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Gore’s TV War: He Lobs Salvo At Fox News
NY Observer ^ | 11/27/02 | Josh Benson

Posted on 11/27/2002 12:55:44 AM PST by Mensch

Among the many problems facing the Democratic Party, according to former Vice President Al Gore, is the state of the American media.

"The media is kind of weird these days on politics, and there are some major institutional voices that are, truthfully speaking, part and parcel of the Republican Party," said Mr. Gore in an interview with The Observer. "Fox News Network, The Washington Times, Rush Limbaugh—there’s a bunch of them, and some of them are financed by wealthy ultra-conservative billionaires who make political deals with Republican administrations and the rest of the media …. Most of the media [has] been slow to recognize the pervasive impact of this fifth column in their ranks—that is, day after day, injecting the daily Republican talking points into the definition of what’s objective as stated by the news media as a whole."

Mr. Gore has been airing his views during a nationwide promotional book tour that marks his re-emergence in public life after a self-imposed exile following his loss in the 2000 Presidential election. Now, as Mr. Gore considers another Presidential campaign, he’s determined to confound his ponderous image by unveiling a new Al Gore—one who doesn’t hesitate, as he puts it, to "let ’er rip."

Hence his controversial criticisms of President Bush’s foreign policy, and his surprise announcement in favor of a government-run universal health-care system. And hence, in a phone interview with The Observer, his extensive criticism of the media, which is hardly a conventional way of launching a national political campaign.

Actually, Mr. Gore may have little reason to hide his views about the media, for his re-emergence, while generating a massive amount of attention, has also inspired ridicule from commentators of all ideological persuasions. Conservatives seemed delighted by his return, remembering his awkward candidacy in 2000, and many liberals have been quite frank in wishing that he would simply disappear.

But Mr. Gore has a bone to pick with his critics: namely, he says, that a systematically orchestrated bias in the media makes it impossible for him and his fellow Democrats to get a fair shake. "Something will start at the Republican National Committee, inside the building, and it will explode the next day on the right-wing talk-show network and on Fox News and in the newspapers that play this game, The Washington Times and the others. And then they’ll create a little echo chamber, and pretty soon they’ll start baiting the mainstream media for allegedly ignoring the story they’ve pushed into the zeitgeist. And then pretty soon the mainstream media goes out and disingenuously takes a so-called objective sampling, and lo and behold, these R.N.C. talking points are woven into the fabric of the zeitgeist."

And during a lengthy discourse on the history of political journalism in America, Mr. Gore said he believed that evolving technologies and market forces have combined to lower the media’s standards of objectivity. "The introduction of cable-television news and Internet news made news a commodity, available from an unlimited number of sellers at a steadily decreasing cost, so the established news organizations became the high-cost producers of a low-cost commodity," said Mr. Gore. "They’re selling a hybrid product now that’s news plus news-helper; whether it’s entertainment or attitude or news that’s marbled with opinion, it’s different. Now, especially in the cable-TV market, it has become good economics once again to go back to a party-oriented approach to attract a hard-core following that appreciates the predictability of a right-wing point of view, but then to make aggressive and constant efforts to deny that’s what they’re doing in order to avoid offending the broader audience that mass advertisers want. Thus the Fox slogan ‘We Report, You Decide,’ or whatever the current version of their ritual denial is."

"We understand that Gore is frustrated," said R.N.C. spokesman Kevin Sheridan. "He’s the leader of a party without a message. But if he thinks that the Republican National Committee can control the American media, then perhaps he needs a break from the book tour."

Fox spokesman Rob Zimmerman said, "We won’t dignify this with a response."

A spokesman for The Washington Times didn’t return calls for comment. Rush Limbaugh was traveling and not available for comment.

