It's easy to get into trouble when using the terms left and right.
Maybe a better way to talk about the press is to first don't be general - pick one then describe by what lens a particular media group sees the world through.
Two examples: Fox News/Roger Ailes, now Rupert Murdock - stridently conservative; NPR, clearly liberal ..... and there are extremes on either end of that spectrum, e.g., Brietbart, The Guardian, Hannity, et. al. and Limbaugh to the right and the NYT and Slate to the left.
I'd put ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN and MSNBC pretty far away and to the left of Fox ....... their correspondents almost uniformly view the world through two different lenses and their reporting of the news reflects that.
So, what I meant by an "angry press" is a confrontational one involving correspondents and journalists interpreting events through a liberal lens.
Maybe a better way to talk about the press is to first don't be general - pick one then describe by what lens a particular media group sees the world through.
Two examples: Fox News/Roger Ailes, now Rupert Murdock - stridently conservative; NPR, clearly liberal ..... and there are extremes on either end of that spectrum, e.g., Brietbart, The Guardian, Hannity, et. al. and Limbaugh to the right and the NYT and Slate to the left.
I'd put ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN and MSNBC pretty far away and to the left of Fox ....... their correspondents almost uniformly view the world through two different lenses and their reporting of the news reflects that.
So, what I meant by an "angry press" is a confrontational one involving correspondents and journalists interpreting events through a liberal lens.
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