Every weekend, the cable
channel C-SPAN2 becomes "Book TV," a forum for authors to talk about
their latest works.
Let's take a look at some
of the events from the schedule this past
weekend, July 31, - August 1, 2004.
Sen. Robert Byrd,
the ex-Klansman and current Democratic dinosaur in the Senate, talked
about his book, Losing America: Confronting a Reckless and Arrogant
Presidency. (He's talking about the Bush Presidency.) At the event,
Byrd was lauded in a glowing introduction by Hillary Clinton.
(This program aired three times over the weekend.)
Bill Moyers,
an outspoken critic of the Bush administration, was plugging his book,
Moyers on America.
Tom Hayden,
the liberal activist from the infamous "Chicago Seven," spoke of his new book, Street Wars.
Gary Hart, a
Democrat who ran for President in 1988, talked about his new political
tome, The Fourth Power.
Toni Morrison,
Joe Conason, Sidney Blumenthal, Al
Franken, and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., all
prominent liberals, teamed up for a one-hour Bush-bash at an event
that was supposedly entitled, "Books, Politics, and The Culture War."
(This program aired three times.)
Hmmm ... That's a
lot of prominent liberal voices for one weekend!
How about the
conservatives?
William F. Buckley,
Jr., founder of National Review, plugged his new one,
Miles Gone By: A Literary Biography. (This program aired twice last
weekend but only once this weekend.)
Rough Edges: My
Unlikely Road From Welfare to Washington is an autobiography by a
former Bush official, James Rogan, but this program
is barely 30 minutes and not very political.
James Taranto,
editor of OpinionJournal.com, is a conservative, but his latest work,
Presidential Leadership, is a collection of nearly 50 essays from
liberal and conservative scholars. The writers rank "the best and
worst" Presidents from our nation's history. (George Washington is #1.)
(The program ran once this weekend.)
FINAL
SCORE:
Liberals, 9
airings ...
Conservatives, 3
airings.
By the way, the past
weekend also marked Al Franken appearing on his third
Book TV program in the last eight-and-a-half months (and his
fourth in the last fourteen months). Ugh.
TheMediaReport.com asks ... Is Book TV
adding itself to the pile of media outlets on the Kerry campaign?