A Left Hook

Of course, some of the harshest criticisms of Mr. Gore have come from distinctly non-conservative quarters. Mr. Gore seemed particularly stung, for example, by an op-ed written by Frank Rich of The New York Times, suggesting that his new spontaneity was a charade. "When people write a line like one that I read this morning—quote, ‘People do not change,’ period, end quote—well, there’s a difference between learning from experience and self-reinvention," Mr. Gore said. "People do change, particularly in America. If you don’t learn from the experiences you have in life, then you’re not trying very hard, and if you don’t make mistakes, you’re not human …. If people who make their living criticizing anybody and everybody want to add me to their list, that’s all right. Hell, they’ve got to make a living."

Democrats sympathetic to Mr. Gore frequently maintain that "political insiders"—the media, big donors, professional politicians—paint an overly pessimistic picture of his viability as a candidate and suggest that his position has been strengthened by the party’s poor showing in the midterm elections several weeks ago. "There are all these people in the party who have been adamant that we need a fresh face," said Joe Andrew, who headed the Democratic National Committee during the Clinton administration. "I think a lot of those people are taking another look at Al Gore now, saying that, ‘Well, at least there’s someone out there with big ideas, who looks good on TV, who looks more comfortable with himself.’ I think it’s simply a fundamental reaction to the sense that he is a serious candidate with serious ideas."

But while Mr. Gore has a solid core of support, many Democrats do want a fresh face to take on George W. Bush in 2004. The same formal and informal polls that show Mr. Gore with substantially larger backing than any other Democratic hopeful also show that a great many donors, opinion makers and party leaders are uncommitted—and leaning toward Anyone But Gore.

It’s possible that no amount of criticism will keep Mr. Gore out of the race, but there’s little question that "Gore fatigue" already has become a rallying point for his potential opponents. "At this point, people are uniformly looking for a different face and a different agenda, an agenda that requires a backbone," Vermont Governor Howard Dean, a potential Democratic contender, told The Observer.

Asked about Mr. Gore’s efforts to make a fresh start as a straight-talking, independent-minded Democrat, Mr. Dean said, "I think it will be kind of a tough job for someone who was a sitting Vice President to call himself an outsider."

Mr. Gore acknowledged his image problem among powerful Democrats, and that the onus will be upon him to recapture the loyalties of those who supported him in 2000. "Maybe I bear the blame for some of it," he said. "I haven’t been very good about calling all of the insiders over the last two years, and maybe some of them have a beef with me because of that. I know they have been courted assiduously by some of the others who are considering a run for the White House, and it may be that some of them have already signed up with other people. If I do decide to run again, I think there’s a lot of support, but I’d also have to work really hard to get a bunch of them committed back to me."

Mr. Gore also reckoned that he would have to prove himself all over again to key political and media players. "I’m well aware that the political insiders and political-journalism community have a considerable amount of influence, and even though I’m stronger at the grassroots level, I think that if I did run again, I would have to convince those two groups that I’ve learned enough in the last couple of years to run a better campaign than I did last time. I don’t think that there’s a thing that I could say and no words I could choose that could accomplish that—the way to convince them would be in actually doing it."

For now, Mr. Gore can only attempt to explain what motivates the ceaseless lampooning he continues to face from America’s columnists and commentators. "That’s postmodernism," he offered. "It’s the combination of narcissism and nihilism that really defines postmodernism, and that’s another interview for another time, if you’re interested in it.


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
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1 posted on 11/27/2002 12:55:44 AM PST by Mensch
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To: Mensch
So he's basically accusing the Republicans of utilizing a technique that the Democrats developed and perfected?

This guy is such a raging puss it's no wonder he lost. He's a she.
2 posted on 11/27/2002 1:01:07 AM PST by Demosthenes
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To: Mensch
If GWB's popularity is still 65%-70% in 2004, the Dems will let Gore run only because no one else wants to waste their shot at the Presidency. Gore will lose miserably.
3 posted on 11/27/2002 1:03:58 AM PST by fleur-de-lis
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To: Mensch
"The media is kind of weird these days on politics, and there are some major institutional voices that are, truthfully speaking, part and parcel of the Republican Party," said Mr. Gore in an interview with The Observer. "Fox News Network, The Washington Times, Rush Limbaugh—there’s a bunch of them....

