2. In CNN List, 97 Percent of Celebrity Donations Go to Democrats
3. Larry King to Bill Clinton: 'You Almost Got' Bin Laden
4. Path to 9/11 Screenwriter Charges DVD Blocked to Protect Hillary
On Thursday's NBC Nightly News, anchor Brian Williams justified his show's story by asserting that Winfrey's "support for him [Obama] is getting new attention" -- attention NBC decided to give the topic. Mitchell admired how Winfrey "can turn a first-time author into an instant best-seller, single-handedly reviving an industry," leading her to wonder: "Can the billionaire entertainer, and richest woman in America, turn her magic into votes for Barack Obama?" Ted Johnson of Variety insisted: "It's a very big deal because Oprah, as we know, does not spread her endorsements lightly." Mitchell concluded by noting how "Oprah was recently ranked the second most admired woman in America. Who was first? Hillary Clinton." ABC's Wright took a similar approach on Thursday's Good Morning America: "Oprah's plug can turn a book into a bestseller, a movie into a blockbuster. And the question now is, can she turn a candidate into a President?" After citing how the guest list "includes Will Smith, Halle Berry, Jamie Foxx and John Travolta," as he segued into the above-quoted Brazile bite, Wright oozed: "Oprah's fundraiser is just the tip of the iceberg. Imagine the power of Oprah in an Obama campaign ad." The fundraiser will take place Saturday at Winfrey's estate near Santa Barbara, California. [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The Oprah Winfrey-Barack Obama story on the September 6 NBC Nightly News: BRIAN WILLIAMS: Now to Democratic candidate Barack Obama campaigning on the West coast tonight in advance of a big party being held there in his honor this weekend. The hostess is Oprah Winfrey, and her support for him is getting new attention. Here is NBC's Andrea Mitchell.
ANDREA MITCHELL: She can turn a first-time author into an instant best-seller, single-handedly reviving an industry. The MRC's Scott Whitlock provided this transcript of the September 6 story aired in the 7:30am half hour of ABC's Good Morning America: ROBIN ROBERTS: "But first in this half hour, as we said, Oprah Winfrey has announced that she is backing Barack Obama for President. With her millions of loyal, devoted fans who follow her advice every day, an Oprah endorsement sounds like a pretty good thing for Obama. But will the Oprah effect, well, can it be effective in the world of politics? ABC's David Wright has more. David?"
The online version of the GMA story: abcnews.go.com
On this day before Saturday's celebrity-packed fundraiser for Barack Obama at Oprah Winfrey's California estate (see item #1 above), a peg to catch up with a July "CNN Political Ticker" blog entry which listed major donations to presidential candidates from actors/celebrities: 59 of 61, or 97 percent, to Democrats. CNN Political Research Director Robert Yoon listed Danny DeVito and Tom Hanks as amongst 17 celebrity contributors to Hillary Clinton, Mary Steenburgen and Ben Stiller as donors to the John Edwards campaign, Jodie Foster and Will Smith as supporters of Obama's quest, Michael Douglas and Steven Spielberg as financial backers of Bill Richardson and John Lithgow as a donor to Chris Dodd. Paul Newman hedged his bets and invested in the campaigns of Clinton, Obama and Richardson. Rudy Giuliani was the only Republican on CNN's list to get celebrity money -- from actor Tony Sirico of The Sopranos and actress Melissa Gilbert. CNN.com's July 16 posting, "Celebs add star power to '08 donor lists," online at: politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com ....[W]e at the CNN Political Ticker have painstakingly reviewed the latest batch of presidential fundraising disclosures and have compiled that information in convenient list form, complete with bullet points. HILLARY CLINTON (D) * Ruby Dee, actress: $250 * Danny DeVito, actor: $2,300 * Fran Drescher, TV's "The Nanny": $2,300 * Joely Fisher, actress $4,600 * Tom Hanks, actor: $2,300 * Ed Helms, actor, "Andy Bernard" in NBC's "The Office": $250 * Sharon Lawrence, "NYPD Blue" co-star: $1,000 * Tobey Maguire, actor $4,600 * Marla Maples, actress: $1,000 * Paul Newman, actor: $4,600 * Rhea Perlman, actress $2,300 * Pauly Shore, actor $1,000 * Ben Stiller, actor $6,900 ($4,600 is the legal limit) * George Takei, actor $1,000 * Lily Tomlin, actress $2,000 * Rita Wilson, actress $2,300 * Joanne Woodward, actress $4,600 CHRIS DODD (D) * John Lithgow, actor: $1000 * Christy Romano, actress, singer, voice of "Kim Possible": $300
