Wikipedia
habitually delivers unflattering content about conservative media
figures while giving liberals a much lighter treatment. That's the
result of an informal survey of the site.
According to alexa.com,
Wikipedia, a free online encyclopedia project that can be edited by just
about anyone, is currently number 12 in worldwide traffic rankings on the
Web.
When one thinks of a conventional encyclopedia entry, one expects to
find rudimentary information: full name, birth date, birthplace, family,
education, and career highlights. Wikipedia takes it one step further -
especially with conservatives.
Unflattering personal episodes, embarrassing revelations, and factual
missteps are frequently a major staple in entries about conservative
figures; they are most often filed under the heading of "Controversy" or
"Criticism." Meanwhile, entries on liberal personalities rarely contain
such headings; unflattering episodes by liberals are often non-existent
or downplayed.
Take the entry on
Bill O'Reilly. Major space in the article is dedicated under the
heading "Sexual harassment lawsuits." Major space is devoted to
debatable comments that O'Reilly has made on the air over the years. An
anti-O'Reilly web site is promoted within the article. Readers can also click on
separate entries called
"Bill O'Reilly controversies" and
"Critics and rivals of Bill O'Reilly." And a fourth article
under the heading of
The O'Reilly Factor gives critics of the show a prominent
voice. (By the way, you'd think an article on The O'Reilly Factor
might want to mention the fact that the show has
had the largest audience in all of cable news for several years. This
fact is buried about a third of the way down in the article on Bill himself.)
The Andrea Mackris lawsuit is mentioned in three of the four
articles related to Bill O'Reilly. Finally, while the
entry on the liberal
Rosie O'Donnell devotes an entire section to her charitable causes,
no mention is made of the thousands of dollars that billoreilly.com has
raised for charity over the years. There's a lot more to this, but I
think you get the point.
Similarly, Wiki articles on
Rush Limbaugh,
Laura Ingraham,
and
Ann
Coulter devote plentiful space to past personal issues,
controversial remarks, and unflattering
episodes.
At this point, supporters of Wikipedia may shout, "But the content in
there is true! It's factual!" Yes - but this is not the point here. The point is that Wikipedia entries on
liberal personalities often avoid similar unflattering
portraits.
Take the entry on the liberal
Al
Franken. To be honest, I think this is what a decent encyclopedia
entry should look like. Anyone wishing to find a wealth of information
on the life of the Minnesota Senate candidate (-to-be) won't be
disappointed. However, when compared to conservative counterparts,
Franken's article is simply a puff promotional piece. Unflattering episodes are minimized. (A small paragraph
tells of Franken tackling a heckler at a 2004 Howard Dean fundraiser, but
the article puts a nice, gentle spin on it.) On the flip side, how about
any of the following? Franken
acknowledging cocaine use during his years in the offices of Saturday
Night Live. (See pp. 119-120 of Live From New York by Shales and Miller; See also, Playboy, Feb. 2006, p. 131)
... Franken yelling the f-word into a mic onstage at a 2004
Dean fundraiser. (link,
with video) ... Charges of plagiarism against Franken. (link)
... Franken's relationship to the Air America-Gloria Wise scandal. (link)
... Franken joking that war hero Sen. John McCain "sat out the war"
because he had been captured. (Playboy, Feb. 2006, p. 46; see
also
this interview) ...
Charges of racist and homophobic sketches written by Al at Saturday
Night Live. (See pp. 65-66 of Do As I Say by Peter Schweizer)
... Franken writing in his book that "Republican politicians are
shameless d!cks." (Page 58 of The Truth) ... The point is
that there are plenty of unflattering episodes that could be cited
when writing about Al Franken, but almost none are
mentioned. If the name were Limbaugh, Coulter,
Malkin, or Ingraham, you could safely bet that most of these
tidbits would find prominent space in the article.
This disparate treatment is par for the
course at Wikipedia. (Elizabeth
Vargas, anyone?) And it's what we call bias. (Yes - there are exceptions. The entry on
Michael Medved, for one, is a rare example of a
straightforward article about a conservative.) Some more simple
examples:
... The article on
George W. Bush spotlights criticism of his military service
during the Vietnam War. Meanwhile, the entry on
Bill Clinton merely states, "While at Oxford he also
participated in Vietnam War protests, including organizing an
October 1969 Moratorium event." There is no mention of the
various ways that Clinton allegedly maneuvered to avoid his military
service (such as those highlighted in
this article).
... The entries on
Air America Radio and liberal talker
Randi Rhodes make no mention of
a major defamation
lawsuit filed against both of them. (Now if this had been Sean Hannity
...?)
... The
ACLU
entry makes no mention of its defense of pedophile group NAMBLA in
relation to the gruesome murder of youngster Jeffrey Curley.
... An entry called
"Fox News Channel controversies" is quite lengthy and challenges
the network's conservative slant. So you'd probably think that the entry
on
"CNN controversies and allegations of bias" would
present several examples of its liberal slant, right? Sorry,
folks. Much of the article actually promotes
allegations of a conservative bias and suggests that the
network has taken "a lenient approach to the Bush administration."
Good ... freakin' ... grief ... Are you getting the picture?
(By the way, in less than a year-and-a-half, CNN is a topic
or a related topic in
over 450
articles at NewsBusters.)
I could go on and on ... But here is one final example to drive home the point: Compare the
articles about
Media Research Center (MRC, the operator of this site) and a liberal
group,
Media Matters (MMFA). Fully half of MRC's entry is devoted to
unflattering
"Controversy" and "Criticism"; no examples of the site's content
are provided. Meanwhile, there is nary a syllable of "criticism" or
"controversy" found in the body of Media Matters' entry. And unlike the entry for MRC, examples of MMFA's content are prominently displayed.
Bias? Of course. In the
"discussion" board at Wikipedia's Media Matters article, a user wrote,
"There is a definite slant to this article ... [T]here is no section
about criticisms of MMfA or of its website." When another user replied,
"So fix it," a third user named "Equinox" responded,
"Fix it? Are you
kidding? Attempting to 'fix' it would be dealt with very swiftly and
strictly by the libs here" (bold added). Unfortunately, Equinox is
completely right. My personal attempts on a number of occasions to add an honest balance to entries for MRC
and MMFA have been rapidly and unceremoniously scrubbed by Wiki
users. The articles were immediately reverted back to their biased
accounts.
My humble advice to Wikipedia: Scrap the bogus "Controversy" and
"Criticism" headings. They are waaay too susceptible to abuse,
vandalism, and bias. Unflattering personal episodes and anecdotes can be
linked at the bottom of entries under the "External links" heading. The
credibility and reliability of Wikipedia is dubious enough. Just stick
to the basics.
[IMPORTANT NOTE: Articles at Wikipedia can be changed in a matter of
seconds. The content of my article should be entirely correct as of the
days of my research, February 1 and 2, 2007.]