Showing posts with label SKIP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SKIP. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Skip Your Morning Meditation & Watch This Instead

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Skip Your Morning Meditation & Watch This Instead

Monday, August 26, 2013

With Sleazy Democratic Mayor Finally Set to Resign, ABC and NBC Again Skip Party ID



Why should things change now? NBC and ABC on Thursday night and Friday morning yet again refused to identify San Diego Mayor Bob Filner, accused of sexually harassing 18 women, as a Democrat. ABC’s Good Morning America devoted two segments to his impending resignation, but mentioned only “Mayor Bob Filner.”


In contrast, GMA on Thursday hyped the controversy of the Lieutenant governor of Texas, a “rising Republican star,” caught on a 911 call after he attempted to free his niece from jail. On Friday, only CBS This Morning identified Filner as a Democrat. Reporter Bill Whitaker interviewed the ex-fiancee of “Democrat Bob Filner.” Whitaker explained, “They already shared a passion for progressive politics, the fight for the homeless, civil rights, immigrants.”


He included a clip of Bronwyn Ingram describing her past excitement: “To have a Democratic mayor in a city that’s constantly, you know, run by Republicans was very exciting to a lot of us and we had big plans.”


On Thursday night’s Evening News, correspondent Ben Tracy noted that “18 women have accused the Democrat mayor of sexual harassment.”



NBC’s Today on Friday and Nightly News on Thursday both avoided ideological labels.


On ABC’s Good Morning America, Ryan Owens described Filner in rough terms: “The circus may finally be leaving town. Mayor Bob Filner spotted loading boxes into an SUV outside city hall.”


But he still couldn’t manage to mention the D-word. Similarly, World News on Thursday skipped a partisan label.


Way back on July 27, an on-screen Good Morning America graphic identified Filner as a Democrat. But the word was not spoken aloud.


A partial transcript of the August 23 CBS This Morning segment, which aired at 7:32am ET, is below:


7:32


BILL WHITAKER: When Democrat Bob Filner was sworn in as mayor of San Diego, Bronwyn Ingram stood proudly by his side. As his fiancé, she had planned to share her life with him. They already shared a passion for progressive politics, the fight for the homeless, civil rights, immigrants.


BRONWYN INGRAM: To have a Democratic mayor in a city that’s constantly, you know, run by Republicans was very exciting to a lot of us and we had big plans.


FILNER: It’s going to be a time of change for San Diego.


WHITAKER: But now the plans are crumbling in the face of accusations by 18 women who claim they were sexually harassed by Filner. Did you ever see him behave inappropriately towards women any time you were with him?


INGRAM: No. I have not seen any of the behaviors that are being described by the accusers.


FILNER: Do you believe these women?


INGRAM: I would find it hard to believe they were all fabricating those stories.



– Scott Whitlock is the senior news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.




BiasAlerts



With Sleazy Democratic Mayor Finally Set to Resign, ABC and NBC Again Skip Party ID

Friday, August 2, 2013

In overture to China, Japan PM may skip visit to war dead shrine


Japan

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks to voters during a campaign for the July 21 Upper House election in Funabashi, east of Tokyo, in this July 19, 2013 file photo.


Credit: Reuters/Toru Hanai/Files






TOKYO | Fri Aug 2, 2013 2:16am EDT



TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will likely skip visiting a shrine for war dead on a traditional remembrance day this month, a move he hopes will open the door to a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping and mend badly frayed ties.


Whether Xi, faced with huge domestic challenges, is willing or able to risk responding to the overture remains in doubt. But relations between the world’s second- and third-largest economies have now been hostile for months, with a row over disputed islands adding to wartime bitterness and a regional rivalry.


China and South Korea, occupied or colonized by Japan in the 20th century, are especially touchy about visits to Yasukuni Shrine by Japanese leaders because it also honors people convicted as war criminals by an Allied tribunal.


Conservatives like Abe say it is only natural to pay respects there to those who died for their country, especially on Aug 15, the anniversary of Japan’s defeat in World War Two. Tokyo hopes that if Abe stays away on the day, it would score points in Beijing.


“Now is the most delicate time,” said a government source with knowledge of discussions between Japan and China, who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the subject. “It may be that when a leaders’ summit takes place, we look back and say ‘that was the start’.”


Abe, 58, is keen to replicate one of the few successes of his troubled 2006-2007 term, when he thawed Sino-Japanese ties after a five-year chill during the tenure of his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, diplomatic experts say.


“Despite the hawkish persona that he puts forward, in 2006 he was the guy who began the post-Koizumi reconciliation process,” said Sheila Smith, a senior fellow at the U.S.-based Council on Foreign Relations. “He sees himself as a statesman in the sense of being effective on the diplomatic scene.”


Sino-Japanese ties went into a deep-freeze during Koizumi’s term partly because of his annual visits to Yasukuni.


The deeply conservative Abe was able to warm up relations thereafter by never saying whether he would or would not visit Yasukuni, but in fact, staying away while in office.


