In the appalling wasteland of contemporary television,
any oasis of sense and sanity is hard to find, especially for persons of a more
conservative persuasion. Many of that
persuasion find their sole refuge from the relentless onslaught of left-wing media
rot in the Fox News Channel (FNC). For
this observer, alas, even that isolated oasis has compromised its credibility
with its recent distortions and outright ignorance in its coverage of the Sochi Winter Olympics.
Although
the Democrat-dominated cable news alternatives enjoy mocking FNC as a tool of
the Republican Party and political conservatives, in reality it is far from
it. It's prominent news anchor, Shepard
Smith, is a smirking liberal. Unlike the
mainstream media's liberal-dominated discussion panels, FNC never presents a
topical debate or discussion without equal representation of the leftist or
Democratic viewpoint, no matter how insupportable that position might be. And Bill O'Reilly, FNC's most highly-rated
and prominent star in the news and information field, is politically
conservative only from the skewed perspective of the left. He is an unrepentant liberal on many issues,
such as capital punishment, and takes particular delight in scornfully mocking
what he perceives to be the unwarranted stubbornness of conservatives in
advancing and defending their positions.
In fact, a quick perusal of genuinely conservative political websites
will confirm that O'Reilly and the FNC are held in considerable contempt in
those quarters.
Still,
any port in a storm, as the saying goes.
Although I rarely resort to television for news or anything else, I
frequently find relief from the boredom of lengthy workouts on the elliptical machine
at my gym by tuning in FNC on the individual TV monitor. But after the maddening ignorance and
distortions to which I was exposed by two FNC programs on February 21, I think
I will seek my rare television relief at the nature or history channels in
future.
In
both cases, the subject was the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.
The
first program was Neil Cavuto's afternoon news and information talk-fest,
entitled "Your World." Cavuto
previously worked with CNBC, NBC, and PBS, and had an intership in the Jimmy
Carter White House in his youth. His
expertise and experience lie in the fields of economics and business. He is basically a mealy-mouthed, Pillsbury
Dough-boy moderate who would likely consider a battle between Satan and Michael
the Archangel as a story requiring a "fair and balanced"
presentation. But Cavuto's segment on
Russia's conduct of the Sochi Olympics did not even pretend to a balanced
presentation.
Cavuto's
guest was a former CIA operative whose qualifications for presenting informed
comment on a winter sports festival were nil. Both Cavuto
and his guest spent the entire segment parroting and reinforcing the prescribed
U.S. media narrative (of both right and left) that the Sochi Olympics have been
a disaster for Vladimir Putin and Russia.
They focused gleefully on photos of Putin frowning balefully while watching the
Russian Ice Hockey team's upset defeat at the hands of Finland -- as though he
should have been smiling and laughing at his nation's loss.
Revealing
their abysmal ignorance of the broader Winter Olympics picture, they focused
entirely on Russia's defeat in ice hockey, while studiously ignoring its momentous
upset triumphs in ladies and team figure skating and its far exceeding expectations in the overall medal count (at this writing, on Feb. 22,
Russia leads the overall medal count
with 29, vs. the U.S.'s 27, and 11 golds, vs. the U.S.'s 9). Not content with presenting an entirely
distorted picture of the strong performance by Russia's athletes, Cavuto and his guest joined in seriously suggesting, without a shred of evidence, that Putin
might punish, or maybe even execute, those Russian athletes who had fallen
short. They then went on to contend that
the Sochi Olympics presented the greatest disaster for a host country since
Hitler's travails at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, again without any basis in
supporting facts.
Significantly,
moreover, the original and primary basis for predictions of disaster for Sochi
was the threat of terrorist attacks or subversion. Even the slightest indicators of approaching
problems in this regard were seized upon with glee by the America media, with
Cassandra-like projections of Olympic tragedy.
Yet the Sochi Games have been entirely free of even slight disruption in
that respect; Putin's iron-handed security has proven more than a match for
any terrorist pipedreams. Consequently, the
anti-Russian media chorus has been reduced to whining lugubriously about
insufficiently plush accommodations, sometimes slushy snow, and almost comical
suppression of the obnoxious and sacrilegious exhibitionists, Pussy Riot, by so-called Russian cossacks.
But
the Cavuto show's Russo-phobic distortions were only a preview of what was to
follow on the sophomoric, dormitory lounge-style political panel show known as
"The Five."
Purporting
to be a conservative alternative to the left-wing circle jerks that pass for
political exchange on outlets like MSNBC and CNN, the Five does not
include a single principled social conservative or a single well-informed or
thoughtful conservative commentator.
Instead, it is composed of Bob Beckel, a porcine, mentally indolent
representative of old-school Democratic liberalism (he is also the political
genius who managed Walter Mondale's pathetic 1984 presidential campaign that
carried only a single State, Mondale's own Minnesota, and that by a squeaker);
the smugly annoying, spike-haired, Berkeley-educated libertarian, Greg Gutfeld;
former Bush 43 spokeswoman Dana Perino, the very embodiment of the inoffensive,
unprincipled National Press Club-style moderate Republican; and Eric Bolling, a
former commodities trader and financial reporter, who passes for the group's
most assertive conservative. The show's
fifth slot is filled alternatively by one of two attractive and articulate
brunettes, Andrea Tantaros and Kimberly Guilfoyle, or by the liberal African-American
commentator, Juan Williams.
