Boston Herald

The year in favoritism toward liberal bias

- By TIM GRAHAM Tim Graham is a syndicated columnist.

The Poynter Institute is a Florida-based journalism organizati­on that runs PolitiFact. On Poynter.org, a daily media report run by Tom Jones, who sounds like Brian Stelter’s identicall­y thinking twin. Poynter says it supports “responsibl­e news and fact-based informatio­n,” but its incessant party line of liberal-media cheerleadi­ng and conservati­ve-media loathing really came through when Jones made a list of the “best and worst of news media in 2020.”

Best national news: “ABC’s David Muir, with his steady presence behind the desk, is leading what has become the best network evening newscast.” But he loves CBS and NBC, too! “All, however, are good, and that includes the ‘PBS NewsHour’ with outstandin­g anchor Judy Woodruff,” he said.

Best Sunday-morning interview program: “Meet the Press.” Chuck Todd “isn’t beloved by all viewers, and often is beat up in the Twitter world, but I will never understand that,” he said.

“His interview skills … are as good as anyone in the business.”

Most controvers­ial op-ed: Sen. Tom Cotton’s New York Times piece. That’s probably true, but Jones said that “Cotton advocated sending in the military to break up those protesting police brutality and racism.” That’s misleading. Cotton advocated sending in the military to stop rioting. He wrote, “A majority who seek to protest peacefully shouldn’t be confused with bands of miscreants.”

Dumbest editorial: The New York Times, for endorsing both Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Sen. Elizabeth Warren for president. “Seriously? The whole point of an endorsemen­t is to help voters by endorsing one,” he said. This crew was his only liberal target.

Biggest breakout star: Abby Phillip on CNN, for her

“measured, yet provocativ­e voice whenever CNN turns to her for commentary.” He added, “Put it this way: If I’m flipping by CNN and she’s talking, I stop and listen.”

Worst excuse for news organizati­ons: the “irresponsi­ble, reckless and damaging programmin­g that you see on One America News Network and Newsmax,” especially OANN’s eager transmissi­on of the unsupporte­d claim that President Donald

Trump won the presidenti­al election “in a landslide.”

Best show about the media: Brian Stelter’s “Reliable Sources.”

Best book about the media: Stelter’s anti-Fox News screed “Hoax.” (Twins!)

Most dangerous network: “Fox News people won’t like to hear this and they refuse to believe it, but no news organizati­on does more harm than America’s mostwatche­d cable news network,” he said.

Best debate moderator: Kristen Welker of NBC News. She “was in full command” of the third presidenti­al debate.

Best changing of the guard: “outstandin­g” Joy Reid, who took over for Chris Matthews on MSNBC.

Biggest hurdle to a free press in the U.S.: President Trump and White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany. “With her lies and childish attacks, she is in the running for worst White House press secretary ever,” he said.

Hardest workers: “Did anyone work harder in journalism this year than Poynter’s

PolitiFact and Internatio­nal Fact-Checking Network, CNN’s Daniel Dale, The Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler, The Associated Press’ Karen Mahabir and anyone else who fact-checks for a living?” he asks.

Things he really liked in the media this year: latenight hosts Stephen Colbert and Seth Meyers. “Roasting politician­s and commenting on politics have been latenight staples forever, but the commentary of Colbert and Meyers this year was hilarious and biting,” he said.

Things he really hated this year: “Pretty much everything said on Fox News’ ‘The Five,’ especially if it was coming out of Greg Gutfeld’s mouth.”

Oh, and Jones also hates Rick Santorum on CNN. Because all the liberals don’t want conservati­ves to, as liberal blog Crooks and Liars says, “muddy up their political panels” on CNN.

Liberals good, conservati­ves bad: That’s the Poynter Institute for you.

 ?? AP FILE ?? BIGGEST BREAKOUT STAR: CNN journalist Abby Phillip asks President Trump a question before he departs for France on the South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, D.C., in November 2018.
AP FILE BIGGEST BREAKOUT STAR: CNN journalist Abby Phillip asks President Trump a question before he departs for France on the South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, D.C., in November 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States