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Hmm. Prominent Conservative Radio Hosts Planted Scripted Actors Among Callers

enlarge Well, looky here! From the Columbia Journalism Review: Well, here’s a shocker: Some of the people who phone in to talk radio shows (that caller with the pitch-perfect rant, provocative comment or burning question) may actually be hired actors reading from scripts .  I’m not an angry listener, but I play one on radio! Via Tablet Magazine: If [the actor] passed the audition, he would be invited periodically to call in to various talk shows and recite various scenarios that made for interesting radio. He would never be identified as an actor, and his scenarios would never be identified as fabricated—which they always were. “I was surprised that it seemed so open,” the actor told me in an interview. “There was really no pretense of covering it up.” enlarge Curious, the actor did some snooping and learned that Premiere On Call was a service offered by  Premiere Radio Networks , the largest syndication company in the United States and a subsidiary of Clear Channel Communications, the entertainment and advertising giant. Premiere syndicates some of the more sterling names in radio, including Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and Sean Hannity. But a great radio show depends as much on great callers as it does on great hosts: Enter Premiere On Call. enlarge “Premiere On Call is our new custom caller service,” read the service’s website, which disappeared as this story was being reported (for a cached version of the site click  here ). “We supply voice talent to take/make your on-air calls, improvise your scenes or deliver your scripts. Using our simple online booking tool, specify the kind of voice you need, and we’ll get your the right person fast. Unless you request it, you won’t hear that same voice again for at least two months, ensuring the authenticity of your programming for avid listeners.” Ensuring the authenticity of your programming… with paid, planted callers.

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Free speech? Fuggedaboutit! Liberal radio host and reined-in MSNBC flamethrower Ed Schultz has provided another example of his erratic reverence for the Constitution, specifically that pesky First Amendment. On his radio show Wednesday, Schultz harkened back to halcyon days of yore involving “old Democrats” made singular by their intolerance for discussion of that most sacred cow, Social Security ( audio here ) — It's easy to sit here and Monday-morning quarterback what they ought to be doing (referring to Democrats' response to union battle in Wisconsin), how they ought to be doing it and everything else, but can we agree on one thing? That there is an old Democratic Party out there that would have never allowed Social Security

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Ed Schultz: The Economic State of the Middle Class is Tied to Union Membership

Click here to view this media As Ed Schultz rightly pointed out on his show tonight, if you’re not a member of a union and you don’t think union membership has anything to do with your own economic prosperity, think again. As unions go, so goes the middle class in America. Our friends over at Think Progress posted the same chart Ed had up tonight on where we’re headed here — GRAPH: As Union Membership Has Declined, Income Inequality Has Skyrocketed In The United States : Across the country, right-wing legislators continue their attack on labor unions, claiming that they are saving their states money. Yet in waging these anti-labor campaigns, these politicians are ignoring one very simple fact: unions were a major force in building and sustaining the great American middle class, and as they declined, so has the middle class. As CAP’s Karla Waters and David Madland showed in a report they first published this past January, as union membership has steadily declined since 1967, so too has the middle class’s share of national income, as the super-rich have taken a larger share of national income than any time since the 1920s : enlarge Credit: Think Progress As they noted, it’s not the only factor that has led to the severe income inequality in the United States, but it is certainly one of them, and unions are the last organized segment in America pushing back against so many policies that have been terrible for American workers. They’re not just defending decent wages and benefits and protections in the workplace. And one final note here on Ed Schultz and the coverage on his show for the last month or so since these protests first started in Wisconsin: I just want to thank him for shining a spotlight on what’s going on in Wisconsin and in other states and for giving the labor movement in this country a voice on cable television. The only place we’ve seen that is with some of MSNBC’s prime time and no one else has been doing what Ed has with getting out there with the protesters and with highlighting a lot of the local voices in Wisconsin. Good job, Ed. And somehow you managed to do it without bringing on Ron Christie or some other right-wing hack to get their opinion on what’s going on with labor right now. Imagine that. I sincerely hope this is the type of journalism you’re going to continue to do instead of having two talking heads arguing with each other that inform your viewers about nothing that’s going to improve our economy or get Americans back to work, or keep our labor unions from being busted. I was really upset when MSNBC let Keith Olbermann go, but he’s moving on and seems happy with the change and I do get Current TV here, so I plan on watching and recording his show once he’s back on the air and I’m getting over his leaving MSNBC even though it still irks me. My husband refuses to even watch the network at all now that he’s gone. One of the things Ed acknowledged when he moved to the later time slot was that he was lucky enough to pick up Olbermann’s staff. I think it’s been good for his show to have them working with him. Keep up the good work Ed on behalf of labor and the working class in America and thank you to the staffers left from Countdown for giving him a hand as well.

