The Media Research Center’s Nicholas Fondacaro began a June 9 post with a relatively nuanced — by MRC standards — take on the media: “The liberal media are certainly not ‘the enemy of the people’, as President Trump often suggests, but they do operate as though they’re part of an opposition party in how viciously they cover him.”
But then Fondacaro’s Acosta Derangement Syndrome kicked in, and his post into yet another hatefest. He ranted that “showboater” Jim Acosta conducted a “vomit-inducing interview” with CNN’s Brian Stelter to promote his new book, “Enemy of the People.” He deliberately misinterpreted Acosta’s statement that he wished his media colleagues challenged Trump’s “enemy of the people” slur — something even Fondacaro admits is a slur — by claiming that Acosta had really “said he regretted how the media wasn’t more hostile against the President.” Fondacaro then sneered: “At no point did Acosta say he regretted being a showboater and grandstander in the White House briefing room (or elsewhere).”
Then, again ignoring what he wrote in the very first sentence of his post, Fondacaro declared the title of Acosta’s book to be “silliness” and huffed that “Acosta fell back onto the disgusting assertion that Trump had created an environment that could get journalists killed” — even though he quoted Acosta saying that he gets death threats and pointing out that someone mailed a pipe bomb to CNN headquarters.
We’ve documented how the MRC is shockingly callous about the safety of journalists who aren’t kneejerk Trump shills, attacking them as self-centered to be so concerned.
If an MRC writer can’t even last one sentence before descending into hate and childish insults, what good is it as a purveyor of “media research”?