On the March 25 CBS Early Show, co-host Chris Wragge apparently merged his nuclear terms by warning viewers of leaks of "uranium and plutanium" at the Fukushima power plant in Japan.
On MSNBC's March 22, 2010 Countdown, host Keith Olbermann came unhinged as he ranted against the Tea Party movement's supposed "narrow-mindedness" and its "evolutionary regressive" supporters.
On the October 5, 2010 edition of CNN's Parker-Spitzer, co-host and former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer attacked the Tea Party movement as "vapid" with "no ideas" and something that would "lead us down a dangerous road."
On the December 20, 2009 edition of This Week, ABC's Cokie Roberts presumed that public opposition to ObamaCare was based on ignorance. "A lot of people are going to like it a whole lot, once they see what's in it."
Digging through the background of attempted Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad, ABC's Chris Cuomo saw someone who "seemed to be living the American Dream....Even his signature seems to suggest optimism -- it appears a heart is dotting the 'i' in Faisal."
In the wake of the congressional vote for ObamaCare, MSNBC anchor David Shuster and guest Michael Eric Dyson slammed Rush Limbaugh for his "controversial venom" and "trying to foment a universe of bigotocracy."
In a year-end review on NBC's Today, December 31, 2009, journalist Tina Brown singled out Rush Limbaugh for, "like the bad fairy at Sleeping Beauty's christening," spoiling the "huge festival of hope and renewal" of Obama's inauguration.
Appearing on MSNBC's Jansing & Co. on November 19, ex-ABC 20/20 correspondent (now TruTV anchor) Jami Floyd slammed Sarah Palin: "She's an extraordinary ass....The more the woman says, the more trouble she gets into."
Interviewing Alaska's Democratic Senator Mark Begich during MSNBC's election night coverage, co-anchor Chris Matthews insultingly demanded to know if the Senator had ever witnessed Sarah Palin "actually reading something?...Have you ever seen her reading words on a piece of paper?"
In her August 23, 2010 "Katie Couric's Notebook," the CBS Evening News anchor railed against the "Islamophobia" and "Obamaphobia" she saw among opponents of the Ground Zero mosque.