This weekend,
Fox News Watch, Fox News Channel's media criticism show, covered the following issues: The media's coverage of the Casey Anthony trial verdict; MSNBC's suspension of Mark Halperin for making vulgar comments about the president; the media's role in the Dominique Strauss-Kahn case; the cancellation of
In the Arena, Eliot Spitzer's CNN television show; and Vice President Joe Biden's new Twitter account.
The glaring omission from this list is any mention of the
shuttering of the Rupert Murdoch-owned
News of the World,
billed as the largest English-language newspaper in the world, which published its last edition today. The paper is folding following allegations that it
hacked the voicemails of a slain teen girl in the United Kingdom, an action which potentially impeded the police investigation and gave the girl's family false hope that she was still alive. There are also
allegations that family members of soldiers who died in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and families of victims of the 2005 subway bombings have been phone hacked.
Murdoch's News Corp. owns Fox News, and Fox News has been
slow to cover the phone hacking scandal, but how could Fox's media criticism show get away with not mentioning
News of the World at all?
It would be surprising, except for the recent history of
Fox News Watch. In the last couple of years,
Fox News Watch has ignored Fox News Washington managing editor Bill Sammon's
admission that he linked President Obama to socialism even though he "privately" believed the link to be "far-fetched" at the time, ignored the fact that Sammon sent
an e-mail directing Fox reporters to skew reporting on climate change, ignored the fact that Fox pulled the plug on Sean Hannity's decision to
charge admission for a taping of his show and direct all proceeds to the Cincinnati tea party, kept silent about Fox Business' host Andrew Napolitano's
9-11 conspiracy theories, and ignored
donations made by News Corp. to Republican-aligned groups.
<snip>
http://mediamatters.org/blog/201107100009Well, color me surprised.