Update: Correction made below
In an interview with John Hudson of the left-wing magazine The Atlantic, screenwriter and producer Aaron Sorkin described where he gets his news and quickly launched into a tirade against conservative media figures: "Beck and Limbaugh are eye-poppingly awful. It would be easier to buy their love of America if they didn't have such hate for Americans. They're my generation's Joe McCarthy..."
Sorkin claimed Beck and Limbaugh were guilty of "tarring anyone who disagrees with them with schoolyard epithets and, of course, being 'un-American' or even on the side of America's enemies....They appeal to the worst in the worst among us..."
However, back in February, appearing on CBS's Sunday Morning, it was Sorkin hurling "schoolyard epithets" at former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, smearing her as someone who "glamorized dumbness" and was in need of a therapist.
Sorkin further argued: "I'm a fan of the two-party system and a fan of debate....[but] The effort gets choked to death when one side says the other is fundamentally evil....I find the right trades in it a lot more than the left." Meanwhile, he defended all of the haters at MSNBC: "Yes, I've seen Olbermann and Matthews and Schultz and Maddow but they simply don't compare to Limbaugh, Beck, Hannity and Coulter. And Ingraham and Breitbart and Palin and Gingrich." He then added: "And with Fox News No. 1 on cable and Limbaugh No. 1 on the radio, where did we get the idea that the media was controlled by the left?" (Corrected: It was Sorkin, not Hudson, that made the comment questioning liberal media bias)
Sorkin concluded by proclaiming "there's reason for hope," citing moderate to liberal Republicans, including Peggy Noonan, David Frum, and Mark McKinnon, as acceptable voices on the Right.
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