There are few things that the Media Research Center hates more than Hunter Biden daring to defend himself. When Hunter faced the possibility of a closed-door hearing with House Republicans — who have a penchant for dishonestly leaking excerpts of the testimony that don’t hold up when the full tranascript is later released — Alex Christy spent a Nov. 29 post complaining that Jimmy Kimmel made that point:
ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel expressed his concern with Hunter Biden possibly going before the House Oversight Committee on his Tuesday show claiming Republicans’ desire for a closed-door hearing will lead them to “make stuff up” because “they’ve seen no evidence that Joe Biden had anything to do” with Hunter’s business operations.
Kimmel actually began with a rare joke about Hunter himself, “Hunter Biden may be heading to Congress. He said—Hunter said he is willing to testify before the House Oversight Committee, but only if it is televised. He wants to do it in public, preferably nude, in a hot tub, smoking an unfiltered cigarette with a hooker.”
However, Kimmel quickly shifted to the substance of the matter and, like Hunter’s legal team, demanded a televised hearing, “but his legal team wants him to testify out in the open, but Republicans don’t want that. They don’t want it on TV. They’re like, ‘If we don’t do this behind closed doors, how are we supposed to make stuff up?’”
If the positions were reversed, Kimmel would probably accuse Republicans of wanting the hearing televised so they could get their 30 seconds of fame by confronting Hunter and putting the clip on the internet while fundraising off it.
As it is, Republicans are seeking to deny Democrats the opportunity to get their own 30 second clips that would end up on Jimmy Kimmel Live!
Christy was silent on the fact that Republican dishonesty on leaked testimony has been well documented.
The same day, Curtis Houck whined that non-right-wing media outlets aren’t obsessing over this as much as he is:
Tuesday saw a possible monumental twist in the Hunter Biden saga as Biden said he would be willing to comply with a House Oversight Committee subpoena and testify publicly (even though the committee currently wanted a private deposition) about his life of ruin, corruption, and allegations of malfeasance involving his father, the current President.
But like most Biden scandals, it barely received any attention on the flagship morning and evening news programs on ABC, CBS, and NBC, with only 31 seconds on Tuesday’s CBS Evening News.
Tim Graham spent a Dec. 2 post whining even more at the idea that Hunter defending himself could possibly be seen as a good thing:
On CNN’s The Chris Wallace Show on Saturday morning, they talked about Hunter Biden, but it was framed as Hunter making Republicans look dumb.
Wallace began: “Sometimes the best defense is a good offense. The president’s embattled son Hunter Biden taking on House Republicans this week, agreeing to testify in their impeachment inquiry, but only if it’s in public. House Republicans quick to reject the offer, calling for Hunter to testify first in private.”
After a soundbite of Rep. James Comer, Wallace then asked leftist podcaster Kara Swisher: “Kara, did Hunter Biden outsmart House Republicans, saying sure I’ll testify — in public?” The screen also asked ‘DID HUNTER BIDEN OUTSMART HOUSE REPUBLICANS?’
Swisher agreed: “Yes, I thought it was brilliant actually, because he’s a somewhat appealing character. People will get to see him for the first time rather than the cartoon and now they have to say ‘no we don’t want to see you,’ and after all this time, we have to see Hunter Biden.”
That’s a weird flex, because Hunter Biden did a weird round of interviews when his addiction memoir Beautiful Things came out in 2021.
Graham didn’t give CNN credit for having conservatives on the panel, though he eagerly quoted those conservatives portraying Hunter defending himself as a “stunt.”
After Hunter faced new tax-related charges, Christy came back in a Dec. 8 post to complain that someone pointed out the charges disprove right-wing claims that the Department of Justice has bee “weaponized”:
New York Times correspondent and author Michael Bender joined Friday’sCNN This Morning to react to Hunter Biden’s latest indictment on tax evasion where he proceeded to memory holed the IRS whistleblowers who alleged he received preferential treatment in order to proclaim that in “a normal world” these latest charges would debunk the idea that the Justice Department has been weaponized.
Host Poppy Harlow began with more of a statement or observation than a question, “Michael, this is a complete collision course between, you know, the political system and the legal system. What’s fascinating is for both the president’s son and for the former president, all at the same time.”
Bender concurred, but on the political ramifications, he accused Republicans of living in some sort of fantasy land, “normally the American people are less likely to penalize a candidate for his family’s charges, and you would think, in, maybe, a normal world, all these charges against Hunter Biden might take some steam out of the Republican argument that Joe Biden has weaponized the Justice Department against his — against his political enemies but, you know, the keyword there, in a normal time.”
Christy didn’t explain how these charges don’t disprove the right-wing “weaponization” narrative.
Graham returned to serve up his own complaint in a Dec. 8 post that the charges were being questioned:
While ABC, CBS, and NBC dryly and seriously addressed the new Hunter Biden indictment on tax charges in California, MSNBC’s Morning Joe didn’t discuss the new Hunter indictment until a half-hour had elapsed, and then they implied this shouldn’t have happened.
Co-host Willie Geist walked legal analyst Lisa Rubin through all the reasons not to prosecute. Hunter repaid the tax debt, “maybe not by him specifically, but they were repaid.” And not in a timely manner, Rubin added, but “Hunter’s tax liability has been cleared.”
Rubin then explained that back when Hunter’s plea deal collapsed, she told the MSNBC anchor that other people would have never been prosecuted for this, so the fact that these charges are added “shows me that there is a two-tiered system of justice, it just doesn’t go the way Donald Trump thinks it does.”
[…]They’re so energetically doing Democrat Talk that they can’t acknowledge that all of Hunter’s millions came from selling access to his father. Joe Biden obviously knew his son was selling access. He cooperated with it, and met with his clients. next? [Jonathan] Lemire then made a speech that this indictment is “not a coincidence.” (Like Biden’s Justice Department is working with Republicans?)
Graham didn’t explain that it’s entire possible there could bepartisan DOJ holdovers from the Trump years who would act against Hunter the way he accuses DOJ operatives of acting against Trump.
Houck served up a Dec. 8 coverage time-count post (that oddly excluded Fox News), adding: “While the liberal media seem increasingly comfortable with throwing Hunter overboard, they’ve made sure to continue sheltering his father, President Joe Biden.”
Nicholas Fondacaro grumbled in his own Dec. 8 post:
First son Hunter Biden got an early Christmas gift from Special Council David Weiss in the form of a brand new federal indictment on felony tax charges. That didn’t sit well with MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell, who opened her eponymous show on Friday by lamenting that Weiss “quoted gritty details from Hunter’s own memoir to build his case,” how it was bad “optics” for White House, and that it could hurt President Biden’s 2024 chances.
Christy huffed in a Dec. 9 post: “With Hunter Biden being charged with multiple tax-related felonies, the cast of Friday’s PBS NewsHour wanted to emphasize what it considered the main takeaway “the indictment does not in any way implicate President Joe Biden.” He then ranted about “all the evidence that Joe was involved in those ill-gotten gains that he said doesn’t exist,” though the MRC post he offered as proof failed to demonstrate that any of it was creidible evidence.
A Dec. 10 post by Jorge Bonilla complained that an ABC panel discussion “threatened to veer into ‘a father’s undying love’ territory, but it only took former DOJ spokesperson Sarah Isgur 39 seconds to bring the discussion back into focus.” He censored the fact that Isgur is a conservative activist who was a DOJ spokesperson in the Trump administration. Bonilla also groused that the panel discussion didn’t get into “the firing of Victor Shokin,” but failed to disclose that Shokin (a prosecutor in Ukraine) was fired because he wasn’t doing his job of prosecuting corruption, not because he was.