There is A lot wrong with the feckless Democratic Party at this point, but yes.If you want a stronger party, you have to be visible all the time just like President Trump is now
There is A lot wrong with the feckless Democratic Party at this point, but yes.If you want a stronger party, you have to be visible all the time just like President Trump is now
How about instead of hundreds of posts on this, the folks on this board whether on the left or right just admit that ALL media today is biased in one way or another and be done with it.
How about we discuss, learn and understand that there's nuance depending on circumstance and outlet?How about instead of hundreds of posts on this, the folks on this board whether on the left or right just admit that ALL media today is biased in one way or another and be done with it.
Once again: There is no requirement that any news, from any source, at any time was ever unbiased.
There is no fairness doctrine. When there was, the courts ruled that it was unconstitutional.
Journalists have the right to use their own discretion in deciding how to report stories.
supreme.justia.com
Then that either makes Carr's inflammatory statements impossible to accomplish or a new intrusive government policy that will affect all of broadcasting.How about instead of hundreds of posts on this, the folks on this board whether on the left or right just admit that ALL media today is biased in one way or another and be done with it.
The Heritage Foundation was among the movers and shakers pushing for Fowler to follow through and kill the doctrine:


Chris McCarthy, a 22-year veteran of Paramount and CBS who recently served as the lead executive in charge of the company’s cable networks (except Nickelodeon), will depart the company immediately following its merger with Skydance Media, which is expected to close in August. Brian Robbins, the President of Nickelodeon and Paramount Pictures, is also slated to leave, according to trade publication reports that first surfaced last year.
George Cheeks, the last of the three co-CEOs and the lead executive in charge of CBS, will remain with Paramount once the Skydance merger is completed, though he is expected to serve in a lesser role with the company. Skydance has already settled on former NBC Universal CEO Jeffrey Shell as the new president of Paramount once the merger closes.
As co-CEOs, McCarthy, Robbins and Cheeks were tasked with navigating Paramount through turbulent financial and regulatory conditions as the Skydance deal faced delays. In a bid to stabilize the company’s bottom line, they carried out multiple rounds of layoffs and organizational restructuring in recent months and agreed to key concessions with President Donald Trump and members of his administration to secure approval for the merger.
I’m sure most of the Paramount execs will be out.![]()
Paramount co-CEOs Chris McCarthy, Brian Robbins to leave amid Skydance merger
A pair of Paramount executives who helped operate the company as part of its co-CEO structure are expected to leave in the next few weeks.thedesk.net
Here is an update on the Paramount/Skydance deal Chris McCarthy and Brian Robbins are to leave Paramount as soon as Skydance management takes over.
I’m sure most of the Paramount execs will be out.
I was assured he was the epitome of youth and fitness.One has to wonder if DJT has Alzheimer’s, just saying.
I agree. While the article describes the deal as a "merger", it is really Skydance taking over the running of Paramount. And that makes business sense as it was the owner of Skydance who purchased Paramount.
This administration, when it decries biased journalism, isn't asking for diverse views (in fact, they've made it clear they don't want to hear the word "diverse"). Their view of bias is to present anything other than the story they want told.
So now my questions about CBS News are: Now that the FCC Chairman has said they promised to present unbiased news, does that mean moving forward, they will accept that all CBS News is unbiased? Who judges what is biased? The government? Or someone in editorial? And what is the penalty if someone in government says they're biased?
"The leaders of our top newsrooms are pathologically afraid of being accused of partisanship. So only if people on “both sides” agree does the media consider something a real scandal.
That effectively gives the right veto power over what the media cares about. If the right presents a united front, the coverage — even of threats to American democracy, or to the planet — will be listless and sporadic. Which it is."
presswatchers.org