NRO
 
December 9, 2013 4:00  AM 
 
_MSNBC’s Alternative Universe_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/article/365780/msnbcs-alternative-universe-charles-c-w-cooke)
  
What passes for journalism on the network is  downright silly. 
 
 
By _Charles C. W. Cooke_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/author/charles-c-w-cooke)  

 
More than any other subject, apolitical sorts will ask me about Fox News.  “
Is it really crazy?” my British friends inquire, flashing the sort of  
smile that a botanist might exhibit while examining a newly discovered species  
of moss. “Is it, like, really right wing?”  
The question has always slightly irritated me, showing as it does that the  
considerable success that the Left has had in demonizing its opposition 
extends  even across the Atlantic. Certainly, both Fox’s commentary and its 
ostensibly  straight reporting are marked by the right-leaning proclivities of 
its owners.  But the notion that the network is unique in exhibiting bias is 
one of the more  egregious planks of Western conventional wisdom — and 
especially so because it  seems patently obvious to me that if one were to 
single out for palpable  eccentricity a cable-news station in the United 
States, 
it would not be Fox. It  would be MSNBC.
 
Take a quick look at the numbers. A recent Pew study revealed that the  
supposedly neutral CNN spent 54 percent of its time broadcasting “news” and 46 
 percent of its time hosting “opinion.” Fox, by contrast, transmits 55 
percent  opinion and 45 percent news. But MSNBC — well, MSNBC consists of a 
remarkable  85 percent opinion and only 15 percent news. This has consequences. 
 During the election, Pew _added_ 
(http://www.politico.com/blogs/media/2012/11/pew-msnbc-more-negative-than-fox-148088.html)
 ,  the ratio of 
unfavorable to favorable treatment in stories about Mitt Romney on  MSNBC was 
roughly 
23-to-1, and the negative-to-positive ratio for Barack Obama  on Fox News 
was 8-to-1.  
“Biased” doesn’t cut it. To watch MSNBC for an afternoon is not so much to 
be  given a slanted account of what is happening here in America, but 
instead to  witness a series of discussions about current events in parallel 
America II — a  rather silly place in which the political center of gravity and 
all things Good  are defined by the preferences of the faculty at Berkeley 
and the comments  section of the Daily Kos and in which anyone who dissents 
from this  position is believed to possess two heads, a black heart, and a 
pocket copy of  Mein Kampf. 
America II, as anyone who watches the channel will discover rather swiftly, 
 hosts a supermajority of well-meaning multi-culti, progressive types whose 
 foolproof plans for explosive economic growth, uniform social justice, and 
 general human utopia are constantly being undone by a blossoming  
white-supremacist movement, split apart by neo-secessionists, and existentially 
 
threatened by traitors whose defining characteristic is a never-quite-explained 
 hatred for progress. America II features no gray areas whatsoever: All 
local  variation is apartheid, each and every identification requirement is the 
second  coming of Jim Crow, all criticism of the government is sedition. It’
s  exhausting. 
Hour by tedious hour, America II is saved from its own worst instincts. 
What  destroyed Detroit, a city that has been run into the ground by Democrats 
for  half a century? “Republicans” and “capitalism,” naturally. A pressing 
question?  “Are conservatives the new Confederates?” A _topic_ 
(http://newsbusters.org/blogs/jeff-poor/2010/11/03/matthews-badgers-senator-over-palin-h
ave-you-ever-been-eyewitness-her-act)   worthy of Chris Matthews’s 
investigation? Whether Sarah Palin can actually  read. It’s like watching 
Mystery 
Science Theater 3000 — just less  realistic. 
Perhaps the most startling thing about the network is that one doesn’t need 
 to even infer or twist anything in order to wallow in the gratifying  
stupefaction that its hosts just said what they just said. There is an entire  
cottage industry on the Internet that is dedicated to putting words in the  
mouths of cable news personalities — indeed, in recent weeks I have been  
featured in a couple of _modest_ 
(http://thinkprogress.org/security/2013/11/21/2980531/fox-news-pundit-says-end-judicial-filibuster-lead-military-coup/)
   
_contributions_ 
(http://mediamatters.org/blog/2013/12/02/national-review-online-everyone-should-get-pass/197091)
   myself. But with MSNBC, no such 
mendacity is necessary. No clever editing. No  false contexts. One can just 
read 
the transcripts. They meant to say  that. 
After all, what would one possibly add to Martin Bashir’s suggestions that  
someone should defecate in Sarah Palin’s mouth, that conservatives are 
using the  acronym “IRS” as a stand-in for “n***er,” or that Ted Cruz is the “
David Koresh”  of the Republican party? What could be achieved by sexing up 
Chris Matthews’s  conviction that tea partiers “still count blacks as 
three-fifths” of a person,  or that the perpetrators of 9/11 “just have a 
different perspective”? What might  a worker bee charged with feeding the 
outrage 
machine do to make more impressive  Joy Reid’s asseveration that Republicans 
are “resentful” of “post-1964 America,”  or to improve upon Ed Schultz’s 
faith that “God supports Obamacare,” or to  render more absurd Michael Eric 
Dyson’s contention that Eric Holder is “the  chief lawgiver” and the “
Moses of our time”? 
The channel is a lazy intern’s dream. Recently, a guest called Tim Wise  
nonchalantly announced that Republicans have “essentially gone in as a  
white-nationalist, Afrikaner, Boer party.” It’s all there, clear as day. Just  
rip from the Internet and upload. Bingo! One gets the uncomfortable feeling 
that  the minds behind the programming are so strongly wedded to the cartoon  
impression of what they believe Fox News to be — sorry, what they believe 
the  “FAUX NEWS ECHO CHAMBER!” to be — that they cannot imagine running a 
television  station without emulating it. MSNBC, it seems, is a reaction 
against a Fox that  never really existed — a progressive version of the How 
Utterly Ridiculous Can  One Become Before the Commercial Break? game that has 
long 
been played more  devotedly in the fever swamps of the Left than by the 
conservatives they like to  denounce.

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