OutFoxed
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OutFoxed
| Tue, 08-03-2004 - 11:16am |
Last night, I saw Outfoxed. This movie just confirmed everything, that I already knew about Faux News (Fox News). You can always count on seeing Baby Bush doing something on their morning news. Faux News willl give a great deal of coverage to something negative about Kerry/Edwards. Gee! After Bush gets dumped in 2005, what will they do for news stories? They might just have to wrote some news stories. I'm really surprised that their anchors noses aren't brown from kisses Baby Bush and his administrations bottom (A*S). I think I'll stick with NPR and Air America.

LOL....yea their objective...
Fox Bad....NPR good...
well at least your looking for balance in your newscasts.
ROFL.
Murdoch is an extemely power & dangerous man, IMO,
This is why the changes to the FCC holdings rule was so unpopular--to no afail. Of course, the administration supports Fox, all of its supporters believe that it is the only station that reports the "fair and balanced" news. This trend to monopolies is not good for the nation.
"This trend to monopolies is not good for the nation."
Or the world. Murdoch is a two faced manipulator.
How government protects big media--and shuts out upstarts like me."
By Ted Turner :-) in the July-August issue of Washington Monthly Full article at:
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2004/0407.turner.html
Here is the final paragraph.
At this late stage, media companies have grown so large and powerful, and their dominance has become so detrimental to the survival of small, emerging companies, that there remains only one alternative: bust up the big conglomerates. We've done this before: to the railroad trusts in the first part of the 20th century, to Ma Bell more recently. Indeed, big media itself was cut down to size in the 1970s, and a period of staggering innovation and growth followed. Breaking up the reconstituted media conglomerates may seem like an impossible task when their grip on the policy-making process in Washington seems so sure. But the public's broad and bipartisan rebellion against the FCC's pro-consolidation decisions suggests something different. Politically, big media may again be on the wrong side of history--and up against a country unwilling to lose its independents.