April 16, 2009
Categories: Networks
Claim: CNBC pressured to tone down Obama criticism
When GE CEO Jeff Immelt and NBC Universal president Jeff Zucker met recently with CNBC executives and on-air talent, was there really pressure from the higher-ups to be less tough on Obama?
It’s a very serious charge, but the New York Post makes it. Reporting on the meeting today, one source claims that the network’s been urged to tone down the Obama-bashing.
“It was an intensive, three-hour dinner at 30 Rock which Zucker himself was behind,” a source familiar with the powwow told us. “There was a long discussion about whether CNBC has become too conservative and is beating up on Obama too much. There’s great concern that CNBC is now the anti-Obama network. The whole meeting was really kind of creepy.”
One topic under the microscope, our insider said, was on-air CNBC editor Rick Santelli’s rant two months ago about staging a “Chicago Tea Party” to protest the president’s bailout programs — an idea that spawned tax protest tea parties in other big cities, infuriating the White House. Oddly, Santelli was not at the meeting, while Jim Cramer was, noted our source, who added that no edict was ultimately handed down by the network chieftains.
(snip)
Good find!
Fascism at work....
From your find, I deduce that there must have been several (if not continuous) warnings to the CNBC commentators about "disrespecting" "the office of the president" Obama.
The public deserves to know the name of the "mathophobic" executive who told Francis that by pointing out the fallacies of obamacare math she was disrespecting the office of the president."
FYI:
Melissa Francis Leaving CNBC for Fox Business>
By Chris Ariens on December 2, 2011 3:45 PM
TVNewser has learned Melissa Francis is leaving CNBC and joining Fox Business Network.