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Cenk Uygur

Cenk Uygur

Posted: March 9, 2010 04:36 PM

We had Jesse Ventura on the show yesterday to talk about his new book, American Conspiracies. He had a lot of interesting theories, such as the possibility that John Lennon was killed by the CIA (to be fair that was by far his most speculative one, watch the whole interview here).

I'm not sure I believe all of those theories, but there is some underlying truth in many of them, especially in how corporate interests have worked with the US government and military to further their financial interests throughout our history.

When it came to the topic of the media though, Gov. Ventura had an inside look on a conspiracy that was out in the open - MSNBC's effort to shut down all voices against the Iraq War. The way they took Phil Donahue and Ashleigh Banfield off the air because of their views on the Iraq War is well documented. Now, Ventura explains his experience with MSNBC at the time:


Ventura: Well, the great example is myself. When I came out of office, I was the hottest commodity out there. I was the voice of the independent. CNN, MSNBC, and Fox got in a bidding war for me. MSNBC won. I went to do my show, they were putting together a five-day-a-week show for me, and then all of a sudden, a phone call came to one of my subordinates, and they said, "Is it true that the Governor doesn't support the war in Iraq?" This was right before, as the Iraq war was going on, getting ready to hype up. And they said no. There was a deafening pause at the other end. They said, "Does New Jersey know about this?" And the person said, "I don't know." And then they said, "Is there a chance he'd change his mind?" And this person that worked with me four years at the Capitol, he said, "I don't think so." Because he said, the Governor's pretty staunch when he gets, you know, you'd really have to sway him. And the war ain't gonna sway him. Well, it turned out they wouldn't put me on the air. They paid me for all three years, they pulled my show, and I sat and collected paychecks and I couldn't say anything because my contract said I couldn't do any cable nor any news shows for three years. Yeah.


Uygur: That's really interesting because that's exactly what they did to Ashleigh Banfield. When she made the speech against the Iraq War, they literally put her in a closet and paid the rest of her contract so she couldn't talk to anyone else.

Ventura: Yep. And they did it also, if you recall, to Phil Donahue.

Uygur: That's right.

Ventura: They had just hired Phil. Phil was their highest-rated show when they pulled him. Have you ever heard of a network pulling its highest-rated show? Never. And remember, this was at the time that MSNBC was trying to be Fox Lite. They weren't liberal like they are now.

Uygur: Right. So, you know, I remember they put out a story at the time saying that you wanted to do the show from Mexico and that that's why they didn't want to do it.

Ventura: That's a complete lie. All I did was I said the show, I wanted to do the show from Minneapolis because... And my reasoning was this. Not only was it my home and I didn't want to relocate, and I had the power to do it, but second, I told them, look, all these shows take place on the East Coast and the West Coast. Why not get a Midwestern perspective for a change?

Uygur: So, but then what happened there? Because you know, MSNBC...

Ventura: They wouldn't put me on because of my opposition to the Iraq War.

Uygur: I hear you, but so then MSNBC, you think, is not putting you on, and not putting all those people on because they're against the Iraq War, but now their primetime, at least, not their morning but their primetime is progressive. So what do you think changed?

Ventura: Ratings. They finally realized they were never going to beat Fox, so then they made... Well, if you saw, when Keith Olbermann first came on, he was conservative. Then all of a sudden he made an about face 180 degrees and became a liberal.

Uygur: I'm sure he would contest that.

Ventura: Well, he might contest it, but at the moment he was hired, they were still a conservative station.

Get the full interview and transcript here.

The fact that MSNBC did this is fairly indisputable. The question is why? This is the same MSNBC that conservatives now claim is completely liberal (apparently a three hour block of conservative programming in the morning doesn't count). Of course, there was a management change so that made a huge difference. But why did MSNBC care so much about shutting down opposition to the war back then? Have those executives at the time been held accountable enough? Have they ever explained whether they got direction from further up the management ladder at GE?

If there was real, independent media in this country, wouldn't they be asking those questions? Maybe part of the problem is that everyone else in television did the same thing. Is Fox News going to complain about the media shutting down opposition to the Iraq War? Does CNN have clean hands? What did they do to voice dissenting opinions at the time? How about ABC? NBC? CBS? Any of them?

