Posted on 10/06/2003 9:44:37 AM PDT by pogo101
I'd long subscribed to the LA Times despite it's clear liberal bias, eschewing the more moderate LA Daily News because the Times' sections on sports and entertainment were routinely superior.
The recall coverage made it impossible for me to continue my subscription to the Times. Today we cancelled it and subscribed to the Daily News.
Here is a redacted version of the letter I sent to the Reader Rep at the Times:
Add us to the count of those cancelling our LA Times subscriptions due to the paper's unmistakable and unfair bias in recent days' coverage.
Certainly we knew at the outset that the LA Times was pronouncedly left- and Democrat-leaning: it has not endorsed a single Republican running against a Democrat in a general election in recent memory, in hundreds of endorsements published.
But the endgame coverage of the recall brought out the worst bias I have seen: prominent, largely uncritical reprinting of negative charges against Arnold Schwarzenegger, coupled with fawning puff-pieces on Tom McClintock and -- apparently for the sake of being able to claim even-handedness -- mere token negative coverage of Davis. (Is it really news that Davis is fighting his image as bland? Next you'll be telling me there's unrest in the middle east.)
The paper has its conservative tokens, including its editorial cartoonist, and deserves credit for giving Roy Rivenberg the freedom to skewer all candidates with wit and irreverence. But overall, we no longer look to the Times as a fair window on the world. The tint in that window has become too dark -- too sinister, in the original sense of the word.
Perhaps you should consider renaming the paper to the Los Angeles Democrat. There's nothing wrong with partisan bias in a paper; in centuries past, it was the common approach. What's wrong is a paper claiming NOT to have such a bias, when it, in fact, does.
Your ex-subscriber,
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
God Bless This Man! |
|
|
FreeRepublic , LLC PO BOX 9771 FRESNO, CA 93794
|
AND SAY THANKS TO JIM ROBINSON! It is in the breaking news sidebar! |
Well, that's just what the Times itself said in a story printed Sunday. One reasonably should suppose the actual number is far, far higher, for these reasons:
- the "over 1000" figure was in a story put to bed on Saturday evening. Many more have cancelled since then;
- the Times can and does ONLY include a cancellation in its "count" IF the cancelling subscriber goes to the trouble of explaining the reasons for the cancellation -- and many, probably most, won't explain.
My dad did. The subscription clerk is probably still trying to pry his eardrums apart...
Insert word "did".
Prairie
Every couple of months I receive calls from telemarketers selling subscriptions to the NY Times. Whenever I receive these calls, I make a point of explaining in a firm but pleasant manner exactly why I will never subscribe to that newspaper.
I was very surprised to have one of them tell me that he hears this comment "all the time."
Things like this are worth remembering every time one of the parent companies of these newspapers misses its revenue targets.
But the endgame coverage of the recall brought out the worst bias I have seen: prominent, largely uncritical reprinting of negative charges against Arnold Schwarzenegger, coupled with fawning puff-pieces on Tom McClintock and -- apparently for the sake of being able to claim even-handedness -- mere token negative coverage of Davis. (Is it really news that Davis is fighting his image as bland? Next you'll be telling me there's unrest in the middle east.)
Trust me, this pales in comparison to their coverage of the Floriduh recount. They even censored George Will's editorial of Clinton's Legacy and had to publish an apology the next day. They are not just biased but religiously bigoted and pro-Palestinian.
We still get mail offers to resubscribe . . . I just put a copy of my subscription order to the Daily News in the postage paid return envelope and send that in.
Inertia, Roy Rivenberg, and the Sports and Calendar sections, I suppose. But the LATimes is even leftier than the Post: at least the Post has had the courage to blast the Dems' filibustering of well-qualified conservative judges (except as to Pickering). The Times, like its New York namesake, routinely has toed the Schumer / Leahy / People For the American Way line.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.