Top Items:
Variety:
Prickly Peacock nixes Chicks — NBC cancels ads for Dixie docu 'Sing' … The Weinstein Co. is claiming that NBC and the CW have refused to air national ads for the new Dixie Chicks docu "Shut Up & Sing." — But while the Peacock has specifically said it won't accept the spots …
Discussion:
Outside The Beltway, Riehl World View, Say Anything, Hullabaloo, Think Progress, Talking Points Memo and All Spin Zone
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Judd / Think Progress:
The Dixie Chicks Ad NBC Doesn't Want You To See — NBC is refusing to air an ad for the new Dixie Chicks documentary, "Shut Up & Sing." Variety reports, "NBC's commercial clearance department said in writing that it 'cannot accept these spots as they are disparaging to President Bush.'"
Dan Eggen / Washington Post:
Cheney's Remarks Fuel Torture Debate — Vice President Cheney said this week that dunking terrorism suspects in water during questioning was a "no-brainer," prompting complaints from human rights advocates that he was endorsing the use of a controversial technique known as waterboarding on prisoners held by the United States.
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Associated Press:
White House denies Cheney hailed 'water boarding' … WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House said Friday that Vice President Dick Cheney was not talking about a torture technique known as "water boarding" when he said dunking terrorism suspects in water during questioning was a "no-brainer."
John Amato / Crooks and Liars:
Tony Snow-Dick Cheney-waterboarding-a dunk in the water — Tony Snow was trying to dance around the fact that Dick Cheney is all for water-boarding no matter how he tries to spin it. Trying to frame water-boarding as a dunk in the water is not fooling anybody, Tony. — CBS has the video
Daily Mail:
Oh my god, South Park mocks Irwin — The creators of South Park have never been afraid to upset celebrities - and many of the show's viewers. — From jokes about religion and homosexuality to four-letter tirades, Trey Parker and Matt Stone have always mixed shock tactics with satire in the hit cartoon series.
Discussion:
Right Wing News
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CNN:
'South Park' mocks Steve Irwin — LONDON, England (CNN) — The cartoon series "South Park" has never been shy of courting controversy, but its latest episode has caused outrage by featuring the recently deceased Crocodile Hunter, Steve Irwin. — Swearing and random death and destruction …
Discussion:
Secular Blasphemy
Greg Tinti / The Political Pit Bull:
VIDEO: South Park Mocks Steve Erwin's Death?
VIDEO: South Park Mocks Steve Erwin's Death?
Discussion:
Ace of Spades HQ
Nathan Burchfiel / CNSNews:
Webb Says His Novels 'Inappropriate' for News Radio — (CNSNews.com) - In an interview on Washington Post Radio Friday morning, Jim Webb, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Virginia, said excerpts of his novels are "a little bit inappropriate" to be read on news radio.
Discussion:
The American Princess, TAPPED, NewsBusters.org, Bring it On!, TIME, Ezra Klein, Inactivist, Ankle Biting Pundits, IMAO, Stop The ACLU, Dogwood Pundit, Althouse, Yourish.com and Wizbang Politics
Graham Allison / Washington Post:
Deterring Kim Jong Il — In an interview aired last week, George Stephanopoulos put the question to President Bush: What would he do if "North Korea sold nukes to Iran or al-Qaeda?" Bush replied, "They'd be held to account." — Seeking specifics, Stephanopoulos asked: "What does that mean?"
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Geoff Elliott / NEWS.com.au:
Australia 'a nuclear threat' — HAROLD Ford, a handsome 36-year-old from Tennessee, has become one of the sensations of the mid-term elections in the US and a reason why Democrats are a good chance of winning back control of the US Congress for the first time in 12 years.
BBC:
Australia Muslim cleric suspended — Australia's top Muslim cleric has been barred from preaching for up to three months, after comparing immodestly dressed women to "uncovered meat". — Sheikh Taj el-Din al-Hilali's comments, suggesting that women who did not wear a headscarf attracted sexual assault …
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Media Matters for America:
Lauer on Limbaugh's Michael J. Fox attacks: "Didn't Rush Limbaugh just say what a lot of people were privately thinking?" … On the October 26 edition of NBC's Today, co-host Matt Lauer suggested that when nationally syndicated radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh "said [that] perhaps [actor] …
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Salon:
Salon Interview: Camille Paglia — It's been a while since Salon last heard from our favorite intellectual and one of our founding contributors, Camille Paglia. But with so much tumult in the air, we felt the need to ask her to survey the strange tectonic shifts in our political and cultural landscape …
Discussion:
Gay Patriot, QandO, Sadly, No!, Kesher Talk, Lawyers, Guns and Money, TigerHawk and Vox Popoli
Walter Pincus / Washington Post:
Intelligence Chairman Urges Leak Inquiry — The chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence has proposed a sweeping inquiry into the possible leak of a classified National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq by a staff member, including an audit of staff telephone records …
Virginia H. Mannering / bea.gov:
News Release: Gross Domestic Product — In order to view the PDF files on this page, the free Adobe Acrobat Reader must be installed. — Recorded message: (202) 606-5306 — GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT: THIRD QUARTER 2006 (ADVANCE) — Real gross domestic product …
Discussion:
Angry Bear, Calculated Risk, MaxedOutMama, Bizzyblog, Outside The Beltway, QandO, The Street Light and Vox Baby
David Horovitz / Jerusalem Post:
'Hamas doesn't want to destroy Israel' — Hamas wants to "liberate the Palestinians," not to destroy Israel, Javier Solana, the European Union's foreign policy chief, told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday. — In an interview following his talks in Tel Aviv with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni …
George Lakoff / New York Times:
Staying the Course Right Over a Cliff — THE Bush administration has finally been caught in its own language trap. — "That is not a stay-the-course policy," Tony Snow, the White House press secretary, declared on Monday. — The first rule of using negatives is that negating a frame activates the frame.
Jeff Greenfield / CNN:
Where the right went wrong — WASHINGTON (CNN) — Fifty years ago, when a 29-year-old Yale graduate named William F. Buckley Jr. funded National Review magazine, conservatism was a small insurgency, fighting the dominant tide of liberalism that had governed the United States for a quarter century.
Tom Leonard / Telegraph:
The BBC's commitment to bias is no laughing matter — It's fair to say the message is finally getting through: the BBC has a problem with impartiality. The row over BBC bias has been rumbling on longer than war in Sudan and always seemed just as unresolvable.
David Cay Johnston / New York Times:
I.R.S. Going Slow Before Election — Mark W. Everson, commissioner of internal revenue, said he regularly discussed the potential impact of agency actions with senior staff members. "We are very sensitive to political perceptions," Mr. Everson said. — The commissioner of internal revenue …
Rasmussen Reports:
Virginia Senate: Allen (R) and Webb (D) in Toss-Up — Allen (R) 49% Webb (D) 48% — In Virginia's fierce U.S. Senate campaign, Republican Senator George Allen's once double-digit lead over Democrat James Webb has virtually vanished. Allen now leads 49% to 48%—with leaners added, 50% to 48% (see crosstabs).
Carol D. Leonnig / Washington Post:
In the Libby Case, A Grilling to Remember — With withering and methodical dispatch, White House nemesis and prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald yesterday sliced up the first person called to the stand on behalf of the vice president's former chief of staff. — If I. Lewis "Scooter" …
Kevin Drum / Political Animal:
THE C-WORD....Ramesh Ponnuru, responding to a sensible letter from a reader, gives the stem cell game away. After complaining that Michael J. Fox's ad for Claire McCaskill didn't explain the details of stem cell research in enough detail, he says this:
Discussion:
The Corner