Munch, Gee, Felton & Bolander Homicide: Life on the Street
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Munch, Gee, Felton & Bolander Homicide: Life on the Street
Merry Christmas, everyone!
Wholesome content!
The Homicide detectives having fun in the snow!
Homicide: Life on the Street
Season 3, Episode 8 - December 16, 1994
All Through the House
Daniel Baldwin
Director - John Carpenter, Cinematography - Gary B. Kibbe
"A master vampire, able to walk in the sunlight, unstoppable. Unless we stop him."
John Carpenter's Vampires (1998)
"You know, if I had a nickel for every time some piece of sh*t pointed a gun at me I'd be a rich man."
Harley Davidson and The Marlboro Man (1991) directed by Simon Wincer
Pete Tsipis and Reed McMaster at MMFA:
A Media Matters review of White House press briefings held so far in President Donald Trump’s second administration found that White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called on right-wing media outlets 41% of the time, and 4 of the 5 reporters called on most were from right-wing outlets. The press briefings now include a “new media” seat which the White House has used to amplify more right-wing voices. While the White House attacks traditional press freedoms, the press briefings are now littered with biased questions from the administration's most staunch supporters.
Data: Trump's White House elevated conservative media, while snubbing legacy outlets like The New York Times, AP, and public media
Media Matters found that during the 16 press briefings held from January 20 to April 22, the White House called on right-wing outlets 41% of the time (110 out of 267). Leavitt gave the remaining opportunities to ask questions to non-ideological (52%, or 139 times) and foreign (7%, or 18 times) outlets. Reporters at right-wing outlets also made up 4 out of 5 of the reporters called on most. While CBS News' Jennifer Jacobs was called on the most, with 10 occasions, all the other reporters in the top 5 were from conservative outlets. The Daily Caller's Reagan Reese was called on 9 times, while Fox News’ Peter Doocy, The Daily Wire’s Mary Margaret Olohan, and the New York Post’s Diana Glebova were each given 8 chances to ask questions.
The conservative media outlets White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called on most were Fox News (15), the New York Post (12), The Daily Caller (10), The Daily Wire (8), and Newsmax (7). Among nonideological media, Leavitt called on CBS News (19), CNN (14) , ABC News (13) , NBC News (11), and Bloomberg (9) most.
The White House elevated smaller, far-right media over many established outlets, calling on One America News (5 times) and The Gateway Pundit (5) more than The Washington Post (4) and The Associated Press (3). As the Trump administration works to cut federal funding from public broadcasters PBS and NPR, Leavitt has boxed them out, having called on a journalist from each network only 1 time.
[...]
The Trump administration has elevated right-wing voices while cutting traditional press freedoms
The administration has moved to limit the press access of outlets Trump disagrees with while amplifying right-wing outlets. It barred entry to The Associated Press when the news wire refused to call the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America,” relenting only after a court order — and only partially. It established a “new media” seat in the press briefing room, whose occupant gets to ask the first question at briefings; it has been populated by both new media ventures and established right-wing media, including Breitbart and The Daily Wire. The White House has also wrested control of the press pool — the reporters assigned to follow Trump and share information with other outlets — away from the White House Correspondents' Association and used that control to cut out newswires, another blow to the AP. This eliminates direct access for hundreds of outlets, including local news, that rely on newswires. And now the Trump administration is threatening to change the seating chart in the briefing room, which currently gives the front two rows to major broadcast networks and papers, including CBS, NBC, ABC, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal.
Press briefings under the 2nd Trump Administration, led by Karoline Leavitt, favored right-wing outlets and commentators in being picked to ask questions.
The Skarsgard's are the Baldwin’s of today. They both even have one that’s not related.