The Associated Press issued
a somewhat peculiar story this afternoon. The story? Rush
Limbaugh made an error. Yup. Rush apparently mistook the fact that
Rep.
Sherrod Brown (D-OH) is a white man and not black, as he had
announced on the air. According to the story, Limbaugh received e-mails
from listeners correcting him. "Uh, Sherrod Brown's a white guy? Then
I'm confusing him with somebody. OK, I'm sorry," Limbaugh is quoted as
saying.
And ... this ... is ... news? I'm ... confused. That the
Associated Press would find this episode newsworthy is almost weird.
Many posters at
Free Republic are equally bewildered. "Must be a slow news day for
the AP?"
wondered one.
My favorite: "The AP finds the speck in Rush's eye but ignores the
log in theirs."
I haven't researched this; but did the AP ever issue stories about:
These errors from Michael Moore? (also
here and
here)
These distortions from the New York Times? (see also
TimesWatch.org)
These errors
of Al Franken? (also
here)
These errors of
ABC News?
This error from the
Los Angeles Times?
This doozie from the
New York Daily News?
Just wondering ...
Oh, yeah. The story is only around 200 words long (which is almost
puny), but the AP could not resist ending the piece without a totally
irrelevant, gratuitous cheap shot:
"In 2003, Limbaugh was pushed off ESPN's NFL preview show after
he said quarterback Donovan McNabb was overrated because the media
wanted to see a black quarterback succeed."
C'mon. Was that really necessary?