Mehdi Hasan’s aggressive interviewing style landed him a Sunday show at MSNBC. Until he started talking about Palestine. Now he’s launched his own venture on Substack, Zeteo, where he can say anything he wants.
On Tuesday's "Good Morning America," co-host Chris Cuomo and media critic Howard Kurtz ignored the role that liberal bias has played in the decline of ratings for the network evening newscasts. At the same time, Cuomo and Washington Post reporter seemed to be proud of the media's ability to turn Americans against the war in Iraq. Kurtz, who has written a book on the subject, asserted, "I believe that these newscasts in 2005 and 2006 played the biggest single role in helping to turn public opinion against the war." Cuomo agreed and complimented the journalist's analysis. He enthused, "It's easy to say, 'Oh, well. The war was unpopular. People were looking for the unpopularity of it. At some point, the networks gave that to them.' But you have a more penetrating look at it. You take a look at it in terms of the role of the nightly newscasts in shaping the ideas about the news..." According to Kurtz, the top three network anchors kept "framing the story in such a way" that the bad news finally had an impact. And while the two reporters wondered about the effect the iPod and internet are having on network low ratings, at no time did they discuss liberal bias or salient facts such as that journalists backed John Kerry over George Bush by a two-to-one margin.
giving you a stronger lawn. release the hounds! smell that freedom, eh? i smell it! i'm still talking to the dogs. get scotts turf builder rapid grass today, it's guaranteed. feed your lawn. feed it. 25 years later the shadow of the columbine school shooting remains. this weekend president biden marked the somber occasion saying he and the first lady prayed for the survivors but know the pain never goes away. joining me now is nbc's kate snow. kate, what does like look like
not every day is guaranteed. >> amy now shares her story with survivors of other mass shootings. >> i don't know i went through columbine. i think i'm here to help. >> you look so pretty. >> this year, helping bree prepare for prom and graduation, amy says she is filled with hope. >> so many people watched what happened at columbine and all of these years later, they probably wonder how you all are. >> it still hurts. it is never going to fully heal but there is hope. i get to watch my kids grow. it is time for the next chapter. you look really beautiful. >> kate snow, nbc news, parker, colorado. from that sobering story have to go to this, why cary lakes is suggesting supporters strap on a glock for 2024. a new book from a national security expert and that's next. next. help you make
this weekend marks 25 years since the columbine shooting that left 13 people dead. since then it's a tragedy we've seen repeated far too many times. tonight, our kate snow visits with a survivor from that day who now has a daughter the same age she was then. >> yeah, so pretty. >> reporter: preparing a daughter for senior prom is a big moment for any mother. >> love it. >> reporter: but for colorado mom amy over, it's especially emotional. 25 years ago this week, amy went to her own senior prom at columbine high school just three days before the mass shooting. >> 25 years later, you now have a daughter who is a senior in high school. >> i do. i can't wait for her future. and i think that's why i get so choked up when i talk about her and my kids, because the last time i was normal, not normal, but amy normal was prom.
Eager to see the total eclipse, thousands of drivers headed toward prime viewing locations and found themselves sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic from Massachusetts to Vermont to Maine.
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