The
show's February 21 segment on the ladies figure skating competition at Sochi
was one of the more offensive, mean-spirited, ill-informed presentations I have
witnessed on television.
I am
a great admirer of the beauty and spirit of ladies figure skaters, and along
with many millions world-wide, I greatly enjoyed the especially dramatic,
beautifully skated performances of the contenders at the Sochi Ice Palace. The gold medal came down to the final free
skates of the three appealing young ladies who led the scoring after the short
program: highly-favored defending gold
medalist Yuna Kim of South Korea, regarded by many as the greatest ladies
skater ever; the graceful and elegant Italian skating veteran, Carolina Kostner;
and the vivacious, brown-eyed 17-year-old Russian champion, Adelina Sotnikova. Earlier, Kim's long-time arch-rival, two-time
World Champion and 2010 silver medalist Mao Asada of Japan, had been effectively
eliminated by falling in her attempt to land the rare and difficult triple axel (which
no other lady skater currently attempts) in the short program.
The
final free-skate competition was a moving demonstration of athleticism, heart, and artistry for anyone with the slightest appreciation of the sport. First, Mao Asada, heart-broken after her
disastrous fall in the short program, pulled herself together for a gorgeous
free skate, including perfect execution of her trademark triple axel. Her gutsy performance, which pulled her from sixteenth to sixth place and was out-pointed only by the top two skaters in the free skate component, was
especially admirable because she took the ice emotionally distraught and eliminated from contention for the gold medal she had sought since finishing second to Yuna Kim at Torino in 2010. Commentator Johnny
Weir justly observed that, medal or no medal, Asada's brave performance under the
shadow of her short program confirmed that the lady had the heart of a true
champion.
When
the final group took the ice, the Ice Palace was filled with extraordinary tension and
suspense because the top three ladies were virtually tied after the short
program. Carolina Kostner was the first
to skate. Her dazzling, long-legged
spirals, jumps, and spins to Revel's Bolero
were both moving and athletically impressive, and she was rewarded with a
justifiably high total score of 216.73 to take the lead.
It seemed at the moment that only the supreme Ms. Kim could surpass
her. But then Miss Sotnikova, the Russian ingenue, took center stage. Her technical performance, with
seven dazzling triple jumps, was off the charts, and was embellished by the
energy, grace, and theatricality of her presentation. Mainly on the strength of her incredibly
demanding technical elements, she moved ahead of Ms. Kostner with a total score
of 224.59.
Finally, the arena hushed dramatically when Queen Yuna regally glided onto the ice. She skated with the flawless grace and execution expected of the world's highest-ranked skater, but her jumps were on the tight side, and less demanding than those of Sotnikova. She nailed six triple jumps, but Adelina had nailed seven, with higher technical values. In the end, the judges determined that Miss Kim's graceful performance had not overcome Sotnikova's superior technical element scores and dazzling charisma, and awarded the gold medal to the Russian gamine.
Finally, the arena hushed dramatically when Queen Yuna regally glided onto the ice. She skated with the flawless grace and execution expected of the world's highest-ranked skater, but her jumps were on the tight side, and less demanding than those of Sotnikova. She nailed six triple jumps, but Adelina had nailed seven, with higher technical values. In the end, the judges determined that Miss Kim's graceful performance had not overcome Sotnikova's superior technical element scores and dazzling charisma, and awarded the gold medal to the Russian gamine.
Especially
because of Yuna Kim's great stature and status as a heavy favorite, the upset
victory was naturally subject to scrutiny and the second-guessing that is
typical of a sport based upon judging.
Unsurprisingly, South Korean officials complained that the judges had
unfairly deprived their Queen Yuna of her expected victory. More disturbingly, seventh-place U.S. skater
Ashley Wagner expressed bitter criticism of the overall judging, even though
her competent performance was nowhere near the excellence of the ladies who
were awarded the podium. Undoubtedly
because the gold medal was awarded to a Russian girl, the Putin-hating U.S. media
used these and other routine grumblings to cultivate a contrived controversy
that Ms. Sotnikova's well-deserved victory was the result of prejudiced or
dishonest judging. Smugly ill-informed
U.S. journalists, like USA Today's Christine Brennan, could not even
wait to "review the video" before tweeting their unsolicited opinion
that Ms. Sotnikova's score was unjustified.
Fortunately
for the cause of fairness and well-informed judgment, however, members of the
elite skating community who actually understand figure skating came to the
rescue.
