliver the paper to everybody in their target demographic…If big newspapers would charge the advertisers, not the readers, they could still turn things around.” Why didn’t we think of that?
The San Francisco Chronicle laid off “more than a dozen top reporters” last week, according to a story on the local CBS website. There are few specifics, but given that the Chronicle is trying to cut its way from $50 million in annual losses to break-even, you can expect more to come.
Daniel Baum, who was fired from the New Yorker in 2007, is taking the very un-New Yorker approach of tweeting the story, as well as details about the inner workings of the literary magazine. We doubt the New Yorker has ever said anything in 140 characters.
Mcclatchy | Newspaper Death Watch