F
FloridaBear1776
Guest
Fox News goes out of its way to make the point that while its commentators
give their opinions, its newscasts are "fair and balanced."
A smidgen of evidence to the contrary may be found in a story that I heard on a FNR affiliate concerning the transit strike in Philadelphia.
The reporter, Robin Wallensky, wrote a piece around what sounded like a phone interview with one man who was unhappy about the strikers' not wishing to pay co-pays for health benefits. There was no "vox pop" of a representative sampling of people trying to get around, which in heavily Democratic Philly would surely have included someone who might have seen the union's point about eroding benefits. Nor were there any bites from the union or from the transit agency, for that matter.
Am I mistaken, or is Fox the only non-union shop among the New York-based networks?
Would Robin "Union Buster" Wallensky's piece be an example of bias by deliberate omission, or bias by stupidity (I've seen the other posts about the low overall quality of the FNR product).
give their opinions, its newscasts are "fair and balanced."
A smidgen of evidence to the contrary may be found in a story that I heard on a FNR affiliate concerning the transit strike in Philadelphia.
The reporter, Robin Wallensky, wrote a piece around what sounded like a phone interview with one man who was unhappy about the strikers' not wishing to pay co-pays for health benefits. There was no "vox pop" of a representative sampling of people trying to get around, which in heavily Democratic Philly would surely have included someone who might have seen the union's point about eroding benefits. Nor were there any bites from the union or from the transit agency, for that matter.
Am I mistaken, or is Fox the only non-union shop among the New York-based networks?
Would Robin "Union Buster" Wallensky's piece be an example of bias by deliberate omission, or bias by stupidity (I've seen the other posts about the low overall quality of the FNR product).