Former Olympic champion Tara Lipinski and her colorful NBC sidekick, former Olympian Johnny Weir, both concurred in the judges' decision that Ms. Sotnikova deserved first place. In a subsequent television interview with Bob Costas which is well worth viewing (available on video at NBCsports.com), Lipinski and Weir politely but firmly explained why Sotnikova's victory was warranted in terms even the likes of Christine Brennan might understand. Her technical performance was demonstrably superior to Miss Kim's and Miss Kostner's, particularly her more difficult series of seven triple jumps. As Johnny Weir put it with his typical verve, "Adelina won the night, plain and simple."
Other elite Olympic skating veterans concurred. Former gold medalist and long-time skating maven Scott Hamilton cited Sotnikova's superior athleticism in supporting the judges' decision. "It was totally fair," concurred two-time Canadian silver medalist Elvis Stojko. Interestingly, if any two persons could represent the opposite poles of figure skating style, it would be the muscular and macho Stojko and the androgynous Johnny Weir. Yet they flatly agreed on the justice and integrity of Adelina's victory. And to its credit, NBC Sports.com went to the trouble of preparing a synchronized, side-by-side video on its website showing each technical element and jump performed by Sotnikova and Kim, along with the points allowable for each element. Anyone viewing that video can more readily understand why Sotnikova was given the narrow edge in the final scoring.
Former Olympic champion Tara Lipinski and her colorful NBC sidekick, former Olympian Johnny Weir, both concurred in the judges' decision that Ms. Sotnikova deserved first place. In a subsequent television interview with Bob Costas which is well worth viewing (available on video at NBCsports.com), Lipinski and Weir politely but firmly explained why Sotnikova's victory was warranted in terms even the likes of Christine Brennan might understand. Her technical performance was demonstrably superior to Miss Kim's and Miss Kostner's, particularly her more difficult series of seven triple jumps. As Johnny Weir put it with his typical verve, "Adelina won the night, plain and simple."
Other elite Olympic skating veterans concurred. Former gold medalist and long-time skating maven Scott Hamilton cited Sotnikova's superior athleticism in supporting the judges' decision. "It was totally fair," concurred two-time Canadian silver medalist Elvis Stojko. Interestingly, if any two persons could represent the opposite poles of figure skating style, it would be the muscular and macho Stojko and the androgynous Johnny Weir. Yet they flatly agreed on the justice and integrity of Adelina's victory. And to its credit, NBC Sports.com went to the trouble of preparing a synchronized, side-by-side video on its website showing each technical element and jump performed by Sotnikova and Kim, along with the points allowable for each element. Anyone viewing that video can more readily understand why Sotnikova was given the narrow edge in the final scoring.
Had
the ill-prepared blockheads of The Five taken even five minutes to apprise
themselves of these expert judgments they might have refrained from launching
the disgraceful and ill-informed attack on the integrity of Ms.
Sotnikova's spectacular triumph that was broadcast on February 21. The obese
and clueless Bob Beckel, who would not know a triple axel from a triple crown,
not only declared that Ms. Kim had been cheated of the gold medal, but went so
far as to imply that the result was fixed.
The other members of the panel generally lent their uninformed
support to the insidious premise of the program – i.e., that Miss Sotnikova's
victory was tainted and probably the result of corrupt Russian influence – by
failing to challenge or question Beckel's and the program's introductory suggestion of
a "fix." In the program's
nasty and mean-spirited denigration of this lovely Russian athlete's triumph, not
one of the panel evinced the slightest indication that they had done any
research or preparation for discussing a topic on which they lacked even rudimentary knowledge or insight.
Indeed,
this episode was the second time in a period of only a few weeks in which The
Five's panelists had pontificated ignorantly and ignominiously on Olympic ice
skating. The U.S. Olympic authorities
had ignited considerable controversy when they selected Ashley Wagner as one of
the three lady skaters on the U.S. team, even though Mirai Nagasu had finished
ahead of Wagner in the competitive tryouts and thus had earned the spot under the
normal practice. In their clueless
discussion criticizing Wagner's selection, panel member Beckel implied that Wagner (a rather striking All-American
beauty) was selected over Nagasu (a Japanese-American) because Wagner's looks
were more representative of what was expected of a U.S. lady skater. No other panel member questioned or challenged Beckel's boorish and groundless insinuation. This was an insult to both ladies, in
demeaning both Wagner's selection and Nagasu's looks, even though Miss Nagasu is
also a lovely girl. Panelist Greg
Gutfeld then removed any doubts about the group's ignorance
when he smugly asserted that figure skating – long recognized as the most popular
and widely-viewed Winter Olympic sport in television ratings – was one of those
sports that only the participants and their families cared about. Although his snide comment was beyond clueless, the other panel members acquiesced in silence.
The
most disturbing aspect of this kind of ill-informed television commentary –
apart from the harm it inflicts upon those who are defamed by its fallacies –
is the failure of these self-satisfied philistenes to undertake even
minimal preparation and research on the topics they are privileged to expound
upon before millions of viewers. For
commentators like those on The Five to impugn the integrity of Miss Sotnikova's
Olympic triumph without even bothering to inform themselves of the most basic
and pertinent facts is the height, or depth, of arrogant sloth.
Well done George! If I taught a course in journalistic bias the coverage of the current Olympics would be a primary case study.
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