Ken,
There's an archival link on the site that Kat mentioned, and here's a
link to a report of the article on the Fox website from a newspaper in
New Hampshire.
http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041003/NEWS/41003
0362/1002/NEWS01
The link may not work really well, since the link was split in my
Outlook.
The other references I found were from the Hindustan Times, which quoted
The Guardian.
Kendall Corbett
An unreasonable man (but my wife says that's redundant!)
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one
persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all
progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-George Bernard Shaw 1856-1950
-----Original Message-----
From: ken barber [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2004 4:44 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [C-PALSY] Don't trust News Sources!!
i thank you for the link and i'll check it out. but, i
do hope to get a specific link to see both the
guardians article and the fox site article although i
am on the way to the fox site to do a search there
having failed with google.
not only do i not trust my news sources, i don't trust
anyone's new sources without collaberation. print is
cheap; on the internet and in the newspapers. and talk
is cheap on the airwaves.
--- Kat <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> A good site that points out inaccuracies in media
> reporting is:
>
> http://mediamatters.org/
>
> Kat
>
> On Monday 04 October 2004 07:04 pm, Deri James
> wrote:
> > Fox News apologises for Kerry fabrication
> >
> > Oliver Burkeman in New York
> > Monday October 4, 2004
> > The Guardian
> >
> > Fox News, the influential rightwing US television
> network, said yesterday
> > it had "reprimanded" its chief political
> correspondent after its website
> > carried fabricated quotes attributed to John
> Kerry, in which he called
> > himself a "metrosexual" who enjoys getting
> manicures.
> >
> > The network, owned by Rupert Murdoch, apologised
> for the article in which
> > the Democratic challenger was quoted telling a
> rally in Florida: "Didn't my
> > nails and cuticles look great? What a good
> debate!" Comparing himself to
> > the president, Mr Kerry was supposed to have said:
> "I'm metrosexual - he's
> > a cowboy." Women voters, he purportedly added,
> "should like me! I do
> > manicures."
> >
> > The article appeared under the byline of Carl
> Cameron, who has been
> > following Mr Kerry on the campaign trail. It had
> been posted on the site,
> > the network said in a statement, because of
> "fatigue and bad judgment,
> > rather than malice."
> >
> > "Carl Cameron made a stupid mistake and he has
> been reprimanded for his
> > lapse in judgment. It was a poor attempt at humour
> and he regrets it," a
> > Fox spokesman, Paul Schur, told the Los Angeles
> Times, though he would not
> > give details of what action would be taken against
> Mr Cameron.
> >
> > The "metrosexual" story taps into a persistent
> theme underlying the
> > election race, in which the Republican party and
> its supporters in the
> > media have sought to make a campaign issue of the
> candidates' perceived
> > masculinity.
> >
> > At the party's convention in New York last month,
> California governor
> > Arnold Schwarzenegger called Mr Kerry's advisers
> "economic girlie-men".
> >
> > A metrosexual, the fake Fox article helpfully
> concluded, "is defined as an
> > urbane male with a strong aesthetic sense who
> spends a great deal of time
> > and money on his appearance and lifestyle".
>
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