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    Monday, April 21, 2008

    Chris Mattews Tells The Truth

    There's a great media site called Mediabistro and their TV blog TVNewser. And that's where this interview with MSNBC's Chris Mattews appeared.

    Read all the way down to the last question and marvel in a moment of honesty as Mr. Mathews talks about FNC. Pretty much what we FNC Fans already knew.

    Monday Apr 21, 2008

    Chris Matthews On Money, Politics & FNC

    Matthews_4.21.jpgThe Philly Inquirer's Jonathan Storm has 10 questions for Philly native Chris Matthews of the eve of the PA primary. We chose #4, #6, #8 and #9.

    You're 62, and your contract with MSNBC runs out a year from June. Why wouldn't you just hang up the bullhorn, and go fishing?

    Matthews: Ha. Ha. Ha. The money is enormous. I'd probably talk politics if I wasn't on the air. Mike Wallace is, what, 90? These people just keep doing this stuff. It's not like it's a real heavy-lifting job.

    Why do you talk so loud and seem not to let people finish their sentences?

    Matthews: Because I do let them finish their sentences, maybe not their sentences, but finish their thoughts. The honest answer is I have to work on that. I never figured out how Ted Koppel was able to keep the conversation going without interrupting.

    Who watches the cable news talk shows, and why?

    Matthews: I have the most amazing audience. I meet them. They're very intimate. 'Chris,' they say. It sometimes amazes me. They chat as if I was their cousin. In Washington, guys who drive limos, doormen, West Africans, people from the Middle East, Latinos. They watch shows like Hardball to learn language, culture, politics.

    Is Fox News really fair and balanced, and why does it beat you in the ratings?

    Roger has brilliantly put together a counterprogram to everything else that was on television when it started. Everything was establishment liberal, and Fox is a challenge to that. It balances off what they say is mainstream journalism. I don't know if was fair and balanced if it were the only news you got. Ha. Ha...Fox offers itself up as an alternative to prime-time television themes.

    Wednesday, April 16, 2008

    Gloria Allred

    Did she bolt Greta or did they lose the sat feed?

    Correspondents Dinner

    Glad we were able to peak in on the dinner tonight. Mo Rocca was funny for 2/3's of his routine but he really trailed off. Likable though.

    I thought the Veep had some funny lines and I don't think I have ever seen him smile as much as he did tonight. Wonder if he is happy that this is be one of his last encounters with the Radio and TV press?

    Lastly, I'm sure Mr O was thrilled the camera only caught his bald spot on the back of his head. Being in a similar state let me just say...I hate when that happens.

    Greta Greta Greta!

    Thank you for the "divorce story."

    A nice break form everything else.

    I think the woman was sex deprived and not responsible for here actions.

    Friday, April 11, 2008

    Through James Carville's Fundraisng Lense

    The best commentary on this subject is to suggest you read this letter asking for money. (double clock each page for a larger and easier to read view)


    Bet I Know What O'Reilly Will Be Talking About Tonight...

    George Soros!!

    Last night on PBS's Charlie Rose one of O'Reilly's most hated far-left loons spent a half-hour preaching the doom and gloom of the economy and the failure of the capitalist system--at least for the moment.

    Best Interview Award To Sheppard Smith

    Watch this clip from Studio B and listen as Shep asks the child about who released the bus' break in the first place. Shep "let it go" but made a point to say someone will get to the bottom of all this. Classic!!



    Did you happen to notice that Shep's southern drawl kept creeping into this piece--big time!?!

    Thursday, April 10, 2008

    CBS News

    If the WSJ is correct Ms. Couric will be out after the elections. A merciful departure. She was not what the network needed. Sheppard Smith would have had a shot at being a winner. Why would he leave FNC to do that? Exactly.

    This posted on this morning on the FNC blog:


    The 3 networks will eventually get out of the news business and become pure play entertainment networks-it will be the only way to compete and survive.

    22 minutes of news won't hold up in the 24 hr news cycle world.

    If I were consulting them I would suggest they do an hourly news brief in between shows and make those briefs available on line to download.

    I can't recall the last time the network news was high on my list of things I have to watch. That slot is reserved for FNC!

    Wednesday, April 9, 2008

    Vote in the Poll

    Don't forget to vote for your favorite FNC show in the poll to the right ===>

    Live Coverage Today

    Between the American Airlines cancellations and the San Francisco protests, FNC is all over it. Also watching the business update makes me wish Dish Network picks up FBN soon. Would like to have an alt. to CNBC.

