Bill O'Reilly's "Apology":
Still Spinning in the 'No Spin Zone'
CommonDreams.org
by Peter Hart
February 25, 2004
Viewers of ABC's Good Morning America saw something very
unusual earlier this month: Fox News Channel's star host Bill
O'Reilly admitted he was wrong about something. Sort of.
Right before U.S. forces invaded Iraq, O'Reilly made a bold
promise on ABC about Iraq's WMDs: "If the Americans go in and
overthrow Saddam Hussein and it's clean, he has nothing, I will
apologize to the nation, and I will not trust the Bush
Administration again, all right?"
Last week, thanks to persistent needling from ABC host Charlie
Gibson, O'Reilly mustered a half-hearted apology: "Well, my
analysis was wrong and I'm sorry.. I was wrong. I'm not pleased
about it at all." As to the promise to "never trust the Bush
administration again," he was considerably less forceful: "I am
much more skeptical of the Bush administration now than I was at
that time," he explained, before blaming CIA chief George Tenet
for Bush's troubles.
But the day after his climbdown, O'Reilly was back on more
familiar turf, telling his Fox audience that the controversy was
cooked up by the "left-wing press" who "used my words to hammer
the president." The liberal media, he reminded his audience, "has
made dozens of mistakes itself and continues to deny that the
world is a better place because Saddam is gone." This from a guy
who promises his show is a "no spin zone."
Deception and doubletalk are nothing new on The O'Reilly
Factor, where O'Reilly struggles to maintain the fiction that he
isn't conservative-- while regularly inveighing against the
"secularists," the "liberal media," National Public Radio, the
ACLU and an assortment of Bush critics. Bush himself, meanwhile,
is described by O'Reilly as "the closest modern president to what
the Founding Fathers have in mind."
But if O'Reilly's in the mood to issue more apologies, he has
his work cut out for him. He could start by explaining his
comments three days after the September 11 attacks, when he
fingered Saddam Hussein as an accomplice: "I believe that you're
going to find out that money from Iraq flowed in and helped this
happen." Or he could explain how he concluded that long-time
nemesis Rev. Jesse Jackson wanted to see Rush Limbaugh in jail on
a drug rap. O'Reilly quoted a truncated passage from a Jackson
interview on another cable network to prove his point-- but
conveniently skipped over the part where Jackson said, "I hope
Rush Limbaugh does not go to jail."
O'Reilly could also explain why he hyped a year-end battle of
book sales between himself and Hillary Clinton. O'Reilly would
eventually accept defeat, but not before claiming his competition
was cheating: "We're doing this the old-fashioned way. Regular
folks are actually buying the book, not the DNC and other
ideological organizations." That's funny-- if you visited a
website called the Conservative Book Club, you could buy a copy
of O'Reilly's latest hardcover for a dollar. O'Reilly also later
admitted that Clinton's book was not being purchased in bulk by
Democratic organizations, telling the Washington Post the whole
thing was "just for sport."
O'Reilly could also explain where he got this idea: "According
to analysis done by the San Diego Union-Tribune, illegal
immigrants cost the taxpayers $20 billion every year," he told
his audience last month. But there's no such "analysis" in that
newspaper's archives-- only a conservative columnist using the
figure in an opinion piece. My call to Fox News to sort out the
matter was never returned.
O'Reilly might want to clarify his advice to young
journalists, too. O'Reilly recently interviewed a young
conservative who had distributed a newsletter at his high school
calling liberalism a mental disorder. You can't do that sort of
thing, O'Reilly lectured the student: "The calmer you stay, the
less inflammatory you stay, the more people will listen to you.
Right now, you're polarizing, and you're not converting
anybody."
That advice may come as a shock to anyone familiar with
O'Reilly's angry shtick: telling guests to "shut up," referring
to critics of the Iraq war as friends of Saddam, and so on. It
didn't help matters much that a few moments before O'Reilly
delivered his sermon on civility, he heaped scorn on other media
outlets-- namely the "BBC pinheads" who "deal in defamation." So
it's hard to say when O'Reilly decided name-calling was a no-no.
But one thing's for sure: As usual, the king of the "no spin
zone" must have left some viewers dizzy. ----
Peter Hart is an analyst at FAIR (www.fair.org ) and the
author of "The Oh Really? Factor: Unspinning Fox News Channel's
Bill O'Reilly" (Seven Stories Press, 2003).
|