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Chris Matthews Swoons Again: ‘Everything’ Obama’s Done ‘Has Been Good for This Country’

Professional Obama fan Chris Matthews appeared on Friday's edition of the Martin Bashir show to slam the President's critics and to swoon, ” Everything he's done has been good for this country .” Matthews went on an extended rant against those who oppose Obama, theorizing, “…They go back to the old nativist root, this old dark night of the soul thing that people worry about, a black man in a White House. And they start working on that. 'Oh, he's a Mau Mau. He goes back to a Muslim background.'” Indirectly referring to columnists such as Dinesh D'Souza , who has highlighted political beliefs of Obama's father and grandfather, Matthews attacked, “It's using race. It's using the paranoid fear of whites of black males against this President whose life has been spotless, has been the American dream.” Yet, when George W. Bush gave his farewell speech on January 15, 2009 , the Hardball host did his own theorizing about the then-President and his father: “He was a rich kid driving his father's car. He got to be President because of his father, let's face it, the same way he got into school and everything else, the same way he got his car probably. After an extended bout of praising Obama, Bashir regained control of the show and ended the segment by enthusing, “Chris, I gotta draw you to a close, but that's the best pep talk I've heard for a long time. So, thank you so much.” A partial transcript of the March 4 segment, which aired at 3:03pm EST, follows: MARTIN BASHIR: In watching you recently, you've been uncompromising in the way you've highlighted the very personal nature of the attacks on the President. CHRIS MATTHEWS: Right. BASHIR: Beginning with the issue of his personal faith. Now if you read his books, as I have, he's abundantly clear that he's a Christian. If you ask him the question, he says his faith rests in Jesus Christ, the Christian gospel and yet not a day passes without somebody suggesting the man's a Muslim. Now, why? MATTHEWS: Well, let me get to the heart of that. I'm going to talk about it on my comment tonight and it's going to be very tough. When you start talking about the Mau Maus of the 1950s, when you talk about revolutionary black Africans killing white people, you're reopening, you're really ripping the scab off of an old wound in America, the fear of southern whites of a slave revolt. That's exactly what you're talking about. You're talking about Nat Turner is what you're talking about. When you talk about Mau Maus of the '50s, you go back to the this guy's grandfather experience, a grandfather he never met, a father he only barely met. I think one occasion. And using that as some sort of predictor, as Newt Gingrich would say, of this man's behavior and policy is horrible. It's using race. It's using the paranoid fear of whites of black males against this President whose life has been spotless, has been the American dream, all merited by him and his hard work and his commitment to get ahead in life and going to Harvard Law and becoming head of law review, not going off and making a ton of money, serving the country. Everything he's done has been good for this country. And then to go back and try to use this ethnicity against him, and in fact, as you point out, that isn't even accurate. Not only is it not only- not only is he not part of the Mau Mau revolt, and knew nothing of it, except what you and I know from reading, he knows, probably as much. And to try to play the religious card too. I mean, religion, we have no religious test. It's written in the Constitution. He has expressed himself as a Christian rather beautifully. And, by the way, on the American front, no one has ever been more beautiful in their description of American exceptionalism than this President. From the first time most of us met him, when I first really got to know him in 2004 up in Boston at the beautiful speech when he talked about his life in saying only in this country is my story possible. Has anyone ever said it better? BASHIR: I don't believe they have. But it does seem remarkably hypocritical that some of those who smear his religious beliefs, they call themselves Christians. Now, what kind of Christian is it that is happy to peddle complete falsehoods, utter lies, about the President? MATTHEWS: Well, I guess you have to have three marriages to start with, if you're Newt Gingrich. I don't know what the roles are these days about hypocrisy. You used the word. I mean, give this man a break, who doesn't need a break, and maybe you'll get a break. If you're asking for forgiveness from God or the people like Newt Gingrich is, how about starting with a guy who has done nothing wrong and stop attacking him? Stop going after him through his ancestors, if you're going to be Christian, act it. BASHIR: The First Lady has also- MATTHEWS: And if you're going to ask if a person's a Christian, how about being one yourself in terms of your own behavior. And I don't think anyone thinks it's fair what happened this week. George F. Will, who I respect for his thinking, even if I don't agree with him, has a column coming out on Sunday, his syndicated column, and he has 500 newspapers he's in, George Will said, this is destroying the Republican Party. This weird kind of talking, this strange kind of behavior, where you have a good economic issue to fight. There is a concern about a serial decline in American hopes. There is great things to argue about. The whole industrial part of the country in the northern Great Lakes region is suffering badly. There's great issues to be raised. Instead they go back to the old nativist root, this old dark night of the soul thing that people worry about, a black man in a White House. And they start working on that. “Oh, he's a Mau Mau. He goes back to a Muslim background. Let's start working that old vein again, that good old nervous paranoid vein again” The fact that they're doing that makes you wonder why they're running. BASHIR: But, Chris, they're not- But, Chris, they're not- Chris, they're not just stopping with him, are they?