Abe has since said he regretted that decision and visited Yasukuni after becoming ruling party leader in September.


Even if he does not visit the shrine in August, he would face pressure from his conservative base to visit the religious complex in central Tokyo in October at an autumn festival.


CREATIVE AMBIGUITY


Chinese state media, however, have issued a barrage of invective against Abe in recent weeks even as back-door diplomacy took place over repairing ties. The country’s Foreign Ministry has accused him of simply “chanting empty slogans” in his push for talks with Xi.


China – which officially denies that any talks on a possible summit are taking place and shown no public signs of wanting one – may want assurances that Abe won’t attend the shrine once a summit is done and dusted.


“The question of timing is pretty critical,” CFR’s Smith said. “If Abe goes (to Yasukuni) in October, it is disastrous for Xi if they are talking about a summit in September.”


Japan-China ties took their latest nose-dive after Abe’s predecessor nationalized the uninhabited isles in the East China Sea that are controlled by Japan but claimed by both countries.


Still, several Japanese politicians and officials, starting with Abe’s junior coalition partner in January, have visited Beijing since he returned to office in December.


Plans for a trip to Beijing in May by Masahiko Komura, the vice president of Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party were dropped after Finance Minister Taro Aso, who is also deputy prime minister, Taro Aso, visited Yasukuni in April.


But the diplomatic pace picked up in June, when Abe’s foreign policy adviser Shotaro Yachi visited Beijing. Another adviser, Isao Iijima, followed suit last month ahead of an upper house election that cemented Abe’s grip on power.


And on Tuesday, Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Akitaka Saiki, met Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Beijing.


For the leaders to meet, though, diplomats would have to exercise some deft verbal footwork find a formula that allows them to dial down tensions over the disputed East China Sea isles, known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China.


Japanese and Chinese ships and planes have been playing a risky game of cat-and-mouse near the islands, and activists from both sides are eyeing trips to the area around Aug 15.


China wants Japan first to acknowledge that a formal dispute over sovereignty exists, experts say, a step that Tokyo has rejected for fear it would undermine its claim.


Ambiguity could well be the easiest path to avoiding domestic backlashes, especially in China where public antipathy to Japan is running high. “Face-saving is involved,” said a former Japanese diplomat. “Creative nuances might be necessary.”


September could be one window for a summit, but skeptics note that Xi has his hands full with an economic slowdown, planned economic reforms, an anti-corruption campaign and a party plenum in September or October.


Doubts in Beijing about Abe’s sincerity also run deep.


“Abe is being two-faced,” said Li Xiushi at the Shanghai Institute of International Studies, which advises the government on foreign policy. “On one hand, he wants to strengthen the containment of China in the global arena … On the other hand, he wants to pretend to the international and domestic audience: ‘See how good my attitude is. I’m willing to negotiation. Only China is the tough one.’ He wants to create this illusion.”


(Additional reporting by and Sui-Lee Wee and Ben Blanchard in Beijing, and Antoni Slodkowski in Tokyo; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)





Reuters: Most Read Articles



In overture to China, Japan PM may skip visit to war dead shrine

Monday, June 3, 2013

Undercover at Disneyland: "Shameful" trick to skip lines



NBC’s Jeff Rossen investigates the shocking way some families have been cutting to the front of those long lines at Disney: by hiring disabled tour guides with special passes so they get onto rides without a wait.



It can be frustrating to wait in long lines at Disneyland, but now some families have figured out how to cheat the system. TODAY National Investigative Correspondent Jeff Rossen and his team went undercover at the theme park to investigate what many call a shameful trick.


Watch the video report or above or click here to read a text piece showing what they learned about skipping to the front of the line.


More from Open Channel:


Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook




Open Channel



Undercover at Disneyland: "Shameful" trick to skip lines

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Undercover at Disneyland: "Shameful" trick to skip lines



NBC’s Jeff Rossen investigates the shocking way some families have been cutting to the front of those long lines at Disney: by hiring disabled tour guides with special passes so they get onto rides without a wait.



It can be frustrating to wait in long lines at Disneyland, but now some families have figured out how to cheat the system. TODAY National Investigative Correspondent Jeff Rossen and his team went undercover at the theme park to investigate what many call a shameful trick.


Watch the video report or above or click here to read a text piece showing what they learned about skipping to the front of the line.


More from Open Channel:


Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook




Open Channel



Undercover at Disneyland: "Shameful" trick to skip lines

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Undercover at Disneyland: "Shameful" trick to skip lines



NBC’s Jeff Rossen investigates the shocking way some families have been cutting to the front of those long lines at Disney: by hiring disabled tour guides with special passes so they get onto rides without a wait.



It can be frustrating to wait in long lines at Disneyland, but now some families have figured out how to cheat the system. TODAY National Investigative Correspondent Jeff Rossen and his team went undercover at the theme park to investigate what many call a shameful trick.


Watch the video report or above or click here to read a text piece showing what they learned about skipping to the front of the line.


More from Open Channel:


Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook




Open Channel



Undercover at Disneyland: "Shameful" trick to skip lines