We’ve documented how for years, the Media Research Center has been the willing — and, apparently, secretly paid — servant of Phelim McAleer and his wife Ann McElhinney to promote the crowdfunding for, and making of, their film about rogue abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell that’s designed to advance a right-wing anti-abortion agenda. The movie is finally set for release on Oct. 12, and the MRC has been ramping up the publicity for it — again, it seems, as McAleer’s direction.
When conservative Daily Beast columnist Matt Lewis received “leaked” emails from “Gosnell” executive producer John Sullivan of his negotiations with National Public Radio over wording in proposed advertising sponsorships in promoting the movie — read: Sullivan eagerly gave him the emails — both the MRC and its “news” division CNSNews.com eagerly regurgitated the tiny controversy. Never mind that the emails themselves were the point of Sullivan’s stunt; it’s unlikely that Sullivan ever intended to actually advertise on NPR, and he likely intended to create this email chain for the express purpose of “leaking” it to a friendly outlet who would used them to 1) promote the film and 2) portray the media as biased against his little film.
When actor Dean Cain, who stars in the film, was doing publicity for it, that got rapt MRC coverage as well. A Sept. 24 MRC item by Brad Wilmouth dutifully transcribed Cain’s recounting of “the challenges he faced in producing and advertising the film” as well as how he “called out the double standard employed by liberals on issues of sexual assault.” Wilmouth even regurgitated the McAleer-Sullivan PR line about how “We couldn’t even buy ad time on NPR because we called him an ‘abortion doctor.'”
The next day, Katie Yoder — the MRC’s most enthusiastic PR agent for McAleer — spun for Cain and his film once more:
Actor Dean Cain calls himself “pro-choice,” but that didn’t stop him starring in an upcoming film revealing the horror story of Philadelphia abortionist Kermit Gosnell.
Cain stars as Detective James “Woody” Wood in Gosnell: The Trial of America’s Biggest Serial Killer, which opens in as many as 750 theaters October 12. MRC Culture interviewed Cain Sept. 21 at Family Research Council’s 2018 Values Voter Summit. He called Gosnell’s crimes “absolutely ghastly” and guessed that the media’s silence surrounding Gosnell was because “abortion’s a bad word.”
Yoder even credulously promoted Cain’s blatantly false insistence that “We’re not taking sides in this film” or “trying to preach to anybody” but just “telling the story.”
We know that’s false because of McAleer’s history as a right-wing polemicist (he previously made a film that engaged in the right-wing practice of bashing the idea of global warming) and by the simple fact of the MRC’s heavy promotion of the film. If McAleer was, in fact, not taking sides, would the MRC be working so hard to promote his film?
And don’t forget that McAleer was sued for defamation a judge involved in the Gosnell trial after McAleer portrayed him in his related book on the case as part of “Philadelphia’s liberal corrupt government.” The MRC ever-so-briefly noted the existence of the lawsuit and that it was settled out of court, paving the way for release of the film, but Yoder and crew expressed no curiosity whatsoever about the terms of the settlement. Of course, that’s negative news that would eat into the precious PR space. that McAleer is apparently paying the MRC to engage in.
CNS also did an interview with Cain in which he advanced the same bogus claim that “we don’t preach in the film.” It also published a column by Michelle Malkin hyperbolically declaring the film “the most important movie in America right now.”
Even the MRC’s video-centric site MRCTV got into the promotional with an interview Nick Kangadis did with McAleer. Kangadis gushed over the film:
The actors in the film do an excellent job of bringing the script to life, as the viewer also learns so much about the case that they most likely didn’t know beforehand.
‘Gosnell’ should be a major eye-opener for anyone that watches it, whether the viewer is pro-life or pro-choice. It’s a very well-done film that grabs a hold of you in the first 10 minutes and doesn’t let go.
As with Yoder, it’s almost as if he was being paid to say that.