Maynard Institute archives

Journalisms-Wed, Nov 7

Newt Gingrich, former House speaker and 2012 GOP presidential primary candidate,

Writer Names “Wrong Losers” Among Pundits

With Florida still out we have yet to crown a winner of our election pundit predictions contest, but we have dubbed a lot of people wrong losers in the race to be the predictive champion,” Rebecca Greenfield wrote Wednesday for the Atlantic. “Now that we’ve outed them as poor tea leaf readers, it’s time for the justification phase of pundit predictions. While some of our political talking heads are bashful, admitting that they were plain wrong, not all of these pundits want to accept the truth. Guys, take it from Romney, a noble concession speech is the way to go in these situations. . . . “

Greenfield names former House speaker Newt Gingrich, the Washington Examiner’s Michael Barone, Ross Douthat of the New York Times; Dick Morris of the Hill; Republican strategist Karl Rove of Fox News; Larry Sabato of the University of Virginia Center for Politics and conservative pundit Ann Coulter.

Eric Boehlert of Media Matters for America added radio hosts Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, columnist George Will; pundit Michael Barone; the conservative website Newsmax; and Larry Kudlow, anchor of CNBC’s primetime program “The Kudlow Report.”

What was different this time was the spectacle of a whole slate of Obama-hating conservatives who claimed that despite very clear polling evidence to the contrary, that Mitt Romney would win the election in a ‘landslide,'” Boehrlert wrote. “Not only would the Republican defeat Obama, but he’d also do it sweeping, historic fashion.”

Michael Calderone added on the Huffington Post, “Fox News contributor Dick Morris, who two days ago predicted a ‘landslide’ win for Mitt Romney, argued Wednesday morning on ‘Fox & Friends’ that President Barack Obama doesn’t have a clear mandate to govern, even with a resounding electoral victory.

“Morris wasn’t shy about offering his 2 cents on the election’s outcome, despite being off by more than 100 electoral votes, along with conservative pundits Michael Barone and George Will. Morris even went a step further by saying that it’s now time to ‘stand up against this socialist agenda and stop [Obama] from fundamentally changing the United States.’ “

FCC Expected to Approve More Media Consolidation

Federal regulators are poised to ease ownership restrictions on major-market media outlets in what could be a boost to some big players in the struggling newspaper industry,” Jim Puzzanghera reported Tuesday for the Los Angeles Times.

“After two failed attempts to loosen its rules, the Federal Communications Commission is expected by the end of the year to approve a new proposal that would allow newspapers and television or radio stations in the 20 largest markets to consolidate.

“And unlike previous battles, there is little opposition this time to easing the so-called cross-ownership rules.

“A decade of Internet growth, fast-changing technologies and plunging newspaper revenues — along with the nation’s focus on recovering from the Great Recession — have altered views. Few people seem to care much if newspapers and television stations hook up in the same metropolitan area.

” . . . ‘It ought to be … a huge issue. Big media wanted us to believe the age of media consolidation was over, but not so,’ said former FCC Commissioner Michael J. Copps, who had opposed loosening the rules in 2003 and 2007 and now heads a Common Cause effort to highlight the problems of media consolidation.”

 

Columnist Helen Ubinas Joining Philly Daily News

“I’m quite pleased to report that Helen Ubinas, a veteran columnist and national award winner, will be joining us next month as a city columnist,” Michael Days, editor of the Philadelphia Daily News, wrote to staff members on Monday.

Helen Ubinas“Helen wrote a twice-weekly, heavily reported column at the Hartford Courant for about 10 years, covering topics ranging from the corrupt administration of Hartford’s former mayor to the horrific home-invasion murders that stunned Connecticut. She is an avid blogger, and some of us are already connected to her via Twitter. In fact, she was the first Connecticut reporter to live-tweet developments from high-profile cases.

“Before becoming a full-fledged columnist, she wrote a weekly column off of the city desk and was a key player in covering city news. She was a member of the paper’s team that won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for breaking news for the amazing work done when a Connecticut lottery worker killed four supervisors and then turned the gun on himself. She has also won numerous awards from local and national organizations, including the Scripps Howard Foundation and the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.

“Helen, who grew up in the Bronx, is a graduate of Boston University, has a master’s in American studies from Trinity College, and was a Knight Fellow at Stanford.”

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