On his Wednesday evening MSNBC show, Ed Schultz accused Kentucky GOP Senate candidate Rand Paul of "whipping these low-information voters up into a frenzy," and thus stirring up right-wing violence.
Is the President of NPR really pushing for a taxpayer-funded national media network to replace dying news corporations? Brent Bozell of the Media Research Center investigates, on Fox Business Channel's "Varney & Co."
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell has as the party's top goal to make Barack Obama a one term president. MSNBC's Joe Scarborough thinks having that as the number one priority is "pathetic."
MSNBC's Joe Scarborough, co-host of "Morning Joe," cast his show as "Switzerland" in the midst of polarized news outlets, such as Fox News. Nevermind the overwhelming number of liberal guests who appear on the show, compared with the scarce number of staunch conservatives who contribute regularly.
On the October 22 "Hannity," the Media Research Center's Brent Bozell condemned slanted coverage of the Tea Party by CBS and MSNBC. Bozell added that their analysis is totally out of touch with polls that show the American public to be more favorable of the Tea Party than not.
MSNBC's Dylan Ratigan laughs at a GOP congressional candidate's ad portraying Louisiana as a border state welcoming of illegal immigrants -- when the context of the ad simply argues that his opponent is pro-illegal immigration.
Appearing on Fox News' "America Live," CAIR Communications Director Abraham Hooper suggested that anti-Muslim bigotry wasn't the full reason Juan Williams was fired from NPR. Hooper hinted that Williams and NPR may have been at a "breaking point" due to his "increasingly leaning towards the right."
MSNBC's Mika Brzezinski rattled off one White House talking point after another on Tuesday's "Morning Joe," concerning the unknown sources of GOP campaign donations.
Referencing President Obama's rescue of the U.S. economy, Monday's "Morning Joe" panel offered that the voters' lack of praise for the accomplishments of the Obama administration can be a measure of Obama's leadership.
Responding to Bill O'Reilly's remarks on "The View" that "Muslims killed us on 9/11," Ratigan smears him as an "extremist" and accuses him of lying and "fearmongering."