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These people are the reason we’re doing this work. Ed and Derence, of Palm Springs, CA, are a couple who submitted their story to Courage Campaign’s call for stories in the wake of the California Supreme Court’s decision to accept the question regarding the issue of standing in the Proposition 8 case — just to decide whether or not they’re going to rule on the issue! — and then announce that they’re going to drag this decision out for six months-plus. Our field staff drove for several hours out to the desert last week to get their story on video because these are the human faces of what happens while the California Supreme Court insists on taking six months just to hear oral arguments, and more to issue a decision. If you’ll permit me, a personal story that I keep thinking about when I watch their video. My grandma, may she rest in peace, had Alzheimer’s like Ed does. She started to forget a lot of things, like Ed will. But she was blessed to have already married my grandpa and experienced the wonderful day that is her wedding day. I even remember talking with her once and because of her condition, she could not remember what my response was when she asked me what my summer plans were 10 minutes prior, but when I asked her where she held her wedding and who came, she could tell me every single detail like it was yesterday. Maybe it’s just the nature of the condition, but I think it was a little bit because it was one of the happiest days in her life. I always remember that. Because of the Court’s refusal this week to shorten time in the case, and because Ed is gay, he might not get to experience that ever in his life. He might not even recognize Derence if Derence goes down on one knee. And that’s not fair. Ed and Derence joined with Courage to pen an open letter to the 9th Circuit asking them to lift the stay. If the California Supreme Court is going to take this long, they should have the chance to wed. You can read it here. Please sign their open letter . Then share with friends and family. Let’s make sure the nation knows about Ed and Derence. Let’s put their faces on TV, on Facebook, everywhere. These people are invisible until we shine a light on them. Disclosure: I am proud to work for the Courage Campaign as Director of Online Programs.

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These people are the reason we’re doing this work. Ed and Derence, of Palm Springs, CA, are a couple who submitted their story to Courage Campaign’s call for stories in the wake of the California Supreme Court’s decision to accept the question regarding the issue of standing in the Proposition 8 case — just to decide whether or not they’re going to rule on the issue! — and then announce that they’re going to drag this decision out for six months-plus. Our field staff drove for several hours out to the desert last week to get their story on video because these are the human faces of what happens while the California Supreme Court insists on taking six months just to hear oral arguments, and more to issue a decision. If you’ll permit me, a personal story that I keep thinking about when I watch their video. My grandma, may she rest in peace, had Alzheimer’s like Ed does. She started to forget a lot of things, like Ed will. But she was blessed to have already married my grandpa and experienced the wonderful day that is her wedding day. I even remember talking with her once and because of her condition, she could not remember what my response was when she asked me what my summer plans were 10 minutes prior, but when I asked her where she held her wedding and who came, she could tell me every single detail like it was yesterday. Maybe it’s just the nature of the condition, but I think it was a little bit because it was one of the happiest days in her life. I always remember that. Because of the Court’s refusal this week to shorten time in the case, and because Ed is gay, he might not get to experience that ever in his life. He might not even recognize Derence if Derence goes down on one knee. And that’s not fair. Ed and Derence joined with Courage to pen an open letter to the 9th Circuit asking them to lift the stay. If the California Supreme Court is going to take this long, they should have the chance to wed. You can read it here. Please sign their open letter . Then share with friends and family. Let’s make sure the nation knows about Ed and Derence. Let’s put their faces on TV, on Facebook, everywhere. These people are invisible until we shine a light on them. Disclosure: I am proud to work for the Courage Campaign as Director of Online Programs.

