» Foxy?

Did Rachel Maddow try to get a show on Fox News? [Jossip]

  2 Responses
» (Bad) Words…

"…Our buddy Dan Abrams…he's been replaced by Rachel Maddow, or will be, in early September. He's losing his show to somebody with more testosterone than he has." - Right wing radio host Rush Limbaugh - who recently called Barack Obama a "little black man-child" - on lesbian journalist Rachel Maddow's ascension at MSNBC. [Soup Cans]

  11 Responses


Liberal lesbian Rachel Maddow just went and scored herself her own MSNBC show, which was some time in the making. Officially, NBC says Rachel's debut on Sept. 8, or 09/08/08, is the "final leg of the political race this year."

Unofficially, though? On 09/08/08, a one Keith Olbermann will mark his nearly complete takeover of the network. Yes, Olbermann might as well hold Phil Griffin's title as MSNBC chief, since, according to knowledgeable sources and all outside appearances, he's making the calls.
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Keith Olbermann's among the many millions who are thrilled about sappho-journo Rachel Maddow's primetime MSNBC show. Watch as the news man welcomes his new colleague - after the jump…

It's precious.

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World Rejoices!


Hooray for MSNBC's Rachel Maddow!

The rock star lesbian journalist, whom we interviewed earlier this year, will soon be slipping into Dan Abrams' primetime:

The moves, which were confirmed by MSNBC executives Tuesday, are expected to be finalized by Wednesday, with Mr. Abrams’s last program on Thursday. After MSNBC’s extensive coverage of the two political conventions during the next two weeks, Ms. Maddow will begin her program on Sept. 8.

MSNBC has been known to be seeking a way to capitalize to a greater degree on Mr. Olbermann’s popularity. A program hosted by Ms. Maddow will almost certainly be a closer ideological fit with Mr. Olbermann’s.

[MSNBC president Phil] Griffin said of the selection of Ms. Maddow, “This just completes our prime-time lineup. Our lineup makes sense now.”

And it pleases us to no end! Maddow's our number one televised lesbian crush.

As for Abrams, don't worry about him - he's going back to his general manager gig.

» Moving Up?

New MSNBC president Phil Griffin definitely has big plans for sappho-journo Rachel Maddow: "At some point, I don’t know when, she should have a show. She’s on the short list. It’s a very short list. She’s at the top.” [NY Times via Soup Cans]

  26 Responses
» "Symposium."

The American Civil Liberties Union invited activists, pundits and media types - like Pam Spaulding, Rachel Maddow and John Aravosis - to write a few words on gay pride. And, for some reason, they asked our editor, who wrote a surprisingly earnest piece. Here's but a taste: "When I think of gay pride, I don’t think of gay people. Okay, well, that’s not true. I do think of gay people… But, more than all those communities, that proverbial melting pot, I see America: a nation built on the revolutionary idea that citizens should live as individuals, free of tyranny." [ACLU]

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rosenh.jpg
Hilary Rosen may very well be Wonder Woman.

The New Jersey-born activist acted as the Recording Industry Association of America's chairman for five years, acted lesbian social networking site Ourchart's president, served as Human Rights Campaign's interim executive director back in 2004 and currently serves as Huffington Post's political director, a gig she accepted earlier this year.

With all that experience under her belt, you can be sure Rosen, who previously endorsed Hillary Clinton's campaign, has scads to say about the current electoral climate, including the increasingly "blurred" lines between press and politics, her feelings on Clinton's departure, sexism in the press and how the lived experience shapes one's political views. And, thankfully, Rosen shared her thoughts - and many more - with our trusty editor.

Before getting into all of that, however, the duo start things off at the "beginning" of Rosen's queer career: her coming out. Read all about it, after the jump…

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» Distasteful.

Revolting journalist John Gibson, who previously made fun of the late Heath Ledger for playing gay, took a swipe at our favorite lesbian television/radio journo, Rachel Maddow. Immediately following a discussion about Maddow's Jeremiah Wright thoughts, Gibson played a clip which said, "Ooh, lesbians! Yummy!" That's right. Lesbians are yummy, you schmuck. [HuffPo]

  3 Responses
» Bickering.

MSNBC's transphobic Joe Scarborough reportedly walked off Race To The White House last night after having a heated debate with lesbian journalist and Queerty pal Rachel Maddow. It should be obvious who we're backing in this one… [HuffPo]

  8 Responses

pitneyn.jpg
Nico Pitney's more than a pretty face.