    Tuesday, April 8, 2008

    Tonight's Culture Quiz

    So, how old is Martha MacCallum?

    She seems to know a lot about a lot of old things. Is she a trivia buff or much older than she appears?

    And Steve Doocy, who doesn't know the actress who played Lois Lane? Come On!!

    McCain and Petraeus

    FNC is carrying the Senate Armed Services Committee meeting with General Petraus this morning and it is interesting to see John McCain (along with others) front and center asking the questions.

    Wonder if this helps or hurts his campaign. One might think it would help, but with the high percentage of anti-war folks out there it does raise questions.

    Obama still insists talking directly to Iran will help this situation. Seems like that's a tough putt to me. Is there reasoning and talking with such a government?

    You make the call.

    Monday, April 7, 2008

    O'Reilly On Fire Tonight!

    Just barely through a 1/2 hour of The Factor and he has been doing a great show. Great talking points, great guests, and some fiery commentary.

    It's interesting to note that for a guy who has been called a racist he's had more Black guests on talking about important issues and has treated them all with the utmost respect and appropriate decorum. Maybe it's all a sham? Yeah, right.

    Interesting topics, Great TV, and entertaining.

    Fox News Sunday

    Poor Chris Wallace.

    Seems every time a Democrat is a FNS guest there's always a snicker or two. Just like John Kerry did yesterday. Every tough question is viewed as if it were coming from the RNC. What a crock. I don't know what Chris Wallace's personal politics is; but it is pretty clear just from watching that he asks tough questions of everyone who appears on the show--not just Dems.

    Maybe the Dems should just stay away. Remember it was the Democrats who refused to allow FNC to host a debate. It would have been a fair debate--tough questions, but fair.

    Why is it the GOP has no problem going on CNN and MSNBC? And they do it without a snicker.

    Poor Chris Wallace. He continues his Obama Watch....what is it? Some 700 plus days just trying to get Mr. Obama to appear? That too is a crock.

    I want to know more about Obama. I want to know more about what he has planned if he were to be elected. I want to know more than he isn't a very good bowler.

    Come on Mr. Obama. Go ahead, snicker on FNS. We can take it. Even Mrs. Clinton has had the courage to go on and snicker (or in her case cackle).

    Maybe papa Wallace can make a few phone calls?

    Sunday, April 6, 2008

    Red Eye!

    One of my favorite FNC shows. Too bad it's on in the middle of the night. Here's a story I ran across from Zap2it.com. It really is a different kind of show and despite it's timeslot I am glad Fox has the guts to fun this crazy free-for-all.

    Fox News Has 'Red Eye' in the Wee Hours

    By Kate O'Hare, Zap2it

    April 3, 2008

    Greg Gutfeld on 'Red Eye'
    Greg Gutfeld on 'Red Eye'
    "If beauty were an onion, I'd cry while chopping her to pieces."

    That's Greg Gutfeld, host of Fox News' late-night pop-culture/news chatfest "Red Eye w/Greg Gutfeld," introducing a recurring guest, entertainment reporter Courtney Friel. And it's also about the only one of these introductions that can be printed in a family publication.

    Lucky, then, that "Red Eye" airs weeknights at 3 a.m. Eastern time (2 a.m. on weekends).

    "Once you start doing them," says Gutfeld of the introductions, "you can't stop. But the thing is, you always have this argument, this option to say, that you're just playing with language.

    "It's fun, but it's clean."

    Launched in February 2007 ("We're trying to throw an anniversary party," says Gutfeld, "but we're two months late. That's how lazy we are."), "Red Eye" is a sort of alternate-reality version of a news and political roundtable.

    Gutfeld and his guests make outrageous, sometimes-bleeped comments, Gutfeld draws the news -- always featuring Unicorn Jones and sidekick Fluffy McNutter, a cat/dog hybrid -- and there's no real dividing line between satire and seriousness.

    "It's a weird animal," says Gutfeld. "It does feel more British-y, because I lived there for a while. They do have these reckless British shows, these weird, wacky news shows.

    "It completely flies in the face of conventional wisdom about Fox being recalcitrant or conservative, when this is the most daring show on television."