* Oliver Stone, director: $500 * Mary Steenburgen, actress: $2300 * Ben Stiller, actor: $4600 * Peter Coyote, actor: $1054 * Sharon Lawrence, actress: $1000
* Mark Ruffalo, actor: $700
* Adam Arkin, actor $250 * Paul Dooley, actor $2,300 * Jodie Foster, actress $1,000 * Jamie Foxx, actor $2,300 * Martha Hackett, "Star Trek" actress $2,300 * Bruce Hornsby, singer $2,300 * Anna Horsford, "Amen" actress $500 * Cedric "The Entertainer" Kyles, actor $2,500 * Eriq La Salle, actor $500 * Paul Newman, actor $4,600 * Tom Skerritt, actor $1,000 * Jean Smart, actress $4,600 * Jada Smith, actress $4,600 * Will Smith, actor $4,600 * David Sutcliffe, "Gilmore Girls" Actor $1,250 * Isaiah Washington, former "Grey's Anatomy" Actor $2,300 * Joanne Woodward, Actress $4,600
* Shelley Morrison, actress ("Rosario" on "Will and Grace"): $1600 * Alexandra Paul, actress, "Baywatch" co-star: $1300 * Deirdre Hall, "Days of Our Lives" actress: $1000 * Hector Elizondo, actor: $300
* Michael Douglas, actor: $3100 * Val Kilmer, actor: $2300 * Paul Newman, actor: $2300 * Edward James Olmos, actor: $2300 * Wendie Malick, "Just Shoot Me" actress: $500 * Steven Spielberg, director: $2300 * Kate Capshaw, actress, wife of Steven Spielberg: $2300 * Jodie Foster, actress: $1000 * Christie Brinkley, self-described as "Model/Mom/Environmental activist": $500 * Bette Midler, actress/singer: $4600 * Sherry Lansing, former film executive: $2300 * William Friedkin, director: $2300 * James L. Brooks, producer/writer: $1000
* Tony Sirico, actor, "Paulie Walnuts" on "The Sopranos": $1000 * Melissa Gilbert, actress: $4600
The height of King's fawning over Clinton came when the host wondered, "Would you be happier if history said about you: Bill Clinton, a great philanthropist who happened to be President?" Clinton paused for a moment, and answered: "No. I would like to say that I was a President who left America and the world better off when I left than when I started, and that after I left office, I did my best to help organize people in -- as private citizens -- to do the same thing. And large numbers of people were better off when I stopped than when I started." [This item is adapted from a posting, by Matthew Balan, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] During the first half-hour of the September 5 interview, King pressed Clinton about Hillary and the criticism she has received over the years; the former President's latest book, Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World; his involvement in charitable causes; and forwarded two e-mail questions from viewers on his involvement in his wife's presidential campaign and how he might help select her running mate. Clinton also answered what he thought of Fred Thompson and the rest of the Republican presidential field; and the upcoming report on Iraq from General Petraeus. The first topic King asked about, however, set the tone for the entire interview. King asked Clinton about the recent sex scandal involving Senator Larry Craig. "Did you get any sense of satisfaction, since he [Craig] was such a critic of yours during the impeachment thing, and using terms very demeaning about you?" Clinton answered in the negative, and explained: "Because when it was going on, I knew that, you know, a lot of them were outed for hypocrisy long before this. And everybody knew that -- every serious student of the Constitution -- knew that the whole thing was bogus, and that they were just jumping on a terrible personal mistake I made." After the bottom-of-the-hour commercial break, King immediately brought up the lapel pin Clinton had on, and asked about an international fugitive:
LARRY KING: By the way, some people have -- they can't read the pin on your lapel. As his usual M.O., King didn't pose a follow-up question, and went on to ask Clinton about the recent arrests in Germany in connection with a terror plot and about the war on terrorism in general.
