lying in ponds
The absurdity of partisanship
Home | About | Philosophy | Methods | Contact | FAQ | 2002 | 2003

Comments, Boxscores

Monday 10 January 2005

Boxscore

PARTISAN PUNDITRY 2004: If the final partisanship rankings for this year look familiar, it's not your imagination. Demonstrating extreme partisanship this year were Ann Coulter (82), Paul Krugman (77), Robert Scheer (71) and Molly Ivins (67); last year we had Coulter (81), Krugman (76), Scheer (73) and Ivins (73). Linda Chavez, Mona Charen and Cal Thomas were also repeat performers in the Top Ten. Democratic pundits took four of the first five positions, not surprising given their unlimited opportunities for criticism in a Republican-dominated government.

Despite that, Ann Coulter easily won her second consecutive partisanship title, mostly because of her relentlessly one-sided criticism of the Democratic Party. Her ratio of 70 negative references to Democrats for every positive reference (1058 to 15) is unprecedented in the three years of Lying in Ponds statistics. Ms. Coulter was simultaneously the most positive pundit toward George W. Bush and the most negative toward John Kerry. In addition to extreme partisanship, Ms. Coulter stands out because of her array of nasty personal attacks -- she referred to various Democratic presidential candidates as a "pacifist scaredy-cat", "crazier than a March hare", a "two-faced weasel", a "coward", a "cad and a gigolo", a "low-born poseur", a "poodle to rich women", and "boobs". In addition to partisanship and incivility, Ms. Coulter is a master of deceptive and irrational rhetoric.

Paul Krugman completed another year as a New York Times columnist, making it five full years of punditry without once finding a reason to write a column consisting mostly of substantive criticsm of any Democrat on any topic or substantive praise of any Republican on any topic. Although Mr. Krugman's utterly predictable criticism of Republicans is unsurpassed, his high ranking also depends on a careful protection of Democrats. He expressed a strong preference for Howard Dean and Wesley Clark, but once John Kerry took the lead in the race for the Democratic nomination, Mr. Krugman turned on a dime and was more favorable toward Mr. Kerry than any of our 33 pundits. He has carefully avoided any mention of Democratic scandals, adding disgraced former New Jersey governor Jim McGreevey to a long list of names which must not be mentioned -- Marc Rich, Al Sharpton, Robert Torricelli, etc. Back in March, I wrote a five part series exploring various aspects of Paul Krugman's amazing record of extreme partisanship.

Robert Scheer, Molly Ivins and Joe Conason are each drearily reliable Democratic partisans. Mr. Scheer has a lengthy record of deception, but is less generous with praise for Democrats than the others and wrote a relatively nuanced assessment of Ronald Reagan. Ms. Ivins dresses up her partisan rhetoric with colorful language; she uses "damn" and "hell" more than any other columnist. Mr. Conason was new to Lying in Ponds this year; he stands out for his almost Krugmanian level of reverence for Democrats.

Linda Chavez and Charles Krauthammer were drearily reliable Republican partisans this year, although they were less partisan last year. Ms. Chavez was the second most positive toward George W. Bush, trailing only Ann Coulter. Mr. Krauthammer has been busy building a record of manipulating quotes and questioning the sanity of his political opponents.

[permanent link]


Sunday 9 January 2005

Boxscore

[permanent link]

Saturday 8 January 2005

Boxscore

[permanent link]

Friday 7 January 2005

Boxscore

NEXT WEEK: I had hoped to post the year-end review this week, but various things got in the way. I promise that the third annual review of partisan punditry will appear next week.

MORE MBA LINKS: I've added links to the complete current list of Media Bloggers Association members to the blogroll. Check 'em out.

