When “they” start talking like this it can only mean one thing: they are afraid.
NBC White House correspondent Chuck Todd gave an interview to Dylan Byers of Politico where he suggested the media’s coverage of politics is often wrong: “we incorrectly cover American politics 60 percent of the time.”
What? What would explain this tilt? Todd insists there hasn’t been liberal/ideological bias for a long time, but “we don’t understand their day-to-day lives” outside the New York-DC bubble, and look down at their church-going and WalMart-shopping:Nothing chaps my ass more than New York-centric coverage of American politics. Because its through the New York prism that we incorrectly cover American politics 60% of the time. To me, the ideological bias in the media really hasn’t been there in a long time. But what is there that people mistake for ideological bias is geographic bias. It’s seeing everything through the lens of New York and Washington.
So, for instance, I’ve always thought we collectively as the media covered this recession horribly, because the two markets that actually weathered it better than almost any in the country were New York and Washington. That didn’t mean we didn’t cover it, but we only covered it statistically. We didn’t cover it from the kitchen table. Imagine if we still had news bureaus in Denver, in Miami — these places were it was really front line, front and center. (NOTE: Is he implying here that it is only the lack of affiliates in Denver and Miami that has lead to their myopic disdain of common people, especially of white “flyover country” people? We are not fooled by this ridiculous “admission”. –Ed)