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Looking for a balance to Fox Programs
As abrasive and condescending as they are, my source of news lately has been Fox News Channel. Because of all the criticism of the channel and their conservative views, I've decided to look for another program to watch that would serve as a counter, like a ying to the O'Reilly Factor's and Hannity & Colmes' yang.
Ideas? At least Greta seems somewhat Fair and Balanced....not Nancy Grace though.... |
Re: Looking for a balance to Fox Programs
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1 - ABC news 2 - CBS news 3 - NBC news 4 - CNN 5 - NYTimes 6 - LA Times 7 - Wash. Post 8 - most local TV news 9 - MOST local newspapers (know of any towns with competing newspapers with opposing views?) And don't forget: 10 - MSNBC 11 - CNBC 12 - Comedy Channel fake news 13 - CNN Headline news 14 - MTV 15 - Oprah 16 - The View There is no need to "balance" Fox News - they're way outnumbered. Fox has seemingly gotten stuck, though, on a few missing white women (see Aruba, etc.), so they're not perfect. |
Well, if you listen to the "conservatives," take your choice -- everything else is "liberal."
See above. |
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It works both ways... |
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I was thinking CNN (Anderson Cooper?)
MSNBC has that douchebag Donny Deutch (or however it's spelled). It's funny hoosier, the more I watch, the more I'm like "I agree with these guys, and their opinions are neither radical nor ultra conservativce, so where's that right-wing influence my professors said was screwed up about FNC?" |
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I like CNN when they're not showing that stupid Aruba story. I usually listen to NPR in the mornings.
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By the time you turn 40, you're weird if you're not conservative. PS: Have you posted anything about your trip to Indiana? |
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I would have suggested the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) if they weren't on strike, but since they are, I think the best alternative to the type of news that is being produced in the US is BBC World News. Watch the American news channels, but then watch the BBC to see it without spin from either side. |
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And what does someone's private affiliations (your source is Wonkette - "A blend of gossip and satire and things the author makes up.") have to do with anything? Again, it's been shown that all news sources carry a bias. Again, it's important to distinguish between opinion pieces and programming and news. All opinion programming is incredibly biased since it is opinion, not fact based. -Rudey --Fox is just the least biased even if it is conservative. |
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Recently though the hiring of Nancy Grace has help them in the conservative department... I don't exactly see the "situation room" as conservative - maybe more sensationalistic or "FOX-like". Seriously though it makes good business sense for CNN to have the conservative and Republican elements on the air - if only to undercut some of FOX's market share... |
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-Rudey |
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Lou Dobbs is loved by unions and is not considered that conservative. As for Novak, I dislike him for other reasons but while he is conservative now he supported JFK and LBJ at one point. Either way both he and Tucker Carlson were commentators and were part of "entertainment" type shows. Every commentator comes with his opinion - conservative or liberal. You can't keep bringing these types of shows up as news just because they air on the network. If you do, then you can start saying that the commercials they show carry bias towards whatever too. -Rudey |
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Edited because there seem to be several versions of this quote! |
Washington Post - 15 hours ago
By Linton Weeks. Robert Novak, the gruff-voiced political pundit and occasional loose cannon in a three-piece suit, is leaving CNN and going to work for Fox News. In the recent past, Novak has been making news more than commenting on it. ... |
He should fit well there!
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I always figured that was where the old slobbering S.O.B. belonged.
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