Cable News-Generated Controversy

by La Shawn on 09.26.07

in Media Bias

O'Reilly_CNNThursday, September 27: Here’s a less controversial CNN appearance.
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That was fun! The ad hominem-laced e-mail is rolling in already. Keep it coming. I love it. The only thing you’re doing is confirming the stereotype that black people don’t know how to think or express themselves without calling people names. Sorry to disappoint you, but I’m not going anywhere. As long as CNN producers invite me on the show, I’m going on. Ain’t America great? Free expression, baby.

I asked someone to capture my CNN segment. I hope he got it. I’ll let you know…

Update: Here’s the clip. And this is what started it all. Bill O’Reilly and black journalist Juan Williams were discussing the vileness of the rap subculture, and O’Reilly was trying to make the point, albeit awkwardly, that whites who don’t know blacks or aren’t exposed to blacks may get the impression that the rap subculture represents black America. I was putting his remarks — “There wasn’t one person in Sylvia’s who was screaming, ‘M-Fer, I want more iced tea'” — in context. I’m no Bill O’Reilly apologist, but come on.

[See my review of Juan’s book, Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements…]

O’Reilly also said he couldn’t get over the fact that people in a black-owned restaurant behaved no differently than people in any other restaurant. Again, I believe it’s the same awkwardly expressed idea about the rap subculture. Whatever he meant by it, I promise you this: the sky will not fall.

However, some blacks see it differently. It’s a shame that certain black Americans, circa 2007, are so darn sensitive. With no more klansman to defend against or whites-only signs to knock down, they look for racism under cable news rocks. But hey, this is what cable news and the “civil rights” industry are all about.

Paying work calls. Must run.

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