Business

Dan Gainor | July 24, 2006

     If you want to read between the lines for politicians, it helps if you know what book they’re reading. In the case of liberal would-be tax fixer Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), it appears to be Mao’s “Little Red Book.”

 …

Ken Shepherd | July 21, 2006

      ABC’s Charles Gibson gave viewers of the July 20 “World News Tonight” little to chew on when he told them the government was scaling back testing for mad cow disease. The anchor only put forth the anti-industry side…

Rachel Waters | July 21, 2006

     Instead of worrying about the burst of the “housing bubble” you might as well watch paint dry or your grass grow. CNN’s “American Morning” is no longer forecasting doom and gloom for the US housing market. On July 21…

Ken Shepherd | July 20, 2006

     On July 19, a federal judge struck down a state law aimed at punishing Wal-Mart for spending “too little” on health insurance. The next day’s coverage in The New York Times and The Washington Post portrayed the court case…

Ken Shepherd | July 19, 2006

     A think tank with ties to liberal financier George Soros was called simply as “nonprofit” in a recent New York Times article on privatized prisons.

 

     “The increasing…

| July 19, 2006

     It hasn’t been long since the cowboy was the defining image of America – to friends and enemies alike. The cowboy stood strong and tall – always willing to fight for a good cause. And where he stood, he stood for something important,…

Amy Menefee | July 19, 2006

     Oil speculators are staying busy these days, and they’re not just on the trading floor. They’re active at all three broadcast news networks, helping to hype oil prices even higher than…

BMI Staff | July 19, 2006
Networks Include Fear Premium in Oil Coverage Journalists and oil traders have been quick to warn viewers that $4 gas is coming. Oil might rise to $100 a…
Ken Shepherd | July 19, 2006

     Washington Post food writer Candy Sagon gave a sour assessment of her grocery store quandaries in her July 19 article “Is There Anything Left That We Can Eat?”

 

     Sagon’s latest…

Ken Shepherd | July 18, 2006

     Greedy drug companies are making a killing off the medicine cabinets of the poor, complained New York Times correspondent Milt Freudenheim in his July 18 article “A Windfall from Shifts to Medicare.”

     Yet while the Times…

Rachel Waters | July 17, 2006

     Al Gore may have rubbed elbows with some of the world’s most prominent leaders, but he looked awkward in staged photos as cover boy in the July 14 issue of Entertainment Weekly. He appeared denim jacketed in the hot…

Ken Shepherd | July 17, 2006

     Global warming may doom the Napa Valley, CBS News warned its July 12 “Evening News” audience. Yet correspondent John Blackstone excluded any scientists, including those who otherwise believe in man-made global warming,…

Ken Shepherd | July 17, 2006

     The Washington Post has produced evidence that journalists influence the way the public views the economy.

     The paper sponsored “a survey-based experiment” of “more than 2,500 online respondents” who were “shown a brief news…

Ken Shepherd | July 14, 2006

     ABC, CBS and NBC alarmed viewers of their July 13 evening newscasts with stories about “record” oil prices due to tensions in the Middle East. While the newscasts informed viewers about global political problems impacting…

Rachel Waters | July 13, 2006

     The ’80s song “I Want a New Drug” might as well be the soundtrack for The New York Times and NBC. Both media have dramatically changed the tune on two prescription drugs they once hailed as “breakthroughs” and “promising…

Ken Shepherd | July 13, 2006

     CNN business contributor Andy Serwer reported on a curious policy change at Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) stores: they’re giving first-time shoplifters a break for inexpensive merchandise. The story was not meant to be publicly announced and could…

Amy Menefee | July 12, 2006

     “We’ll look at who’s to blame for the stuff you put in your body.”

 

     That’s not an exaggeration of the media’s view of the “food police’s”…

Ken Shepherd | July 12, 2006

     ABC and CBS evening newscasts attacked the pharmaceutical industry for expensive drugs for cancer treatment. Both the July 11 “World News Tonight” and “Evening News” left out dollar figures on drug industry research costs…

| July 12, 2006

     Dr. Sylvester Graham – who was born in 1794 and died in 1851 – has been re-incarnated. His new name is Michael Jacobson, founder and director of the Washington-based “food police,” operating under the name the Center for Science in the…

BMI Staff | July 12, 2006
Networks Serve as Deputy for Food Police Do you feel comfortable eating that Big Mac? That frappuccino? If so, the food police havent gotten to you…