Monday, November 2, 2009

We're All Partisans Now

Because if FOX News is considered partisan, than all news is, according to the NY Times's John Harwood.
In audience surveys from August 2000 to March 2001, Fox News viewers tilted Republican by 44.6 percent to 36.1 percent. More narrowly — 41.4 percent to 39.4 percent — so did the audience for MSNBC. The audiences of CNN, Headline News, CNBC and Comedy Central leaned Democratic.

Four years later, amid the Iraq war and President George W. Bush’s re-election campaign, the audience data had shifted. Fox News viewers had become 51 percent Republican and just 30.8 percent Democratic, while MSNBC viewers leaned Democratic by 41.7 percent to 40.4 percent. Viewers of CNN, Headline News, CNBC and Comedy Central grew slightly more Democratic.

By 2008-9, the network audiences tilted decisively, like Fox’s. CNN viewers were more Democratic by 50.4 percent to 28.7 percent; MSNBC viewers were 53.6 percent to 27.3 percent Democratic; Headline News’ 47.3 percent to 31.4 percent Democratic; CNBC’s 46.9 percent to 32.5 percent Democratic; and Comedy Central’s 47.1 to 28.8 percent Democratic.
Thers disabuses Harwood of this idiocy (seriously, Comedy Central is a news network now?)
The answer of course is that including it makes a tendentious conclusion smell better; but still, its inclusion serves admirably to demonstrate that tendentiousness.

Because it does not take two, or more, to "polarize." It takes one. Fox gleefully went full metal GOP, and by and large other networks remained "objective" and "nonpartisan," according to the very strange interpretation of such concepts on the part of the media elites.

Right, which of course means that there's that whole "reality has a well-known liberal bias" thing. I gotta call Dubya's Rule on this one: At some point, a Liberal said something bad, ergo it exonerates everything Wingnuts do from here until the end of time.

1 comment:

  1. NYT's Harwood equates CNN & MSNBC with Fox News; doesn't bother actually comparing them

    http://mediamatters.org/blog/200911020007

    ReplyDelete