News Conference Dominated by Bad News on Iraq, Spy Questions

There were only two subjects that concerned the media during President Bush’s December 19th news conference: Bad news on Iraq and domestic spying. Problems in Iraq accounted for six questions, while there were seven on domestic spying. (Note: Questions were counted based on their topic. Follow-ups on the same subject were not counted as separate questions.)The assembled members of the press…

How The New York Times Stole Christmas

The folks over at The New York Times must be laughing their heads off. With the President’s poll numbers on the rise, a fabulous election result in Iraq, and the potential extension of a key antiterrorism bill that the administration holds dear, the Times stole Christmas from the White House last week with the release of one carefully-timed article. After some pretty horrible months in September…

Washington Post TV Critic Compares Bush Speech To "Very Bad" Wizard of

WaPo Confirms Suspicious Timing of NY Times “U.S. Spying” Article

Paul Farhi wrote an article for today’s Washington Post that confirmed yesterday’s Drudge Report exclusive sited by NewsBusters that the New York Times failed to disclose a major story it broke surrounding U.S. spying in America was part of a soon to be released book by one of its columnists, James Risen. In addition, Farhi indicated that the timing of the release of this report might indeed have…

Hiding The Real News in Today's Washington Post on Pelosi, Prices

Wash Post Editor Denies Bias

Stem Cell 'Breakthrough' Stories Covered Very Differently

WashPost 'Christian Right Is Wrong' Story: They Let GOP Prey on Widows

WashPost's Website Needs An Ombudsman

Another Howard Blackout: Don't Assume Everyone Knows Dean's Defeatist

Is President Bush Acting Like A Clumsy Christian In Public

WashPost Raves Over Revival of Old Hard-Left "Winter Soldier" Document

Washington Post's Weisman Not Wise to Economic Reality

Media Downplay Extremely Strong November Jobs Report

A recent report  published by the Gallup Organization stated: “a majority of U.S. investors continue to describe the current economy as being ‘in a slowdown’ or ‘recession’ as opposed to being ‘in a recovery’ or ‘sustained expansion.’” Regardless of continuously strong economic reports, such bearish assessments have been regularly portrayed by public opinion polls for several years. During this…