Brian Stelter is set to make his return to CNN, resuming his role with the Reliable Sources newsletter. Subscribers to the newsletter were informed via email that Stelter will be back at the helm starting September 9.
Stelter, who exited CNN two years ago, noted substantial changes since his departure. “But this is not going to be a ‘Back to the Future’ remake,” Stelter addressed his readers.
“The media industry has matured, CNN has evolved, and I have changed a lot since I signed off two years ago. I loved my old life as the anchor of a Sunday morning show, but to borrow some lingo from my video game blogger days, I finished that level of the game. Time for new levels, new challenges.”
Stelter originally launched Reliable Sources in 2015. However, the television segment was discontinued in 2022, leading to his departure from CNN.
Oliver Darcy, who succeeded Stelter in managing the newsletter, departed in August to start his own venture titled Status. Stelter’s exit came under the leadership of Chris Licht, who was later replaced by Mark Thompson after Licht was removed from his position.
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Brian Stelter is set to make his return to CNN, resuming his role with the Reliable Sources newsletter. Subscribers to the newsletter were informed via email that Stelter will be back at the helm starting September 9.
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American and international media outlets are offering their assessment of KamalaHarris‘s first sit-down interview since becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, conducted by Dana Bash on the friendly network CNN, with support from running mate Tim Walz. Sympathizers could offer only muted support for her performance, describing it as “adequate” or “solid” while being forced to acknowledge she offered few policy details. More critical voices were harsher, saying she had “fumbled” an interview “softer than a scoop of ice cream.”
DAMNING WITH FAINT PRAISE.
The lack of praise dished out to Harris by those most eager to support her indicates how poorly the interview went. The left-wing Guardianspun the performance as “radically normal” rather than simply dull, suggesting it was a good thing that she “turned a much-hyped first interview as nominee into a soon-to-be-forgotten pit stop along the campaign trail.”
Michelle Cottle of the New York Times could only say the interview was a “solid first effort” that went “pretty well.” Fellow NYT columnist was more honest, also claiming Harris’s performance was “solid” but admitting she was evasive, “vague to the point of vacuous,” and “struggled to give straight answers to her shifting positions on fracking and border security.”
Even CNNacknowledges she was “elusive” and “declined to fully explain reversals on issues like immigration and energy.”
‘TRAIN WRECK.’
The Daily Mail led on remarks describing the interview as a “train wreck,” calling the conversation with Bash a “softball interview.” Like The Telegraph, the Mail noted how short the interview was, at only around 27 minutes, padded to roughly an hour by CNN interspersing it with clips of Harris campaigning.
The Mail said Harris “appeared nervous and hesitant in her responses which were branded ‘word salad’ by many on social media,” quoting Barack Obama advisor David Axelrod as admitting Harris had not “moved the ball forward that much.”
The Telegraph appeared astonished that Harris “managed to fumble even this cozy chat,” noting, “Viewers were left none the wiser about what sort of president she would be.”
‘SLIPPERY.’
The Times of London said the interview with Harris and Walz was “softer than a serving of President Biden’s favorite ice cream,” again noting how CNN had stretched out the conversation with “schmaltzy clips of the pair at the Democratic convention, on the campaign trail or ordering a meal of brisket.”
“Both were allowed to present a series of glib answers without any real probing of some glaring holes in their responses, notably Harris’s new catch-all reply to all inconsistencies — ‘my values have not changed’,” The Times observed.
It was particularly unimpressed with Harris‘s “slippery” answers on fracking. She said there was “no question” she supported a “day one” ban during her 2019 run for the presidency. She now claims she has been clear that is no longer her position since 2020, but The Times notes her only comment on the subject during a 2020 debate was that Joe Biden would not ban fracking.
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American and international media outlets are offering their assessment of KamalaHarris's first sit-down interview since becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, conducted by Dana Bash on the friendly network CNN, with support from running mate Tim Walz. Sympathizers could offer only muted support for her performance, describing it as "adequate" or "solid" while being forced to acknowledge she offered few policy details. More critical voices were harsher, saying she had "fumbled" an interview "softer than a scoop of ice cream."