[permanent link]


Thursday 6 January 2005

Boxscore

DECIPHERING THE IVINS FORMULA: My wife and daughter and I enjoyed watching the excellent PBS program Do You Speak American? last night. In a segment on Texas, Robert MacNeil introduced our own Molly Ivins this way:
Though Texans are far from formal, this is the only place in my travels where I have to wear a jacket and tie. I'm here to meet an old friend -- that redoubtable writer, columnist, commentator and scourge of all politicians -- particularly male ones -- Molly Ivins. Because no one talks better about Texas language than Molly.

Of course that made me straighten right up in my plastic $5 Wal-Mart chair, because the analysis of the last two years of Molly Ivins columns leaves absolutely no doubt that she is not a scourge of all politicians, nor of male politicians. She was the fifth most postive columnist toward John Kerry in 2004, and the 3rd most negative toward George W. Bush. I don't see a single negative reference in 2004 to a Democratic woman, but there are positive references to Ann Richards, Hillary Clinton, Teresa Kerry and Dianne Feinstein. There has not been a single positive reference to a Republican woman, but there are negative references to Wendy Gramm, Condoleezza Rice, Elaine Chao, and Phyllis Schafly. As the fourth most partisan pundit in the rankings, Ms. Ivins' writing actually follows a very simple pattern -- Republican politicians are bad and Democratic politicians are good.

[permanent link]


Wednesday 5 January 2005

Boxscore

[permanent link]

Tuesday 4 January 2005

Boxscore

MEDIA BLOGGERS ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES TSUNAMI VIDEO HOSTING INITIATIVE: Here's an important effort from the MBA:

The Media Bloggers Association, in partnership with Zubr Communications, launched today the Tsunami Video Hosting Initiative, a public service offered in response to concerns over bandwidth issues facing bloggers doing a tremendous public service by providing video of the tsunami to the world.

The Tsunami Video Hosting Initiative is a "distributed content-broker" system that matches web hosts willing to donate server space and bandwidth with bloggers and other Tsunami video sources looking to defray their cost of hosting Tsunami video. ZubrCom has led the way by donating its services in development of the Content-Broker system as well as server space and transfer capacity.

"When the word went out that bloggers needed help dealing with the high cost of bandwidth from hosting Tsunami video," said Robert Cox of the Media Bloggers Association, "the MBA saw an opportunity to fulfill its mission by supporting citizen's media and hyperlocal news reporting by bloggers. Rather than leave it to bloggers to beg for cost reductions from their ISPs, the MBA is matching willing ISPs with willing bloggers and other video sources."

Web Hosts can donate specified amounts of storage and bandwidth. All donors will receive a mention on the Tsunami Video Hosting Initiative home page.

Check out the Tsunami Video Hosting Initiative home page.

[permanent link]


Monday 3 January 2005

Boxscore

[permanent link]

Sunday 2 January 2005

Boxscore

[permanent link]

Saturday 1 January 2005

Boxscore

[permanent link]

Friday 31 December 2004

Boxscore

STAY TUNED: In past years I've posted a partisan punditry review on New Year's Day, but I'll be a little late this time. We'll be loading up the minivan in the morning and driving to Alexandria, VA to visit my nephew and his wife for the weekend. So I'll close out the 2004 numbers and summarize the results by Monday or Tuesday.

[permanent link]

Thursday 30 December 2004

Boxscore

WASHINGTONIAN ON MALLABY AND COHEN: Harry Jaffe, writing for the Washington Buzz column at Washingtonian Magazine, picks favorite and least favorite Washington Post columnists (link via Romenesko). Mr. Jaffe says that Sebastian Mallaby is the "Sharpest Eye Abroad", but he rips Richard Cohen as the "Most Trapped in his Head".