The Tokyo-born, California-bred 26 year old currently works as Huffington Post's National Editor, but traces his occupational origins to more activist endeavors at the Center for American Progress.

Editor Andrew recently sat down with Pitney to discuss the intersection of journalism and activism, the state of the conservative movement and how there's no such thing as objective reporting.

Read all about it, after the jump…

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Journalist Rachel Maddow knows a thing or two about the media. Not only does she have her own show on Air America, but the 34-year old political junkie also appears regularly on MSNBC. And, as you'll see in the video above, she's not a wallflower.

Our editor recently sat down with Maddow to talk about the Hillary Clinton New Hampshire scandal, why we need to talk about race and how she embarrassed herself in front of Keith Olbermann…

Andrew Belonsky: I want to start with the Chris Matthews/Hillary Clinton brouhaha. As you pointed out on MSNBC, Talking Points Memo was talking about how women voted for Hillary in New Hampshire because Chris Matthews and other male news personalities were picking on her. Do you think that's valid? Do you think that people really are swayed so easily?

Rachel Maddow: I don't. Certainly there's no statistical evidence to support that that's why people unexpectedly voted for Hillary Clinton, but there's not that much of an explanation for why Hillary Clinton defied the last two days of polling. She was ahead in New Hampshire all year - the last four days of polling for Obama were very strong, but she had been leading all year. If you actually look at the exit polls and the people who voted for her, it wasn't people who decided the last day or the last couple of days. The people who turned out and voted for Clinton had decided, like 50% or something, had decided more than a month ago that they were going to vote for her. What made the difference is that they turned out in huge numbers. Now, could we emotionally explain that turnout as being mad at the media? Maybe. That's what political analysis is: putting an emotional frame for which we don't have facts.

AB: Really? You think emotion is inherent in political analysis?

RM: I think that political analysis is taking observable facts and working them into a story that makes sense to people and sticks with people. Making things into a story requires understanding people's emotions- you not only play into people's emotions, but you incorporate them. That leads to how you tell the story. I said that on MSNBC, because I was feeling it. I mean, I'm not a Hillary Clinton fan, but the last few days of coverage of her - once those Obama polls were coming out, there was almost glee from the 95% male newscasters. Their palatable excitement about how she was going to lose was gross. That's the only thing that has ever made me feel sympathetic for Hillary. That clip that we all saw of her being emotional at that campaign appearance, I think it was a genuinely affecting moment for more than half the people that saw that tape, but yet more than half the time it was presented in the media, there was cynical, nasty, joy in her pain. There were white guy journalists being like, "Ha! Look at the bitch crying" or "She's obviously faking this just to dupe stupid women voters". The consistent mean in the media was infuriating. I felt it and I was seeing it everywhere in the blog world.

AB: I was talking to Mary Breslauer recently and we spoke about how the lines are breaking down between media and political personalities. They're almost becoming one and the same. The definition of a politician is not necessarily someone who is elected to office. Do you think that the media has gained too much power - particularly with regard to the elections - but in shaping the zeitgeist?

RM: Well, the media has always been tremendously powerful. In historical context, it isn't new that the media is shaping how we view people, but I think what's happening right now is that we have newsish entertainment. We have people who are political operatives who dress up like news anchors and talk about really important political stories with some authority that they have not earned through journalistic credentials. That's not to say that those folks shouldn't be on tv - that's not to say that I shouldn't be on tv - I think there's a love for punditry in political analysis, which is to take facts and make them understandable and help put a context and an emotional frame on what we're seeing, so more people are compelled by the politics of the moment. It's an important role and it's actually, I think, a civically honorable role.

AB: I'm not sure everyone would agree with you, but I certainly do.

RM: What happens sometimes - and I think you saw this with Chris Matthews - the media tends to bandwagon. The higher the ratio of analysis to - you know, seeing five hours of cable new coverage to every AP story with one fact is a totally normal day in political news - the higher the ratio of analysis, the more likely is that the people talking about that fact are going to get on some stupid bandwagon and they're all going to say the same thing and they're all going to make the same point. Because it's all white guys who are all beltway guys - the whole pundit corp is so homogenous - occasionally, especially when you're talking about minority candidates and female candidates, their band wagon story is wrong.

Or Pay Dearly...

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Out's February issue proves what we already knew: Richard Simmons is the queen of all queens.

• Lauren Williams hung out with Phylicia Rashad and the rest of the cast from the Debbie Allen Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and all we got was this incredible post!

Hummer inspired by NYC-based fag rag HX? Wouldn't be the first time…

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