    Northern California native Gutfeld began his career in print, working at Prevention and Men's Health magazines. He later became editor-in-chief of Stuff magazine and then editor of Maxim magazine in the U.K.

    He blogged for the Huffington Post from its launch until July 2007 and has his own blog, "The Daily Gut."

    "I was one of the first bloggers on the Huffington Post," Gutfeld says, "and the only one who wasn't a complete progressive loon, so I stood out like a sore thumb.

    "I was writing there, and the blogs were getting circulated around Fox. Then I started The Daily Gut, and I think that raised interest, that there was a younger voice that was more of what you'd call a 'South Park'-ian conservative. I don't know what it is.

    "So they flew me over, and I met with people. It really is an interesting experiment ... where [Fox News says], 'We're taking people that have never done a TV show, and we're going to let you do something without any of the pretension or any of the things that are attached to experience.'

    "So, we don't talk like TV people. We don't act like TV people. What you have is a really honest show, and you have guests that come on that don't act like they normally do on other shows."

    The guest roster includes ex- CIA agent Mike Baker, various Fox News anchors and reporters, comedians, actors, musicians, Gutfeld's mother (who calls in as the show's "senior correspondent") and pathologist Dr. Michael Baden, the "death correspondent."

    "He's fantastic," Gutfeld says. "He answers every question."

    Unicorn Jones came from an idea that Gutfeld had about how funny it would be if a forty-something man purported to have the same interests as a 13-year-old girl. He also endlessly jokes on-air about his much-abused stable of imaginary multicultural houseboys.

    Asked how his wife, Elena Moussa, feels about the houseboys, Gutfeld quips, "The houseboys are the ones that are terrified, and the unicorns that live under the bed."

    Among the "Red Eye" regulars are two of Gutfeld's friends, his "disgusting" sidekick, Bill Schulz, whom Gutfeld met when he was a "fearless" Stuff writer, and Andrew Levy, who functions as the show's "ombudsman," doing a fact-checking "Halftime Report" and "Post-Game Wrap-Up."

    "Andy was just a guy who was commenting on my blogs at the Huffington Post," Gutfeld says. "He would add comments that would anger people, and I thought this guy was really smart. His comments were often better than the stuff I wrote, so we met at a bar in Hell's Kitchen.

    "He was in the military. I guess he worked for the Academy Awards. He did PR for that. He's into NASCAR and has two cats, Pixel and Stormy."

    Gutfeld introduces Levy's "Halftime Report" by enumerating the features of the "cat toy of the day."

    "He really doesn't like it when I do that," Gutfeld admits.

    The show also features a monologue on the news of the day, called "The Greg-alogue," which is reproduced on The Daily Gut. Each one ends with the line, "And if you disagree with me, then you, sir, are worse than Hitler."

    "I think I am serious," Gutfeld says. "I basically use absurdity, when I'm doing the Greg-alogues, to make a serious point. [If] it's about global warming and carbon offsets, I'll talk about cannibalism. Basically I'm talking about how we think less of humans than we do of the Earth, and I'll come up with something absurd.

    "So I actually am serious. But if you don't get the joke, you missed that part, I guess."

    In the future, Gutfeld hopes to somehow take "Red Eye" to the political conventions and maybe add an audience or even a band. He'd also like the presidential contenders to continue dropping by.

    "We invited Obama last week," Gutfeld says, "but the two we had on dropped out - Kucinich and Ron Paul. I don't think we're going to get Hillary on the show. We tried to get McCain's daughter. She's a nice girl.

    "It's hard for us. A lot of people look at the show and think, 'I'm not going on there.' ... When we do guest segments, we're pretty solid. We don't try to surprise people or embarrass. We're not mean to anybody. When we have somebody on the show, we ask questions that will make them look smart, too."

    The News Babes?


    Lots of changes recently in the newsbabes section at Fox News. Less looks and more substance?

    I always thought the newsbabes did a good job of reading the news while looking great. Not that the new ladies of the news desk look bad, not at all, just a little more reserved than in the past.

    Election HQ looks at Gen Y's

    Shep Smith closed out the Fox Report this past Friday evening with a report on millennials (gen Y's-born 1986-2000).



    Gen Y's are from Mars and the rest of us humans are from Venus. Well, not exactly. But certainly different. No TV's?--try to tell that to the TV generation that grew up pre-1980.

    I report...you comment.

    Do you watch your video on your computer?