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SCENE
The Bias Busters' Ball

Cal Thomas served as master of ceremonies. © Media Research Center

BY LIZ COX

On the evening of March 27, employees of the Media Research Center — along with sponsors ranging from the National Rifle Association to the National Review (which paid between $1,500 and $25,000 each), individual supporters (at $150 to $175 a head), and members of a Congressional Host Committee (twenty-five Republicans and a Democrat, Ralph M. Hall of Texas) — gathered in the Regency Ballroom at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington D.C. for the third annual Media Research Center DisHonors Awards “roasting the most outrageously biased liberal reporting of 2002.” The stones were flying in that glass house.


Fox News Channel’s Cal Thomas, in black tie, welcomed the 800 or so revelers with a reminder of the evening’s objective. “Tonight,” Thomas said, “we will expose the insincerity, the bias, the anti-Americanism, and class warfare of the media elite.” It was a rough paraphrase of the Media Research Center’s (MRC) everyday mission — to which it directs its $6 million annual budget — of “documenting, exposing and neutralizing” purported liberal media bias. After a quick Bill Moyers joke and a jab at Eric Alterman, Thomas restated the night’s purpose more succinctly: to deliver “to the liberal press our version of shock and awe.”


Thomas’s Fox News Channel colleague, Sean Hannity, commenced the shock treatment by presenting the Ozzy Osbourne Award for Wackiest Comment of the Year, the first of the night’s six prizes. Each award was selected by a panel of fifteen judges — sharp-eyed bias-spotters all — including William F. Buckley, Jr., Steve Forbes, John Fund, Lucianne Goldberg, Lawrence Kudlow, Rush Limbaugh, Robert Novak, Kate O’Beirne, Michael Reagan, and R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. Owing to a remark he made about Saddam Hussein’s electoral mandate — that Saddam won “99.96 percent of the vote,” but that “it is impossible to say” whether it is “a true measure of the Iraqi people’s feelings” — David Wright of ABC’s World News Tonight edged out Hearst’s Helen Thomas and ABC’s George Stephanopoulos to take the first trophy.


For the And They Called it Puppy Love Award, Barbara Walters triumphed over The New York Times’s Howell Raines and CNBC’s Brian Williams. Walters’s wayward words? During an interview with Fidel Castro, she noted that “if literacy alone were the yardstick, Cuba would rank as one of the freest nations on earth,” as its “literacy rate is 96 percent.” Laura Ingraham, a radio talk-show host and author of The Hillary Trap, explained to the crowd that the Puppy Love award “goes to the journalist who did his or her best last year to fawn over a liberal hero.” Ingraham then gave her own fulsome introduction to the “hero of the conservative movement,” Judge Robert Bork, who was — wink, wink — accepting the award “on Walters’s behalf.” The heretofore subdued audience obliged with a standing ovation and clinked their dinner utensils against their glasses.


Next, Ingraham announced the Ashamed of the Red, White, and Blue Award, given, she said, “to that journalist who made the most outrageous statement distancing himself from his country in a time of war.” Winner: the well-known journalist Bill Maher. To be sure, there was no such “distancing” in the Regency Ballroom, where red, white, and blue light-projected stars rotated disco-like on the walls, flag lapel pins abounded, and the Pledge of Allegiance was recited twice (with emphasis on the words “under God”). In fact, in its livelier moments the place had the feel of a pep rally, with Hannity as head cheerleader for the “coalition of the winning,” gleefully observing that “our military” hits its targets “again and again and again.”


Ann Coulter, author of Slander: Liberal Lies About the American Right, was on hand to announce Bill Moyers’s first win of the night — the I Hate You Conservatives Award — for his commentary on the Bush administration (in part, “If you like God in government, get ready for the Rapture”). These same words earned Moyers the Quote of the Year, though he could not be there to pick up his prizes because, Tony Blankley of The Washington Times informed the audience, he was “embedded in his limousine.”


The night reached an aural climax when L. Brent Bozell III, the MRC’s founder and president, took the stage to discuss the war “for public opinion” that his organization is waging, and to tally, in his estimation, the ammunition stockpiled by the Left and the Right. “They have ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, CNBC, MSNBC, and PBS,” Bozell shouted, to affirmative crowd noise. “We have Fox, and that’s just fine.”


As the musical guest, Charlie Daniels, tuned his fiddle on the stage at the rear of the ballroom, Bozell acknowledged the MRC staffers, whom Cal Thomas had earlier described as “analytical sleuths” who “combed through hundreds of thousands of stories to find the most outrageous instances of bias.” Similar attention to detail was apparently not extended to the evening’s three-course dinner menu, which was helpfully printed in the program. On a night when the French were the butt of more than one well-received joke, guests dined happily on grilled filet mignon, gratin Dauphinois, and sautéed French haricots verts. The red wine was from the blue state of California.

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Liz Cox is an assistant editor at CJR.
MAY/JUNE 2003
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