The September 5 item, in full, from Wilson who was filling in for Brit Hume as Hume prepared to moderate FNC's Republican presidential debate in New Hampshire: An excerpt from the September 5 LA Times story, "Is Clinton's candidacy blocking 'Path to 9/11'?" by Martin Miller: Among the nearly two dozen television DVDs slated for nationwide release on Sept. 11 is the second season of "Bones," the third season of "Grey's Anatomy" and the miniseries "The Starter Wife" that aired earlier this year. Not on the list on that day or any other in the near future is last year's highly controversial "The Path to 9/11." The $40-million, five-hour ABC miniseries, which recently received seven Emmy nominations and drew a combined two-night audience of more than 25 million viewers, is for now on the path to nowhere. Its Amazon page reads: "Currently unavailable. We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock." With no date for the release, questions are being raised about whether political pressure is behind its current status as a stalled or discarded DVD project. The reasons are murky, but the miniseries' writer, Cyrus Nowrasteh, believes it's crystal clear: Powerful forces are out to protect Bill Clinton's presidential legacy and shield Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) from any potential collateral damage in her bid for the White House. Nowrasteh, also one of the miniseries' many producers, said he was told by a top executive at ABC Studios that "if Hillary weren't running for president, this wouldn't be a problem." "Whatever anyone may think about me or this movie, this is a bad precedent, a dangerous precedent, to allow a movie to be buried," added Nowrasteh, who received death threats even before the miniseries was broadcast last September. "Because the next time they'll go after another movie. The Bush administration may go after a movie. The next administration may go after a movie. No matter who it is, they may go after a movie. I think this town needs to stand up." Even before "The Path to 9/11" aired on ABC late last summer, the docudrama ignited a political firestorm, almost entirely from high-profile Democratic leaders who viewed its account of events leading up to the terrorist attacks as a right-wing hatchet job on the Clinton administration and its efforts to capture or kill Osama bin Laden. Attempts to pressure ABC to cancel the miniseries at the time were unsuccessful, but last-minute network edits were imposed to quell the critical outcry. An ABC spokeswoman reached Tuesday would say only that the company "has no release date at this time," and she declined to comment further.... Thus far, few have noted the DVD's absence in the marketplace. Among those who have are conservative talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh, who questioned last month why the disc isn't available on the nation's retail shelves. (Limbaugh and Nowrasteh have met on several occasions but do not regularly socialize, Nowrasteh said.)... [V]oices traditionally associated with the political left are disturbed by the DVD's uncertain fate. This isn't about politics, said film director Oliver Stone, but about the right of artists to have their work distributed. "This is a shame; it's censorship in the most blatant way," said Stone, who has hired Nowrasteh for several writing projects. "I'm not vouching for its accuracy -- it's a dramatization -- but it's an important work and needs to be seen." The time between a program's television broadcast and subsequent DVD release varies, but these days it's generally around four months. However, for TV movies and miniseries -- mostly because so few are made these days -- the rules are less clear. For instance, HBO's movie "Buried My Heart at Wounded Knee," an adaptation of Dee Brown's famous book, and the USA Network's miniseries "The Starter Wife," about a Hollywood power wife scorned, premiered in late May and will be out on DVD Tuesday. Still, there are plenty of miniseries, most of them produced years ago, that never make it to DVD. The chief reason is usually a perceived lack of interest and profit.... In 2003, after vehement protests from Republicans, CBS yanked its scheduled miniseries "The Reagans." Republicans complained that the docudrama created a distorted and unflattering picture of the former president. Eventually, the program was shown on CBS' much-less-watched sister network, the pay cable outlet Showtime, and was later released on DVD. Initially, Nowrasteh was told by executives at ABC Studios that the miniseries would have a DVD release in January. Then, April. Then, this summer. Currently, Nowrasteh has not been notified of a specific release date for the DVD.... END of Excerpt For the article in full: www.latimes.com -- Brent Baker
|