We’ve already documented how the Media Research is so in thrall to President Trump that it has embarrassingly gushed over Trump’s needless bashing of PBS’ Yamiche Alcindor and NBC’s Peter Alexander during his daily briefings that are ostensibly about the coronavirus. But there’s plenty more where that came from.
Curtis Houck got particularly worked up when Trump attacked his favorite enemy, CNN’s Jim Acosta. “Trump NUKES Acosta for ‘Nasty, Snarky Question’ Looking Back, Not Forward on Virus” Houck screeched in his headline, and the post contained more of the Acosta Derangement Syndrome Houck is known for:
On Monday, CNN chief White House correspondent Jim Acosta stepped back in the ring for Monday’s White House Coronavirus Task Force daily briefing and, as usual, he made a fool out of himself.
Fortunately for our collective sanity, the ordeal lasted less than two minutes and ended with President Trump torching Fake News Jim for his “nasty, snarky question” about the President’s past statements at what was then a disturbing but evolving pandemic.
[…]The President didn’t initially fire Acosta into the sun. Instead, he chose to answer the question, noting that he still does believe the coronavirus will go away, that Americans should “stay calm,” and that everyone’s “doing a great job.”
“[W]e’re going to have a great victory and it’s people like you and CNN that say things like that, that it’s why people just don’t want to listen to CNN anymore. You could ask a normal question,” Trump added.
Taking a jab at the wider notion of intentionally causing panic (e.g. much of CNN’s coverage), the President quipped that, if he wanted to, he “could cause panic much better than even you” that’d make the CNN carnivalbarker “look like a minor league player.”
It’s indicative of the MRC’s highly skewed sense of politics that Houck dropped a reference to “Real Clear Politics White House correspondent Philip Wegmann (who’s a real reporter)” — never mind that Weghmann has a history of writing for biased conservative outlets such as the Daily Signal and the Washington Examiner and is very much a conservative operative, having received the 2018-19 Tony Blankley Fellowship for Public Policy and American Exceptionalism from the conservative Steamboat Institute. Blankley was the onetime editorial page editor for the conservative Washington Times.
Houck served up more Acosta derangement — and held tight to pro-Trump talking points — in an April 3 post:
Acosta inquired at 6:03 p.m. Eastern about the whereabouts of the NIH’s Dr. Tony Fauci, likely seeking to follow up on a CNN report flashing as a chyron during the briefing that Fauci had been purposefully sidelined from appearing.
Trump clearly sensed what Acosta was up to and promptly drove a stake through the heart of the manufactured tension, lamenting that “every time you ask a question,” reporters think there’s “a problem.” In reality, Trump replied that there’s “no problem” and< “we’re doing great together.”
Fake News Jim gave up and asked if he could change subjects, which Trump quipped: “We’re covering a different subject? Okay, go ahead, Jim. Try another one.”
Acosta used his second chance to further ram down our throats the media-fed notion that the Trump administration’s failures to deal with the pandemic date back at least a year.
[…]Get work, Jim. Trying to place blame on the U.S. when the blame should belong to China (and only China).
Houck further showed that Acosta lives rent-free inside his head by dedicated yet another post to Trump unable to handle Acosta’s questioning (not that Houck would ever admit that, of course), perversely proud that he could violent metaphors that Trump “nuked” and “obliterated” Acosta:
It was Good Friday, but the White House Briefing Room saw quite the duel when President Trump nuked CNN chief White House correspondent and opposition party figure Jim Acosta for taking issue with what he felt was too much hope and optimism amidst the coronavirus pandemic and not enough negativity.
At one point, the President obliterated Acosta with the seemingly obvious, which is that these briefings are “not happy talk” “sad talk” and “the saddest news conferences that I’ve ever had” because “this is the real deal” having to deal with matters of life and death.
Starting at the beginning, Acosta started not with a question but an opinion that CNN “hear[s] from a lot of people who see these briefings as sort of a happy talk briefings” and that really no hospital or state has even close to what it needs.
Trump asked for names and when Acosta couldn’t answer after a tense back-and-forth, Trump called CNN’s coverage “fake news” to Acosta’s dismay. Trump added that of course Acosta’s hearing nothing but negativity because guests “always say that because otherwise you’re not going to put them on.”
The President then turned on the afterburners, trashing Acosta’s nonsense and putting in perspective how difficult this has been and will continue to be, including the fact that “this is the real deal” and finding the safest time to reopen the economy will be “by far the biggest decision of my life”[.]
Houck also inserted pro-Trump talking points here too, declaring that “Obviously, Trump said he would listen to [experts], but he had to repeat it over and over so as to debunk the liberal media notion that Trump would put money over lives.”
Houck’s Acosta obsession continued even when he didn’t appear at the briefing. In a April 14 post, Houck sneered that Acosta is a “liberal hack” for pointing out Trump’s obvious distractions from criticism over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic and self-aggrandization about his performance that was so blatant that Acosta called him “Baghdad Bob”– which, of course, only served to incense Houck even more, actually claiming that he had “sided with communist China” by pointing out Trump’s distractions.
That’s the state of “media research” at the MRC these days — if you don’t hand out unquestioning praise of Trump, you’re a dirty commie.