Rachel Maddow Jumps The Zuccotti Park

MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow is usually pretty scrupulous about her facts, but last night she blatantly misled her audience in a segment that highlighted Occupy Wall Street’s improbable ad campaign:

Occupy Wall Street still showing no signs of slowing down, the group using donations to run advertisements on TV explaining in their own words why they’re protesting.

[Ad clip:]

>> i want economic justice.

>> i want to be able to speak my voice without jeopardizing my job.

>> i want a greater regulation of the banks and the markets.

>> i want true democracy for the 99% of us who don’t have it anymore

That ad will be running thanks to donations on Bloomberg Business TV, on ESPN, on History International, on CBS Sports, on the Gayle King Show, on “Gray’s Anatomy,” and Friends Outdoor Channel and Fox News.

Sounds like a major ad campaign, yes? Except Maddow failed to mention that the spots were mostly running on cable and satellite TV in New York City, as the hardworking staff noted yesterday (via Mashable):

[Occupy Wall Street supporters] chipped in more than $6,000 to a crowdfunding campaign that will put a video of protesters explaining their objectives in the commercial lineup of cable television channels . . .

Bloomberg Business TV (nationally) as well as ESPN, CBS Sports, History International, Outdoor Channel, Gayle King Show, Grey’s Anatomy and Friends (on DISH network, Direct TV and Verizon Fios) will all be running the commercial. It is expected to air on Fox News seven times.

$6000 can only buy you so much. Except, apparently, on the Rachel Maddow Show.

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Yogi Berra Has A Gay Old Time At ‘Moneyball’

Scene: A movie theater in Montclair, N.J.

Yogi Berra is here to see “Moneyball.”

Berra didn’t earn a ton of money playing baseball. The game was different then. When Yogi was a 17-year-old prospect from St. Louis, he signed with the New York Yankees for $90 a month. When he returned from World War II, his first major league contract paid him $5,000 a year. Berra worked at Sears, Roebuck & Co. in the winter. He never made more than $65,000 in a season. He never had more than a one-year deal.

But no one squeezed more out of baseball—and gave more back —than Yogi. He played 18 seasons with the Yankees, appearing in 14 World Series, winning ten of them. A catcher, he was a 15-time All-Star, a three-time MVP.

“I was very lucky,” Berra says softly. He is 86 years old. On his right hand is a World Series ring from the 1953 Yankees. On his left, his ring from the Hall of Fame.

Yes, Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Gay took Yogi Berra to see the hit movie Moneyball, and as usual with Gay, it was well worth the trip.

Excerpts:

One of the key moments in the film involves a record-breaking 20-game win streak the A’s reel off late in their season. The movie shows grainy footage of the last American League team to have won 19 games:

The 1947 Yankees. Yogi’s first full year in the majors.

“I’d almost forgotten,” Berra says. “You get old, you know? But we did win 19 in a row.” Joe DiMaggio was on that team, which won the World Series over the Brooklyn Dodgers in seven games.

* * * * *

Berra laughs during a “Moneyball” scene in which millionaire player David Justice complains about having to buy soda in the Oakland locker room. When Yogi was on the Yankees, the player meal was a coffee and a donut. And between games of a double-header? “A hard-boiled egg.”

There’s lots more: Gay’s piece ain’t over ’til it’s over.

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It’s Good To Live In A Two-Times Co. Town (Andy Rooney Edition)

From our Before They Made Him They Broke the Mold desk (apologies to S.J. Perelman):

Kissin’ cousins New York Times and Boston Globe staged a compare-and -contrastapalooza with their respective obituaries of CBS News icon Andy Rooney.

The Globe glowbit here.

The Times version here, with the (o)bits the Globe left out:

Mr. Rooney’s opinions sometimes landed him in trouble. In 1990, CBS News suspended him without pay in response to complaints that he had made remarks offensive to black and gay people.

The trigger was a December 1989 special, “A Year With Andy Rooney,” in which he said: “There was some recognition in 1989 of the fact that many of the ills which kill us are self-induced. Too much alcohol, too much food, drugs, homosexual unions, cigarettes. They’re all known to lead quite often to premature death.” He later apologized for the statement.

But the gay newspaper The Advocate subsequently quoted him as saying in an interview: “I’ve believed all along that most people are born with equal intelligence, but blacks have watered down their genes because the less intelligent ones are the ones that have the most children. They drop out of school early, do drugs and get pregnant.”

Mr. Rooney denied that he had made such a statement, and because the interview had apparently not been taped, the reporter was unable to prove that he had. “It is a know-nothing statement, which I abhor,” Mr. Rooney said.

He said that he had accepted the suspension rather than end his relationship with CBS News. He said that when he was an Army trainee, he had been arrested in the South because he insisted on riding in the back of a bus with some black soldiers who were friends of his.

Many of his colleagues rushed to his defense. “I know he is not a racist,” Walter Cronkite said.

Mr. Rooney was suspended for three months but was brought back after only one. During his absence, the ratings for “60 Minutes” declined by 20 percent and the network received thousands of letters and telephone calls from viewers who missed his commentaries.

Mr. Rooney generated more criticism in 2002, when he said in an interview on a cable sports show that women had “no business” being sideline television reporters at football games because they did not understand football.

He did it again in 2007, with a newspaper column complaining about the current state of baseball. “I know all about Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, but today’s baseball stars are all guys named Rodriguez to me,” he wrote.

He subsequently acknowledged that he “probably shouldn’t have said it,” but denied that his intent had been to denigrate Latin American players.

Full disclosure: I very happily worked with Andy Rooney’s daughter Emily on WGBH’s Greater Boston for 11 years in a variety of roles – reporter, managing editor, executive producer, and correspondent for Beat the Press. During that time I encountered Andy on a number of occasions, in each of which he was unfailingly gracious, generous, and self-deprecating.

