Monday, September 10, 2012

Parker: A news channel decides to take sides in politics

No, not the president, his family or the numerous actors and political heirs who spoke glowingly of Barack Obama during the Democratic National Convention. With the exception of "Morning Joe," where Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski co-host a roundtable of commentators who dispense praise and criticism equally to Democrats and Republicans, the cable network's other political shows are unapologetically pro-Democratic. [...] the powers that be correctly imagined themselves as co-players at the Democratic convention. Exceptions to this rule would include people such as Al Sharpton, who were never journalists but now get to play one on TV while advancing their personal political agendas. The blending of news and opinion isn't new, but activism posing as journalism is a cancer on the body politic. [...] this arrangement is understood between writer and reader. [...] transparency is the critical ingredient, sometimes missing in our "Hollywood Squares" approach to discourse, in which all participants are presented as equal players.

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