On Sunday's State of the Union, CNN host Jake Tapper brought on Rep. Liz Cheney on Ukraine and on her role as "vice chair" of the January 6 committee. Democrats are counting on the committee to save its majority in the midterms, but Cheney gushed "I think that it is the single most collaborative committee on which I have ever served. I'm very proud of the bipartisan way in which we're operating…
On Friday's Tucker Carlson Tonight, University of Chicago student journalist Christopher Phillips reports CNN's Brian Stelter had "no apology, no remorse whatsoever" for CNN's overwrought bias after he questioned him at a conference on "Disinformation and the Erosion of Democracy."
For the Transgender Day of Visibility, PBS NewsHour anchor William Brangham offered viewers a unanimous seven-minute segment for the left. Brangham turned to trans activist Raquel Willis, and began with the softest softball, about whether she felt it was happy enough, like Transgender Christmas.
CBS Late Show host Stephen Colbert (D-N.Y.) certainly knows his audience. On Tuesday's show, he mocked Fox's Peter Doocy for asking President Biden a question, and suggested that he would like Biden to slap Doocy in the face, like Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the Oscars.
At the end of Fox News Sunday, fill-in host Trace Gallagher set up a "quick back-and-forth" on the New York Times quietly admitting the emails on Hunter Biden's laptop were real. Juan Williams preposterously said "nobody said it wasn't true."
On Fox's Sunday Morning Futures, host Maria Bartiromo and former Trump aide Stephen Miller marveled at how badly the vice president answered a question about gas prices in a press conference with the leader of Romania
On Friday's PBS NewsHour, Washington Post columnist and MSNBC host Jonathan Capehart lunged at Republican bills on social issues: "Quite honestly, it looks hideous. It is horrendous."