The CNN Gong Show: dunces, dimwits, and vipers
By Jon Rappoport
"Television is not the truth...We deal in illusions,
man...We're all you know. You're beginning to believe the illusions
we're spinning here. You're beginning to think that the tube is reality
and that your own lives are unreal." (Unhinged newsman, Howard Beale, in
the 1976 film, Network)
As I write this, CNN is mounting yet a new fake story:
because Trump attacks CNN and other media as fake, this is making life
more physically dangerous for journalists in war zones and at home.
Well, well. I guess the takeaway is: don't criticize mainstream news,
keep your mouth shut and stay hypnotized...
The pack of losers at CNN are trying to save their operation.
They obviously need to hire Jerry Springer as news director. The
network is already a reality show; they just don't know how to put one
on. They require help.
Publishing fake news and airing talk-show hosts who spout
venom doesn't make it. It doesn't go far enough. On camera, they need
people breaking into the studio claiming their babies were fathered by
CNN journalists; they need burly security guards tackling the intruders
and bringing them to the floor. They need live audiences who hoot and
holler and boo and applaud.
In the latest dust-up, CNN is "accepting the resignations" of
three reporters, including a Pulitzer Prize winner, for writing a fake
piece claiming the Senate is investigating a Trump buddy, Anthony
Scaramucci, for his connections to a Russian investment company. CNN has
retracted the article.
Meanwhile, independent journalist, James O'Keefe, has
released two undercover sting videos which reveal CNN medical producer,
John Bonifield, remarking that the whole Trump-Russia scandal is "mostly
bullshit right now, like, we don't have any giant proof"; and Van
Jones, CNN political commentator, stating that "the Russia thing
is just a big nothing burger." Of course, CNN relentlessly pursues the
Trump-Russia story as if God and a choir of angels have certified it as
the truest, most important event of our time.
In case you've forgotten about the impressive array of past CNN looney tunes, here are just a few:
June 2017: CNN dumped Reza Aslan, the host of their network documentary series called Believer. Why? Because Aslan tweeted, "This
piece of shit [Donald Trump] is not just an embarrassment to America
and a stain on the presidency. He's an embarrassment to humankind."
October 2016: CNN contributor Donna Brazile was dumped,
because she passed along questions that would be asked in an upcoming
presidential debate, sponsored by CNN. Brazile passed those questions to
the Hillary Clinton camp.
CNN reporter-dunce Chris Cuomo, during the 2016 election
campaign, preposterously told the viewing audience that accessing
Wikileaks' treasure trove of John Podesta emails was a crime---for any
member of the public. Only "the media" were permitted to perform that
delicate operation and then decide what to report. Put a picture of
Cuomo on your wall and pray to it every night.
On June 13, 2015, CNN host Fredricka Whitfield talked about
the attack on the Dallas police headquarters. She said the shooter,
James Boulware, was "courageous and brave, if not crazy." Who's crazy,
Fredricka?
May 7, 2013: In an alleged "fake-set moment," CNN reporter
Ashleigh Banfield interviewed HLN personality Nancy Grace about a
kidnapping in Cleveland. It seemed that the two were in different
locations. But video sleuths soon began discussing the "same cars"
passing behind Banfield and Grace as they stood in parking lots---i.e.,
the same lot, a few feet away from each other.
The 2016 Milwaukee riots. CNN aired a woman named Sherelle
Smith telling the rioters, "Don't bring that violence here." She was
calling for peace. Well, not exactly. The network failed to broadcast
the rest of Smith's advice: "Burning down shit ain't going to help
nobody! Y'all burning down shit we need in our community. Take that shit
to the suburbs! Burn that shit down!"
The list goes on.
CNN is not just fake, it appears to be addicted to fakery. It
can't help itself. And it's not good at hiding what it does. It may be
issuing a cry for help: "Stop me before I fake again!"
Actually, it's obvious that the network has a whole group of
amateurs posing as professional journalists. They're trying to bring off
a smooth version of what they believe is a social-justice agenda. And
they can't do it.
Consider that their major daily news broadcast, headed by the
thready and weak Wolf Blitzer, who achieved fame during the first Gulf
War purely on the basis of his name laid alongside the US bombing
runs---Wolf's broadcast is called The Situation Room. What situation?
What room? It's a television studio, and the situation is "here's the
news." Who came up with that idea?
On a FAR more serious note, how would you feel if you had
supported, advocated, lied, and deceived (along with other networks) in
order to sell George W Bush's war on Iraq? Adding up all the deaths and
casualties and destruction, how would you feel? Well, CNN was a leader
in that cause. Have you ever seen a CNN executive express deep regret?
Of course not. CNN is not in that business.
If you had lied about the significant presence of "moderate
rebels" (actually terrorists) in Syria, in order to push the US further
into war, how would you feel about it? No regret at CNN.
Like other major networks, CNN is in the business of hustling stories that result in ratings and ad revenue.
They're children (pretending to be grownups) playing with very expensive toys no sane parent would give his child.
Earlier this year, CNN boss Jeff Zucker told the NY Times,
"The idea that politics is sport is undeniable, and we understood that
and approached it that way."
Yes, and CNN has been presenting the sport with all the
professionalism you'd expect from a crew broadcasting a junior high
school soccer match in Mongolia.
While Zucker was CEO at NBC Universal (2007-2010), NBC
Television's ratings crashed from number one to four among the four
major networks. Bottom of the barrel. On January 12, 2010, NY Times
columnist Maureen Dowd wrote: "'Zucker is a case study in the most
destructive media executive ever to exist', said a honcho at another
network. 'You'd have to tell me who else has taken a once-grand network
and literally destroyed it'."
On the principle that massive failure leads to another plum
job, Zucker was gifted control of CNN. He may pull off the same stunt at
there. On Tuesday, CNN came in last, behind FOX and MSNBC, in the
oh-so-precious 25-54 age-group ratings.
CNN has the boss and the on-air talent to achieve a permanent place in the cellar.
A few more gaffes, a few more retracted articles, a few more
firings, a few more fake stories about Russia and they'll get there.
Come on, boys and girls, you can do it. You know you want to be victims.
You know you want to whine and moan. Go for it. Keep self-destructing.
Which brings me back to my first point. CNN is a reality
show. But it doesn't go far enough. If Jeff Zucker applied his talents
to the task of tanking the whole network, he could stage flame-outs and
scandals that would rock the house. Go big. Go wild. Hire a few dyed in
the wool terrorists and put them on in prime time and let them talk.
Bring Glenn Beck back, build him a studio that looks like a chapel with
stain glass windows, and let him tell the audience what God wants him to
do. Lure Scott Pelley and Megyn Kelly to CNN and team them together in a
show called The Sadism Hour. Set up Michael Moore in a Burger King for
24 hours straight every weekend and have him talk non-stop (while he
eats and slurps) about why he hates Donald Trump. How about an
investment show hosted by George Soros called How to Kill the West?
The ideas are there, Zucker. Just get busy.
Your ratings will go through the roof and you'll finally understand how mainstream media works.
You'll commit professional suicide and come out smelling like a rose.
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