Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Public’ radio isn’t dedicated to the masses

- By Tim Graham Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog Newsbuster­s.org.

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SNational Public Radio fair and balanced? Do they care what you think? NPR has a “public editor” to monitor listener complaints and concerns, but as we all know, the majority of their listeners are going to complain they’re not “progressiv­e” enough. In 2021, Public Editor Kelly Mcbride appeared on Brian Stelter’s CNN podcast to praise NPR’S decision to allow their journalist­s to go to (leftist) public protests so they can “bring their full humanity to work with them.”

When Stelter asked about NPR’S critics, Mcbride dismissed any conservati­ve complaints about a leftist tilt because they are not “genuinely interested in improving NPR.” Mcbride claimed her job was to coach NPR “to achieve its own internally stated goals. It doesn’t help to be magnifying disingenuo­us criticism.” To balance NPR is to harm NPR?

NPR senior editor Uri Berliner wrote an expose for The Free Press, chroniclin­g NPR’S blatant bias on subjects from Russian collusion conspiracy theories to the Hunter Biden laptop. NPR didn’t report negatively on Donald Trump; they sought to “damage or topple Trump’s presidency.” Is Mcbride going to find that this internally stated criticism isn’t worth considerin­g?

NPR media reporter David Folkenflik countered with an official word salad from NPR chief news executive Edith Chapin rejecting Berliner’s critique: “We’re proud to stand behind the exceptiona­l work that our desks and shows do to cover a wide range of challengin­g stories,” she wrote. “We believe that inclusion — among our staff, with our sourcing, and in our overall coverage — is critical to telling the nuanced stories of this country and our world.”

“Inclusion” of conservati­ve views is something NPR refuses to do. Folkenflik has been an NPR media reporter since 2004, and he has never interviewe­d me or anyone else at the Media Research Center for one of his reports on media performanc­e, including in his multitude of hostile stories on Fox News.

But Folkenflik recently filed several stories from fervently anti-israel leftists at The Intercept complainin­g that The New York Times was too pro-israel in reporting about sexual assaults committed by Hamas terrorists on Oct. 7.

CNN media reporter

Oliver Darcy wasn’t as calm as Folkenflik. He hated this Berliner critique from the start. In his April 9 newsletter, he skepticall­y stated the idea that NPR is “supposedly embracing” a progressiv­e view, and Berliner “felt more aligned with the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal than NPR.” So Darcy wants to deny NPR’S identity is on the left, and then he signals that it is.

Darcy expressed disgust that “Fox News quickly pounced” on the article, and it may lead to a “Jim Jordan type” to hold an oversight hearing on NPR tilt. Horrors!

On April 10, Darcy was at it again. Berliner’s expose on NPR is “nothing short of a massive gift to the right,” whose priority is “vilifying the news media.” This is weird coming from Darcy, who routinely vilifies Fox News as fake news and argues it should be deplatform­ed by cable companies.

On Wednesday, a day after being suspended, Berliner posted his resignatio­n letter.

On a daily basis, taxpayer-funded NPR is nothing short of a massive gift to the left, pumping out progressiv­e propaganda to more than 1,000 stations. Because it has “public” in its branding, too many Americans still think it’s a service to everyone — and not just to the Democrats who ensure the millions keep flowing.

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