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MSNBChost Ari Melber has locked his account on X (formerly Twitter) after threatening to sue Corey Lewandowski, a top team member on the Donald Trump campaign, for defamation during an interview. Lewandowski said Melber had previously stated Trump “had a bandage on his ear” at the Republican National Convention (RNC) after being shot “just for a spectacle.”
Melber, discussing a New York Times article saying Trump had acted as a “prop” at the RNC, had agreed Trump’s bandage was a “placard for delegates to fill in, an image for political mobilization, a spectacle for this candidate who we know is, by his own admission, obsessed with assorted spectacles.”
“I quoted a New York Times article that said, at the convention, Donald Trump ‘was his own biggest prop,'” Melber insisted to Lewandowski. The Trump advisor offered to read the MSNBC host’s full quote back to him.
“It was a New York Times quote about how [Trump] had become such an important figure in rebounding from what was a horrific assassination attempt,” Melber reiterated. Lewandowski again offered to read his words back to him.
“Corey, I said I’d address it. I’m gonna finish… Fox News, which has been caught in defamation, ran a false piece falsely stating that I said something else that I didn’t say. So, I stand on that. I stand on the New York Times quote,” Melber said.
“So, you didn’t say, ‘This bandage was a prop, a spectacle from a candidate who’s obsessed with spectacles’?” asked Lewandowski.
“Uh, Mr. Lewandowski, I did not say that. That is a false quote,” the MSNBC host shot back.
“I have it right here,” said Lewandowski.
WATCH:
An MSNBC Host threatened to sue me for defamation tonight for (by definition) the opposition of defamation >> Quoting their own words.
“What you have is a false quote… I’m putting you on notice, if you continue to repeat falsely that I said that, you will be potentially in a defamation situation because I didn’t say that,” Melber threatened, declining Lewandowski’s offer to apologize to former President Trump for his remarks.
The far-left Daily Beast, Mediaite, and Huffington Post covered the exchange in tones suggesting Melber was in the right. However, their reports show that Lewandowski’s characterization of Melber’s statement about Trump and his bandage is correct.
Users on X began quoting Melber’s words back to him after clips of the exchange went viral, criticizing him as both a bully and a wimp for threatening a lawsuit. Melber responded by locking his account.
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MSNBC host Ari Melber has locked his account on X (formerly Twitter) after threatening to sue Corey Lewandowski, a top team member on the Donald Trump campaign, for defamation during an interview. Lewandowski said Melber had previously stated Trump "had a bandage on his ear" at the Republican National Convention (RNC) after being shot "just for a spectacle."
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American filmmaker Quentin Tarantino blasted leftist television network MSNBC for coddling Democrats by only featuring “conservative” voices who’ve long abandoned the Republican Party. The Acadamy Award-winning director and writer, while speaking with fellow entertainment industry liberal Bill Maher, also heaped praise on Fox News for hiring Democrat Jessica Tarlov.
“OK. Fox is Fox, MSNBC is MSNBC. They are a lot closer than we wish they were, but there’s still enough daylight between them. Correct? But the closeness is all to the discredit of MSNBC,” Tarantino tellsMaher in his typical scattered and hyper tone. “Yet! Yet! Fox does hire Jessica Tarlov. And they put her on their big show, and she says what she says against the Fox audience, against the panel, and especially against Jeanine Pirro. All right. Monday through fucking Friday.”
“As far as I’m– as far as I can see, that is the hardest job on television. All right? And also, they kind of like– maybe not Jeanine, but they all kind of like her,” Tarantino continues, with an exasperated Maher agreeing. The film director asks, “How come there isn’t that person on MSNBC, right?”
The two Hollywood liberals turned their attention to the left-wing network, agreeing it only hosts “conservative” voices that agree with its far-left hosts. Both Maher and Tarantino expressed disappointment that this was the case.
