Many know by now that Democratic Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa of Los
Angeles has admitted to a lengthy affair with a television reporter. So,
what do you call
an extremely thoughtful, well-written commentary that suggests that
the mayor uphold his wedding vows, immediately end his affair, repent
for his actions, and work to restore the relationships between his wife
and his children? If you're the helpless
Tim Rutten at the Los
Angeles Times, you call it a "hysterical screed."
In
his latest column, Rutten refers to
"The Cheat and The Homewrecker" by LA Daily News editor Chris
Weinkopf. Writes Rutten (bold mine):
The news of Villaraigosa's marital difficulties was broken by a
blogger, Luke Ford, then fleshed out by the Daily News, which
immediately posted the story on its website. The paper's editorial
page editor set the tone for much of the subsequent commentary by
immediately putting up a hysterical screed that, believe it
or not, included terms you probably haven't seen since the last time
you read "Elmer Gantry," words like "homewrecker" and "repent."
"Hysterical screed"? Oh, really? Rutten may want to look back at his own
paper to
Robert Scheer's nasty column from August 17, 1999. In the column,
Scheer brutally attacked former Speaker Newt Gingrich for his two
divorces. Spewed Scheer, "Now it's his turn to be judged bad fruit."
Scheer then concluded his column by tagging Gingrich as a "serial
home-wrecker."
Look, Tim! Scheer used the same word as Weinkopf! But, wait.
Gingrich is a Republican. Villaraigosa is a Democrat. Did you publicly
report anything "hysterical" with Scheer's column back then? I didn't
think so.
Yet another double standard at the LA Times.
(P.S.- Rutten did get one thing right: The Villaraigosa story was
largely driven by blogger
Luke
Ford. Ford broke the news of Villaraigosa's marriage
back in
January. Hey, Tim. Where was the LA Times?)