Media changed with the revisionist movement. Bad news is not pleasant unless it is politically motivated or involves the failings of those poor creatures: human beings. Pleasure often grows from the pain of others and bad news appeals to that side of us.
One of the big revisionist piece is the transformation of Joe McCarthy by the right. Fear seems to create insanity in some, 911 demonstrated that so well. Political correctness now informs all information and since communism was bad Joe was good; how else can some use the term today to marginalize others.
But Media is corporate owned and operated and its members come from the higher reaches of society and have learned the game. The game is don't be too outspoken or you will find yourself marginalizes as Howard Zinn or Noam Chomsky are, be good and praise ChinaMart or you may lose your job or find yourself doing the wedding page. And so it goes....
Here is an excellent contemporary example of R and spin too. BS in utterwords.
The Rachel Maddow Show: Revisionist History | Video Cafe
Joe Friday:
FactCheck.org
truthfulpolitics.com - Truthful Politics on taxes, government spending, economic performance, healthcare, abortion, gay marriage, religion, and other political issues.
their corruption list
truthfulpolitics.com - Truthful Politics and Corruption
stats - helpful?
Gallup.Com - Daily News, Polls, Public Opinion on Government, Politics, Economics, Management
fox watchers
News Hounds: We watch FOX so you don't have to.
interesting who got more negative media?
Media Bias: Going beyond Fair and Balanced: Scientific American
"Claims of media bias raised by politicians from either party should be regarded as exceptionally suspect for several reasons. First, politicians might prefer that a news source be perceived as biased against them, even if the source is actually unbiased. As Matthew Baum and I demonstrate elsewhere (Baum and Groeling forthcoming), when members of the public perceive the news to be biased against a candidate or party, harmful messages from that outlet are discounted, while favorable messages are seen as particularly credible. Similarly, partisans might strategically choose to allege bias--even in the absence of such bias--in an attempt to "work the ref"--that is, vociferously protest a close call in an attempt to have the next one go your way."
Who's the fairest of them all? An empirical test for partisan bias on ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox News. | Goliath Business News