Based on that experience, I believe he would have endorsed the Times obit over the Globe’s.

Just a guess.

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Occupy Gayle King/ESPN/Fox News

Occupy Wall Street is about to occupy ad time on New York cable networks.

Via Mashable:

[Occupy Wall Street supporters] chipped in more than $6,000 to a crowdfunding campaign that will put a video of protesters explaining their objectives in the commercial lineup of cable television channels . . .

Bloomberg Business TV (nationally) as well as ESPN, CBS Sports, History International, Outdoor Channel, Gayle King Show, Grey’s Anatomy and Friends (on DISH network, Direct TV and Verizon Fios) will all be running the commercial. It is expected to air on Fox News seven times.

The spot:

 

Occupy that, yeah?

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On The Media’s Brooke Gladstone Unilaterally Declares NPR Centrist

In a conversation with NYU Press Thinker Jay Rosen about NPR’s serial firings of staffers and freelancers over their advocacy of Occupy Wall Street, On the Media host Brooke Gladstone made this statement:

What’s wrong with different kinds of institutions deciding on different kinds of reporting? You have right-wing news organizations, left-wing ones, and ones in the center . . . like public radio

So that pesky NPR liberal bias thing is all settled?

Good to know.

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Leaders Of The Lung Cancer Free World Fail To Read Newspapers

An outfit called Leaders of the Lung Cancer Free World has run a full page ad in the New York Times (and perhaps elsewhere – the group is not exactly a fount of information) headlined:

AN OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA AND SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE JOHN BOEHNER

The ad calls for Obama and Boehner to “come together – to look beyond partisanship to our common humanity – and to point the way forward in the fight against this dreadful disease. There is much you can do.”

Specifically:

On a personal level there is this: For the sake of the nation and of your families, stand up and take a public pledge not to smoke.

But wait – didn’t Obama’s doctors just declare him tobacco-free, as the New York Times reported last week?

But maybe not nicotine-free, says the UK’s Daily Mail:

He was declared ‘tobacco free’ just days ago by the White House doctor.

But it seems the results of President Obama’s physical exam might not have given the whole picture.

As he met the world’s leaders at the G20 summit in France, the President appeared to be accompanied by an old friend – nicotine gum.

New group: Leaders of the Nicorette Free World.

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Ballad Of A Boston Marathon Bandit

From our Taking Themselves Too Seriously desk:

The Weekend Wall Street Journal’s A-Hed chronicles the world of rogue marathon runners – that is, the great unnumbered.

Headline:

Fleet of Foot and Blissfully Bold, Freeloaders at the Marathon Wear Fake Bibs—but Win No Prizes

In the Running World, They’re Called ‘Bandits’ and Race Officials Don’t Like to Discuss Them; the Cockroach Analogy

Nut graf:

There’s nothing illegal about jogging down city streets without a race bib, or even accepting aid-station refreshment offerings. But in the running world, [the] offense is known as banditry, and any mention of it tends to produce righteous indignation. Do bandits realize how much it costs to provide T-shirts and finisher medals, to pay staff members, recruit volunteers and hire police to close down roads?

“Have you no sense of shame?” Runner’s World executive editor, Mark Remy, asked last year in a published dressing down of an unnamed bandit. “There’s a special circle of hell reserved for people like you.”

Seriously? A special circle of hell? As the eminent philosopher Bugs Bunny would say, “What a maroon, what an ignoranimus.”

As it happens, Boston has hosted a special representative of the banditerati: the pride of Hopkinton, Conrad Welzel.

Before his knees gave out, Conrad Welzel, 58, ran the Boston Marathon 36 times, 32 of them as a bandit, the first when he was a teenager. “I wasn’t going to pay for a race that started in my own neighborhood,” says Mr. Welzel, who grew up in Hopkinton, Mass., where the Boston Marathon begins.

And where common sense, at least at Runner’s World, ends.

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Cain ‘High-Tech-Lynching’ Ad Coming Soon To A TV Near You?

Grand Old Partier Hormone Cain (R-Am I Clarence Thomas Yet?) has just released a high dudgeon high-tech-lynching web video that’s as ludicrous as his shape-shifting defense against sexual harassment charges has been.

Via Romensko:

 

Jim Geraghty of the National Review Online says, “I am told the plan is to get on TV in Iowa next week with it and also drop about a million calls into Iowa and Nevada starting tomorrow with the same message.”

The hardworking staff doubts this ad will ever see the light of Iowa, since it’s getting plenty of play in the news media.

But, as the on-the-spot reporters say, time will tell.

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Dr. Ads Deigns To Cher

Originally posted on the New! Improved! Sneak ADtack!

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Cainicide? Larry Sabato Says ‘Not So Fast’

While everyone else writes off Grand Old Partier Hormone Cain (R-My Place Or Mine?), Mr. Crystal Ball Larry Sabato reminds us of this in a Rasmussen Report commentary:

The lesson of history is clear, as our quick-take chart shows: From 1976 to 2008, there has been a major surprise every time either in Iowa or New Hampshire . A back-of-the-pack candidate greatly exceeds expectations. Or the frontrunner stumbles. Or the field is scrambled in some other way.

Helpful chart :

Sabato concludes:

OK, sure, you say. That’s all in our past. We’ve got a much better fix on 2012. We’ve learned from our mistakes. We’ve got daily — sometimes, hourly — polls to keep us on the beam.

And your cloudy Crystal Ball counters with one question: Given the unimpressive record of early nomination predictions from 1976 to 2008, why should we think it will be any different this time?

Cainiacs everywhere, take heart.

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