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These people are the reason we’re doing this work. Ed and Derence, of Palm Springs, CA, are a couple who submitted their story to Courage Campaign’s call for stories in the wake of the California Supreme Court’s decision to accept the question regarding the issue of standing in the Proposition 8 case — just to decide whether or not they’re going to rule on the issue! — and then announce that they’re going to drag this decision out for six months-plus. Our field staff drove for several hours out to the desert last week to get their story on video because these are the human faces of what happens while the California Supreme Court insists on taking six months just to hear oral arguments, and more to issue a decision. If you’ll permit me, a personal story that I keep thinking about when I watch their video. My grandma, may she rest in peace, had Alzheimer’s like Ed does. She started to forget a lot of things, like Ed will. But she was blessed to have already married my grandpa and experienced the wonderful day that is her wedding day. I even remember talking with her once and because of her condition, she could not remember what my response was when she asked me what my summer plans were 10 minutes prior, but when I asked her where she held her wedding and who came, she could tell me every single detail like it was yesterday. Maybe it’s just the nature of the condition, but I think it was a little bit because it was one of the happiest days in her life. I always remember that. Because of the Court’s refusal this week to shorten time in the case, and because Ed is gay, he might not get to experience that ever in his life. He might not even recognize Derence if Derence goes down on one knee. And that’s not fair. Ed and Derence joined with Courage to pen an open letter to the 9th Circuit asking them to lift the stay. If the California Supreme Court is going to take this long, they should have the chance to wed. You can read it here. Please sign their open letter . Then share with friends and family. Let’s make sure the nation knows about Ed and Derence. Let’s put their faces on TV, on Facebook, everywhere. These people are invisible until we shine a light on them. Disclosure: I am proud to work for the Courage Campaign as Director of Online Programs.

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These people are the reason we’re doing this work. Ed and Derence, of Palm Springs, CA, are a couple who submitted their story to Courage Campaign’s call for stories in the wake of the California Supreme Court’s decision to accept the question regarding the issue of standing in the Proposition 8 case — just to decide whether or not they’re going to rule on the issue! — and then announce that they’re going to drag this decision out for six months-plus. Our field staff drove for several hours out to the desert last week to get their story on video because these are the human faces of what happens while the California Supreme Court insists on taking six months just to hear oral arguments, and more to issue a decision. If you’ll permit me, a personal story that I keep thinking about when I watch their video. My grandma, may she rest in peace, had Alzheimer’s like Ed does. She started to forget a lot of things, like Ed will. But she was blessed to have already married my grandpa and experienced the wonderful day that is her wedding day. I even remember talking with her once and because of her condition, she could not remember what my response was when she asked me what my summer plans were 10 minutes prior, but when I asked her where she held her wedding and who came, she could tell me every single detail like it was yesterday. Maybe it’s just the nature of the condition, but I think it was a little bit because it was one of the happiest days in her life. I always remember that. Because of the Court’s refusal this week to shorten time in the case, and because Ed is gay, he might not get to experience that ever in his life. He might not even recognize Derence if Derence goes down on one knee. And that’s not fair. Ed and Derence joined with Courage to pen an open letter to the 9th Circuit asking them to lift the stay. If the California Supreme Court is going to take this long, they should have the chance to wed. You can read it here. Please sign their open letter . Then share with friends and family. Let’s make sure the nation knows about Ed and Derence. Let’s put their faces on TV, on Facebook, everywhere. These people are invisible until we shine a light on them. Disclosure: I am proud to work for the Courage Campaign as Director of Online Programs.

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Rosie O’Donnell Agrees With NB Headline: She and Helen Thomas are ‘Role Models’

From the Making Mischief Department, NB reader Thomas Stewart sent in a NB link to Rosie O'Donnell's “Ask Ro” feature on Rosie.com. My headline on a February 27 blog post was “Rosie O'Donnell Offers 'Giant Hug' to Helen Thomas: A Summit of Role Models?” When faced with this link, O'Donnell simply answered “yes that is true”. Some think this could mean she was again complimenting Helen as a “role model,” as she did when they met up at CNN. But the question was whether this was a “summit” of role models, meaning both women were stellar human beings.

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Rosie O’Donnell Agrees With NB Headline: She and Helen Thomas are ‘Role Models’

From the Making Mischief Department, NB reader Thomas Stewart sent in a NB link to Rosie O'Donnell's “Ask Ro” feature on Rosie.com. My headline on a February 27 blog post was “Rosie O'Donnell Offers 'Giant Hug' to Helen Thomas: A Summit of Role Models?” When faced with this link, O'Donnell simply answered “yes that is true”. Some think this could mean she was again complimenting Helen as a “role model,” as she did when they met up at CNN. But the question was whether this was a “summit” of role models, meaning both women were stellar human beings.

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