It's terrible that Republican ideas finally have a chance to compete in the market place of ideas. For so long only the Dems had the only voice (NY Times, LA Times, ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, PBS, NPR). Now with the horrible Republicans finally getting some air-time and the people actually like it. People are choosing to hear the GOP side of the story for once in their lifes.

4 posted on 11/27/2002 1:09:26 AM PST by Always Right
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To: Mensch
You know, the more I read that this idiot has said, the more i realize we would all be dead if he were president!! This guy changes his story on every show he's on. He doesn't seem to be able to put together one rational thought! Think he's losing it????
5 posted on 11/27/2002 1:30:42 AM PST by blondee123
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To: Always Right
Isn't it amazing that Americans like hearing something other than Democrat spin networks, and they are showing it at the polls. All we ever needed were media outlets that didn't filter or ignore our message.
6 posted on 11/27/2002 1:48:18 AM PST by liberateUS
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To: Demosthenes
Algore is whining and whimpering because the American people can now say their piece and bang away with their views unfiltered and uncensored. That's what bothers him and other liberals, that the days when the liberal media set the agenda - are gone.

For the benefit of younger FR posters, I can relate to the days when I tried to post a letter to my local newspaper and most of the time it simply wasn't published. When it was, the editors would leave important points I wanted to make on the cutting room floor. So no one heard the real me. That's changed with the Internet and with the rise of Free Republic - here is a community of people with views like your own so you don't have to wonder anymore if you're the only one who feels and thinks the way you do and you get the opportunity to say what you want without any one cutting it to fit the space of a column or whatever. I apologize for the length of my rant but only because I felt it was necessary to get this point across which is basically that its about time we conservatives have a place at the table of democracy.

And contrary to Algore's assertion we're a Republican National Committee echo chamber, I don't take my cues from the RNC or the President or any one else. I always say what I feel and think is right and I am first and foremost an American and only then am I a Republican. For me, my country comes before my party. For Gore and his fellow Democrats today its all about putting partisan advantage ahead of the former, which is why they wish to shut us up. There was a time in my life when I was proud to have been a liberal and a Democrat. Today if I no longer feel that way and like most Americans have come to see things the way they ought to be, its due in no small part to the fact that its my party and its values that have deserted me, not the other way around.

It's taken some bandwidth to tell the Gorebatross all this but it had to be said for in his criticism of conservative media emerging in this country today, the truth he's apparently incapable of coming to terms with about their phenomenal growth is that its linked not to the American people being puppets of the RNC or following orders from the Bush White House, but simply as a consequence of the fact the New Media is finally reflecting what people want to learn and hear. No wonder Algore has lost it and his inability to comprehend how the country's changing is exactly why he will never be President. Hey Al, deal with it.

7 posted on 11/27/2002 1:52:56 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: Mensch
" Most of the media [has] been slow to recognize the pervasive impact of this fifth column in their ranks—that is, day after day, injecting the daily Republican talking points into the definition of what’s objective as stated by the news media as a whole." --Al Gore.

ROTFLOL!!!!!!!

He's complaining about the First Amendment!!!

8 posted on 11/27/2002 1:57:32 AM PST by patriciaruth
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To: patriciaruth
With Constitutionally Forcible Rape and similar expressions and now the mandated Five Minute Hate, its hard to believe these people once stood for free speech. I guess what they really mean is Democratic Speech, all the time. Y'now, Algore thinks we're stupid, when the truth is we're catching on. Granted we've made fun of him but how has satire ever hurt any one? If he were half human he'd enjoy it himself and show humility in the face of his critics. The Algore we're seeing is a thin-skinned blowhard that has criticism get to him. He's really that vain. One can only conclude that only does he have no principles, the only reason he's even running for President is to massage his wounded ego and to address the perception he's life's loser. Sorry Al but your criticism of the New Media is not only turning people off, its confirming their worst impressions about you. Oh and for the record that 19% approval rating didn't come courtesy of Rush Limbaugh or the FOX NEWS Channel. I think its high time the Gorebatross put on a dunce cap and go sit in the corner and think again - hard.
9 posted on 11/27/2002 2:06:07 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: Mensch
"Most of the media [has] been slow to recognize the pervasive impact of this fifth column in their ranks—that is, day after day, injecting the daily Republican talking points into the definition of what’s objective as stated by the news media as a whole."

