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NPR really angered me this morning. The interviewer asked Mike McConnell why the telecoms should receive immunity if they ran afoul of the law, and McConnell responded that the Senate Committee had actually found that the telecoms had broken no laws.

Where was the logical follow-up? Keith Olbermann noted on his telecast two days prior that if no laws were broken, why would the companies need immunity?

*growl* I will be penning an e-mail shortly (as soon as I find out the name of the interviewer).

By the way, last night Olbermann had a fantastic special comment about the FISA bill currently being fearmongered debated. He even used the F-word several times.
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I am very absorbed in a personal matter/research project right now. If I seem preoccupied (or if my posts here are fewer than usual), that would explain why.

In the meantime, here are some news stories:

Lives and a Georgia Community’s Anchor Are Lost -- sugar refinery blast blamed on dust

Drug regulators re-evaluating Botox's safety -- deaths associated with use, studies confirm

Woman kills 2 students in La. vo-tech classroom, then kills self -- a nursing student in an emergency medical technology class

Biofuels Deemed a Greenhouse Threat -- two studies publised in Science conclude

Chelsea Remark Earns MSNBC Correspondent A Suspension -- David Shuster made the statements; I'm surprised: he usually is a top-notch reporter who chooses his words well. The comment was made on the show "Tucker" but Keith Olbermann apologized tonight on behalf of MSNBC on his show (the network's top-rated).

Understanding the Gospel According to Huckabee (thanks, [livejournal.com profile] laureth)
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Keith, I think, is really pushing the envelope. He just used the word "goddamned" on the air live.

BTW, there's going to be a special comment in about ten minutes.
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Keith Olbermann might be the first American newscaster to use the term "crazyass".

(He was referring to a comment made by Trent Lott.)
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The presidency is now a criminal conspiracy

It is a fact startling in its cynical simplicity and it requires cynical and simple words to be properly expressed: The presidency of George W. Bush has now devolved into a criminal conspiracy to cover the ass of George W. Bush.
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Keith's Special Comment, 7/19/07

It is one of the great, dark, evil lessons, of history.

A country — a government — a military machine — can screw up a war seven ways to Sunday. It can get thousands of its people killed. It can risk the safety of its citizens. It can destroy the fabric of its nation.

But as long as it can identify a scapegoat, it can regain or even gain power.

The Bush administration has opened this Pandora's Box about Iraq. It has found its scapegoats: Hillary Clinton and us.

The lies and terror tactics with which it deluded this country into war — they had nothing to do with the abomination that Iraq has become. It isn't Mr. Bush's fault.

The selection of the wrong war, in the wrong time, in the wrong place — the most disastrous geopolitical tactic since Austria-Hungary attacked Serbia in 1914 and destroyed itself in the process — that had nothing to do with the overwhelming crisis Iraq has become. It isn't Mr. Bush’s fault.

Read more... )
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MSNBC is now broadcasting Countdown three times a night: once live at 8:00 p.m. ET, then two hours after that, then two hours after that.

I am so glad. Keith reaching that many more homes! Hopefully Countdown will suffer something like Law & Order.

Woo hoo!

Feb. 15th, 2007 02:49 pm
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Keith Olbermann, NBC agree on second term: 'Countdown' host extends through 2011; will contribute more to network

"It (Countdown) is obviously [an] incredibly import[ant] franchise for us," NBC News President Steve Capus said. "It is something that has really put MSNBC back on the map."

In addition to his nightly newscast -- which counts down the day's top political and entertainment stories with Olbermman's signature wit -- the MSNBC host will contribute occasional "essays" to the "Nightly News with Brian Williams" and host two Countdown specials a year on NBC.

[...] "Countdown's" ratings increased by 85 percent over the last year, finishing the month of January with an average of 715,000 viewers, with 283,000 in the adult demographic (25-54).

[...] The show’s popularity leapt after Olbermann began penning "special comments" that voraciously attacked politicians like George Bush for failing to live up to their commitments. One of his first comments, pegged to the anniversary of 9/11, accused Bush of forgetting the men and women who died during the attacks and ended with a message for the president: "May this country forgive you."
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I guess I don't get to submerge myself in current news tonight, but if anyone is interested, Keith Olbermann is showing his best Special Comments of the year on tonight's Countdown.
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Tokyo Rose, a figure Keith Olbermann recently brought up in his castigation of our current propagandists, died Tuesday (coincidentally, the same day as his broadcast).
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His special comment was incredible. I haven't seen anything like that put into the public consciousness via the mainstream media before now.

His show runs at 8:00 p.m. and reruns at 12:00 a.m., Eastern Time, on MSNBC. (Meaning you can catch the special comment at the end of this very hour [in about forty minutes]!)

Okay, okay, here's the transcript. Not nearly as stunning as the video.
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in one of his Special Comments (aired 9/18/06). This was for our dear leader.

The President of the United States owes this country an apology.

It will not be offered, of course.

He does not realize its necessity.

There are now none around him who would tell him or could.

The last of them, it appears, was the very man whose letter provoked the President into the conduct, for which the apology is essential.

An apology is this President's only hope of regaining the slightest measure of confidence, of what has been, for nearly two years, a clear majority of his people.

Not "confidence" in his policies nor in his designs nor even in something as narrowly focused as which vision of torture shall prevail -- his, or that of the man who has sent him into apoplexy, Colin Powell.

In a larger sense, the President needs to regain our confidence, that he has some basic understanding of what this country represents -- of what it must maintain if we are to defeat not only terrorists, but if we are also to defeat what is ever more increasingly apparent, as an attempt to re-define the way we live here, and what we mean, when we say the word "freedom."

Because it is evident now that, if not its architect, this President intends to be the contractor, for this narrowing of the definition of freedom.

The President revealed this last Friday, as he fairly spat through his teeth, words of unrestrained fury directed at the man who was once the very symbol of his administration, who was once an ambassador from this administration to its critics, as he had once been an ambassador from the military to its critics.

Read more... )
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But the winner, oh, the psychological end is near. Bill O explaining that the New York Times and, quote, "many far-left thinkers believe the white power structure that controls America is bad, so a drastic change is need[ed]." Hold on. Bill, you’re saying there’s a white power structure that controls America and you’re defending it? Does that opinion come with the sheet and the hood or do you have to buy those separately?

Bill O’Reilly, now and forever, today’s "Worst Person in the World."

transcript for Countdown with Keith Olbermann, May 17, 2006

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