“Well, I asked the same question,” Maher responds, noting: “And that says a lot about the left because MSNBC is a branch of the left…”
Tarantino interrupts the talk show host, partly blaming Maher for MSNBC‘s bias: “Don’t say, Nicolle Wallace, you know, as you turned her. Fuck you. You turned her a decade ago. A decade ago!”
Maher agrees, likening the process of turning nominal Republicans on liberal networks to breaking a horse.
American filmmaker Quentin Tarantino blasted leftist television network MSNBC for coddling Democrats by only featuring "conservative" voices who've long abandoned the Republican Party. The Acadamy Award-winning director and writer, while speaking with fellow entertainment industry liberal Bill Maher, also heaped praise on Fox News for hiring Democrat Jessica Tarlov.
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Kamala Harris has finally announced her first major network media interview as the 2024 Democratic Party presidential nominee. Both Harris and her running mate, Governor Tim Walz (D-MN), will together sit down with CNN‘s Dana Bash on Thursday at 9:00 PM ET.
The interview will occur at CNN‘s headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia—a critical swing state in the 2024 presidential race. Until today, the Harris campaign had remained noncommittal on any major media interviews with both the Democratic nominee and her running mate. The campaign has struggled with how best to use Walz for media engagement. Some campaign officials were concerned that the Minnesota Democrat might stumble in answering policy questions since Harris has thus far articulated little about her political agenda.
Harris and her campaign likely chose CNN as the network provides both national coverage and a friendly Democratic Party environment. The National Pulse reported in July that CNN‘s Jake Tapper revealingly referred to the network’s viewers as “our voters” in a Pravda-like segment talking up Harris‘s “appeal to Gen Z.” At the time, Harris—who turns 60 in October—had been aping the style of 31-year-old English singer Charlotte Aitchison, a.k.a. Charli XCX, on social media.
CNN likely hopes the primetime interview will boost its sagging ratings and revenue. In May, it was revealed that CNN had hit its lowest primetime ratings in three decades. Additionally, the cable news network’s own reporters tacitly admitted to aiding the Biden-Harris government in covering up the 81-year-old Joe Biden’s cognitivedecline as they feared such revelations would only help former President Donald J. Trump‘s bid to retake the White House.
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Kamala Harris has finally announced her first major network media interview as the 2024 Democratic Party presidential nominee. Both Harris and her running mate, Governor Tim Walz (D-MN), will together sit down with CNN's Dana Bash on Thursday at 9:00 PM ET.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
A foreign-born federal judge with a history of anti-Trump rulings has paused Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey‘s investigation into the Media Matters for America activist group, funded by far-left plutocrat George Soros.
AG Bailey argues Media Matters “has used fraud to solicit donations from Missourians in order to trick advertisers into removing their advertisements from X, formerly Twitter, one of the last platforms dedicated to free speech in America.”
India-born U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta has granted a preliminary injunction blocking Bailey’s investigation, insisting “Missouri’s interest in enforcing its consumer protection laws must give way when a state actor uses them to retaliate against a media organization for protected speech.”
The Barack Obama appointee has already granted a similar injunction blocking Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton from investigating Media Matters.
Bailey and Paxton were prompted to begin the investigation by Media Matters embarking on what X owner Elon Musk describes as a “fraudulent attack” on the social media platform, “manipulating X’s algorithm to artificially force placement of the ads next to extremist content” and sparking an advertiser boycott. Musk is suing the Soros group over the stunt, accusing them of “attempt[ing] to undermine freedom of speech and mislead advertisers.”
Judge Mehta has a history of rulings against Donald Trump and his associates. For instance, he imprisoned former Trump adviser Peter Navarro in January for defying a subpoena issued by the corrupt January 6 Committee. In 2022, he ruled it is “plausible” that Trump intended to overthrow democracy on January 6, 2021.
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A foreign-born federal judge with a history of anti-Trump rulings has paused Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey's investigation into the Media Matters for America activist group, funded by far-left plutocrat George Soros.