This is the most telling remark. According to Algore, the definition of objectivity is defined by the mainstream media. In other words, liberals in the media define what is objective or not and they have decided reporting all the facts (Fox) or opining from the right (Rush) is not objective. Only giving the Left's view of things is objective.You wish Albert.

10 posted on 11/27/2002 2:34:58 AM PST by PaulJ
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To: Mensch
Um, Al, the pendulum is now starting to swing the "other way". Your lame, worn bleets won't distract thinking people from Judy Woodruff's (CNN) statement "We Won" on Election eve 2000. It's just too sweet to see you "blaming" your own meida squads for your own failure.

Go back to your project critiqued by the GAO in FAA - Controls Over Airport Identification Media. It still needs work.

11 posted on 11/27/2002 3:01:23 AM PST by LurkedLongEnough
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To: Mensch
some of them are financed by wealthy ultra-conservative billionaires

I take it, Al, that the others financed by impoverished ultra-conservative billionaires?

12 posted on 11/27/2002 3:07:14 AM PST by governsleastgovernsbest
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To: governsleastgovernsbest
Bwahahaha. Yeah right and I'm Richard Scaife.
13 posted on 11/27/2002 3:12:40 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: Mensch
I love it. First, he complains conservative media is a "Fifth Column." (That's a brilliant strategy, by the way, which the Clintons perfected: Just redirect criticisms against you toward your critics, with a vicious inference of treason)

Then, when he's arguing how he might build support *within* the Democratic party, he acknowledges he'll have to go to the "political-journalistic" community.

So which is it Al? Are the media Democratic or not? "Well, yes, they are and that's a good thing."

14 posted on 11/27/2002 3:32:01 AM PST by Mason
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To: Mensch
some of them are financed by wealthy ultra-conservative billionaires...same line used by clinton to explain scandals.
15 posted on 11/27/2002 3:39:12 AM PST by RWG
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To: Mensch
I haven’t been very good about calling all of the insiders over the last two years, and maybe some of them have a beef with me because of that. I know they have been courted assiduously by some of the others who are considering a run for the White House, and it may be that some of them have already signed up with other people. If I do decide to run again, I think there’s a lot of support, but I’d also have to work really hard to get a bunch of them committed back to me."

Algorebatross hasn't mended fences within the party it seems..well he still AIN'T mended them at HOME in TENNESSEE either. In this last election the RAT running for gov law breaking, media elected, weasel phil bredesen SHUNNED Algorebatross as did all but THREE State canidates. One won, two lost.

Al Baby you are BAD NEWS, keep spewing your hate in that shrill whinny voice. The more you spew the more "real" you comes out.

16 posted on 11/27/2002 3:40:57 AM PST by GailA
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To: Mason

17 posted on 11/27/2002 3:41:24 AM PST by John Lenin
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To: Mensch
I always knew Gore was a idiot, now the picture is futher developed as a fashist idiot.
18 posted on 11/27/2002 3:43:31 AM PST by Leisler
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To: Mensch
"The media is kind of weird these days on politics"...translated...."You mean that they can actually present non-biased news that doesn't support the radical left?"

The NEW Al Gore. No thank you. Didn't like the old one either. Just go away. Now.
19 posted on 11/27/2002 4:07:33 AM PST by giznort
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To: Mensch
Gore has been marginalized by all but himself.
20 posted on 11/27/2002 4:11:51 AM PST by JoeGar
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