Bill D'Agostino
MSNBC’s Nicolle Wallace often hosts overtly political former Justice Department officials on her weekday Trump-centric show. On Monday, the Deadline: White House guest of honor was former Mueller goon Andrew Weissmann, who “violently” (his word for it) rejected the idea that the Justice Department should decline to go after Trump for fear of looking overtly political. This he compared to a…
On the Monday edition of Inside Politics, CNN’s Dana Bash and Phil Mattingly were frustrated that voters continued to believe their lying eyes when it came to the economy. Both Bash and Mattingly pulled out the tired excuse that cable pundits have been using since Biden first took office: Biden’s poll numbers aren’t bad because the economy is bad; they’re bad because voters just don’t understand…
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All Things Considered host Juana Summers interviewed House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries for eight minutes on Wednesday, and it was a festival of talk about “extreme MAGA Republicans.”
NBC's Chuck Todd will be leaving his role as host of Meet The Press in September. Here's a look back at some of his worst moments.
The TV news media spent much of last week decrying a conservative boycott against Target, warning of reported “threats” against store employees. But suddenly, when multiple Target locations received bomb threats by a supposed LGBT activist, the journalists went quiet.
In 2016, former CBS head honcho Les Moonves said Donald Trump’s presence in politics “may be bad for America, but it’s damn good for CBS.” Clearly Mooves was not the only network head to have made such an assessment. On Thursday, just on CNN and MSNBC, Trump was mentioned by name a whopping 399 times between 6:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. ET.
To read more, visit NewsBusters.
CNN and MSNBC are doing their best to pretend the NAACP is an apolitical organization, in order to hype the group’s recent travel advisory warning black Americans not to visit Florida. Hosts on both cable networks hyped the statement throughout the weekend and into Monday afternoon, all while conveniently omitting the organization’s overt far-left advocacy.