Ironically, MSNBC now employs the only people that might ask such questions on television. So, there goes that. Finally, isn't that an amazing fact in and of itself? That MSNBC now has the only hosts in all of television that could challenge the media to not blindly support more wars? What happened to fair and balanced? Where is this so-called liberal media? All I see is a wall of conservative media organizations that helped to push us into wars before -- and will do it again.

Young Turks on You Tube

 

Follow Cenk Uygur on Twitter: www.twitter.com/TheYoungTurks

 
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SamEllison
I feel so clean!
11:24 PM on 03/10/2010
I remember listening to Randi Rhodes one day telling us
about how Keith was gnawing on a bone and asked us to
email MSNBC, the rest as they say is history.
But before that, forget it. Remember Scooter Libby called Russert about Matthews.
Cheney had his people working the networks and the newspapers keeping the
truth away from the people. NYTimes sat on stories for years and the WaPo was
going in with Rummy on the victory celebratio­n in DC.
MSM was bullied but ratings won out, ah capitalism the great savior.
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knosiswar
Major General Smedley Butler - get to know him
10:19 AM on 03/10/2010
Will Keith venture an explanatio­n for Ashleigh Banfield's departure.

Chris Matthews was a pro-war Hawk during those first years
03:48 AM on 03/10/2010
Keith Olbermann says nuh uh:

http://www­.dailykos.­com/storyo­nly/2010/3­/9/844642/­-Ventura-L­ow-Way
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DScaletta5
12:59 PM on 03/10/2010
Mrpopo...F­ANNED! Thank you so much for the link. It really helped fill in a lot of unanswered questions and various other holes in the story-line­. The Daily Kos piece should be in a direct link to this story. I wonder if Cenk anyone at HuffPo will take the time to read it and agree. Nice work!
12:40 AM on 03/11/2010
ThankYou Awesome link. I had no idea he had an online diary. David Shuster take note this is how it should be done. I have missed him on TV the past week or so. I understand the situation he is in though I would prefer Lawrence ODonnell more as a guest than a host (maybe he shoulda worked with Ventura!) uhhh that and what DScaletta5 said.
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genmanager
11:31 PM on 03/09/2010
With respect this is old news, years old. I mean, really.
09:54 PM on 03/09/2010
At the time, I searched the media far and wide, looking for ANY voice of dissent. Now at least I found out what happened to them.
08:46 PM on 03/09/2010
Jesse Ventura is at least daring to ask the questions.
Excellent interview.
06:53 PM on 03/09/2010
This interview took guts, Cenk. You have my respect. Good work!
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kurd55
06:45 PM on 03/09/2010
Heh, heh. What a joke our main stream media is. The most cowardly, fearful bunch of rich out-of-tou­ch creampuff news readers ever! And they own the airwaves that are supposed to be public. LOL!

I'd say it time to flush and plunge.
06:16 PM on 03/09/2010
They shut them out "back then" because that was when we were establishi­ng the occupation­. Now it doesn't matter, because we're leaving (or so they say). If you wanna see how the media treat Iraq as an issue in general, just watch Jon Stewart's bit on it from last night.
05:59 PM on 03/09/2010
How can you forget Jon Stewart and the Daily Show?
05:41 PM on 03/09/2010
Hypocrites­.
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steamboat
05:00 PM on 03/09/2010
The reason is very simple. Barack Obama is now President. When you criticized Bush, MSNBC had no problem with it. But now if you criticize the war being conducted by this administra­tion, you will be silenced by MSNBC.

DOUBLE STANDARD: Look, Sean Penn is loved by MSNBC. The other night he said to Bill Maher, "anybody from the media who calls Chavez a dictator should be put in jail." Think about that: Had a moderate or rightwinge­r said that, this same MSNBC would be calling the person a bully who wants to deny people their 1st amendment rights. But Penn said it, so MSNBC and others don't say a word.
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Angie Tyne 1
I want my disagree button!!
06:19 PM on 03/09/2010
This happened around '03 when Bush was in office. Long before Obama was a twinkle in the voters eye.