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Kamala Harris is seeking to change the terms of her ABC debate with former President Donald J. Trump, with the America First leader’s camp saying her team wanted a sit-down debate with opening statements and notes. Harris has already backed out of a debate on the less-friendly Fox News network in front of a “full arena audience.”
Harris’s camp is currently quibbling over whether or not microphones should remain “hot” while the rival candidates are not speaking. Trump, who asked for hot mics in 2020, agreed to muted mics and no audience for the upcoming ABC debate and his previous CNN debate against Joe Biden—with the Democrats being the ones who put forward these demands. Now, Harris’s team is asking for mics to be left hot on ABC after all and criticizing Trump for declining to reopen the negotiations—to distract from the fact Harris has been demanding even more favorable terms than Biden.
“Enough with the games. We accepted the ABC debate under the exact same terms as the CNN debate. The Harris camp, after having already agreed to the CNN rules, asked for a seated debate, with notes, and opening statements. We said no changes to the agreed upon rules,” said Jason Miller, senior adviser to President Trump.
“If Kamala Harris isn’t smart enough to repeat the messaging points her handlers want her to memorize, that’s their problem,” Miller continued.
“This seems to be a pattern for the Harris campaign. They won’t allow Harris to do interviews, they won’t allow her to do press conferences, and now they want to give her a cheat-sheet for the debate. My guess is that they’re looking for a way to get out of any debate with President Trump,” he concluded.
Kamala Harris is seeking to change the terms of her ABC debate with former President Donald J. Trump, with the America First leader's camp saying her team wanted a sit-down debate with opening statements and notes. Harris has already backed out of a debate on the less-friendly Fox News network in front of a "full arena audience."
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PBS correspondent and former NewsHour anchor Judy Woodruff is retracting the false comments she made on air in which she claimed former PresidentDonald J. Trump was purposefully hampering the Gaza ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas for political gain. Woodruff, who was covering the Democratic National Convention (DNC), claims she was referencing reports by Axios and Reuters when she stated that Trump was encouraging Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to delay peace talks until after the November election.
“The reporting is that former President Trump is on the phone with the prime minister of Israel, urging him not to cut a deal right now, because that, it’s believed that would help the Harris campaign,” Woodruff said during Monday’s PBS NewsHour coverage of the DNC.
Following denials by the Trump campaign and the Israeli Prime Minister’s office, Woodruff posted a retraction and apology on X (formerly Twitter). “I want to clarify my remarks on the PBS News special on Monday night about the ongoing cease-fire talks in the Middle East,” the former NewsHour anchor said, continuing: “As I said, this was not based on my original reporting; I was referring to reports I had read, in Axios and Reuters, about former President Trump having spoken to the Israeli Prime Minister.”
“In the live TV moment, I repeated the story because I hadn’t seen later reporting that both sides denied it. This was a mistake, and I apologize for it,” Woodruff added.
I want to clarify my remarks on the PBS News special on Monday night about the ongoing cease fire talks in the Middle East. As I said, this was not based on my original reporting; I was referring to reports I had read, in Axios and Reuters, about former President Trump having…
PBS receives significant funding from American taxpayers through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). In the fiscal year 2024, Congress appropriated $525 million to the CPB, with $367 million subsequently being earmarked for funding public television programming. PBS has not yet issued a formal statement regarding Woodruff’s remarks or her subsequent apology.
WATCH:
NEWS
PBS’ Judy Woodruff has issued a clarification and an apology for her remarks in this clip which went viral.
“I want to clarify my remarks on the PBS News special on Monday night about the ongoing cease fire talks in the Middle East.
PBS correspondent and former NewsHour anchor Judy Woodruff is retracting the false comments she made on air in which she claimed former President Donald J. Trump was purposefully hampering the Gaza ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas for political gain. Woodruff, who was covering the Democratic National Convention (DNC), claims she was referencing reports by Axios and Reuters when she stated that Trump was encouraging Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to delay peace talks until after the November election.
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A woke Amazon Prime show featuring a black, gay, and disabled version of England’s King Edward VI, sold as a “queer fantasy,” has been canceled after just one season due to a lack of interest. My Lady Jane was based on a series of young adult books from 2016 based on the brief reign of Lady Jane Grey, who historically ruled for just nine days following the death of the Protestant boy king Edward VI before the Catholic Mary I ousted her.
Edward VI appears as a black, disabled, homosexual man in the series, in a move that woke media reviewers lauded. However, despite reviews hailing the show as “perfect summer viewing,” audience numbers were so dismal that Amazon pulled the plug.
Emily Bader, who played Lady Jane Grey in the series, said the show was “camp and super self-aware,” calling it “insane and silly.”
The show is just one of many that have tried to change the ethnic backgrounds of figures from British history. In the show Bridgerton, for instance, many characters supposed to be English aristocrats are portrayed as black, including Queen Charlotte, the wife of King George III, who was historically not black.
The BBC’s flagship science fiction show Doctor Who has also been accused of trying to make historical Britain more diverse than it really was. Former showrunner Steven Moffat explained in 2016 that he did not mind lying to his audience about history to present a “better vision of the world.”
The latest incarnation of Doctor Who is played by a Rwandan migrant who is “openly queer.” This is also seeing dismal ratings.
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A woke Amazon Prime show featuring a black, gay, and disabled version of England's King Edward VI, sold as a "queer fantasy," has been canceled after just one season due to a lack of interest. My Lady Jane was based on a series of young adult books from 2016 based on the brief reign of Lady Jane Grey, who historically ruled for just nine days following the death of the Protestant boy king Edward VI before the Catholic Mary I ousted her.
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The corporatemedia largely ignored a Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announcement that the Biden-Harrisgovernment created far fewer jobs than initially reported over the last 12 months. On Wednesday morning, the BLS—a government agency that provides detailed analysis of U.S. employment data—revised downward the number of jobs added to the U.S. economy by 818,000, the single largest revision in 15 years.
Despite the historic and economically concerning announcement, the news—considered damaging to Kamala Harris‘s 2024 presidential campaign—did not feature on two of the three major broadcast news networks’ evening programming. Among NBC, CBS, and ABC, only the last included the revision announcement in a brief mention during its World News Tonight program. Most broadcast networks opted to provide wall-to-wall coverage of the 2024 Democratic National Convention (DNC).
NINETEEN SECONDS OF COVERAGE.
ABC World News Tonight anchor David Muir‘s report—lasting just 19 seconds—stated: “Newly revised jobsdata showing the jobs market hasn’t been as hot as it seemed. 818,000 fewer jobs were added during the 12 months that ended in March than previously reported. This puts more pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates, potentially by half a percentage point next month, which could, of course, lower car loans, mortgages, and credit card rates.”
Later in the evening, the BLS revisions were mentioned a second time on ABC News Live, the network’s free live-streaming channel. The Biden-Harris government’s Secretary of Commerce, Gina Raimondo, was asked if she believes the new jobs numbers “could be a liability” for the Democratic nominee after former President Donald J. Trump hammered Harris on the revisions earlier in the day.
“First of all, I don’t believe it because I’ve never heard Donald Trump say anything truthful,” Raimondo responded, with the exasperated reporter pushing back: “It is, though, from the Bureau of Labor.”
“I’m not familiar with that,” a visibly confused and flustered Raimdo replied.
WATCH:
Harris-Biden Commerce Sec. Gina Raimondo says she doesn’t believe new government data that shows almost a million of the jobs the Harris-Biden admin claimed to have “created” don’t actually exist.
The corporatemedia largely ignored a Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announcement that the Biden-Harris government created far fewer jobs than initially reported over the last 12 months. On Wednesday morning, the BLS—a government agency that provides detailed analysis of U.S. employment data—revised downward the number of jobs added to the U.S. economy by 818,000, the single largest revision in 15 years.
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