[permanent link]

Wednesday 29 December 2004

Boxscore

NYT VS. WP VS. WSJ: So after an entire year of evaluating The New York Times Lead Editorial, The Washington Post Lead Editorial and the WSJ OpinionJournal On the Editorial Page feature (over 1000 total columns), what have we learned? In the partisanship rankings, the NYT's Democratic score and the WSJ OJ's Republican score were almost exactly equal, while the WP leaned only slightly Democratic, resulting in a partisanship score way down the list in David Broder territory. Both the NYT and WSJ OJ fit the profile of columnists like Cal Thomas or E.J. Dionne, who are sharply ideological but not excessively partisan, willing to write crossover columns with some frequency. The NYT sometimes writes editorials like this morning's, praising Republicans on immigration reform, while the WSJ was willing to turn over their editorial space to a sharp critic of the Swift Boat Veterans in the heat of a presidential campaign.

Does the similarity of the NYT and WSJ OJ scores contradict Michael Tomasky's finding that The Wall Street Journal's editorials were more partisan than those written by The New York Times? No, for two important reasons. First, Mr. Tomasky was careful to compare editorials written during both Democratic and Republican presidencies, but the 2004 editorials I've evaluated tell only part of the story. Second, the WSJ OpinionJournal is not the same as the WSJ -- I really don't know whether the editorials selected each day by the WSJ OJ for their On the Editorial Page feature are representative, or more partisan or less partisan than the average WSJ editorial.

[permanent link]


Tuesday 28 December 2004

Boxscore

FAVORITES: Since I spend most of the time here criticizing the usual suspects for excessive partisanship, it's useful to take a break once in a while and offer praise for columnists whom I admire for their independence. In a recent e-mail, Peggy Kaplan, who writes the blog what if?, had this to say:
I've found few issues of significance in my lifetime that didn't have shades of gray and aspects that raised difficult questions. The fair and balanced columnists do write about these shades ... and, in my opinion, it ultimately serves to bolster their opinions, because the reader has the feeling that they are fair and they do question everything.

I think that columnists such as David Broder and Robert Samuelson hold mostly centrist views, so they naturally end up with very low partisanship scores. I admire a columnist like Richard Cohen, who can be a strident liberal critic of Republicans, yet still have the independence to hammer Michael Moore and graciously praise Ronald Reagan. Also on the left, both Clarence Page and William Raspberry are willing to grapple with difficult issues, taking seriously all sides of an argument.

On the right, Jeff Jacoby is a principled conservative, who doesn't hesitate to criticize "the most bloated budget ever", or to single out Russell Feingold for praise. In his first full year at The New York Times, David Brooks has been independent and consistently thought-provoking.

[permanent link]


Archives

Lying in Ponds is an attempt to encourage vigorous, independent commentary in the American punditocracy by quantifying and analyzing partisanship. Lying in Ponds tries to draw a fundamental distinction between ordinary party preference and excessive partisanship. The presence of an excessive partisan bias transforms journalism into advertising, too distorted and unreliable to be useful in any serious political debate. Political parties are a healthy, essential part of American democracy; excessive partisanship is not. The methods used here are an attempt to quantify only partisanship, and are not intended as a more general guide to the quality of a columnist. There are other important traits such as accuracy, relevance, fairness, civility and style, but Lying in Ponds makes no attempt to measure them.

Lying in Ponds currently tracks the Democratic and Republican biases of a selection of regular political columnists from various sources, including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal's OpinionJournal, and the Washington Post.


partisan
a firm adherent to a party, faction, cause, or person; especially: one exhibiting blind, prejudiced, and unreasoning allegiance

Media Bloggers Association

FINAL 2004 Lying in Ponds Top Ten

Ranked by Normalized Combined Partisanship Index, minimum of two columns per month. Partisanship Indices range from 0 to 100, with higher numbers indicating more partisanship. Democratic biases are in blue, Republican in red. For details, see the Methods page. Democratic normalization: 1.00, Republican normalization: 0.71
Author/
Affiliation
Cols Norm
Comb
PI
Most Frequent Partisan References
1 Ann Coulter
Universal Press Syndicate
53 82 15D+: Kerry(3), Cleland(3), Democratic(2)
1058D-: Kerry(230), Democrats(194), Clinton(63)
467R+: Bush(140), Reagan(59), Republicans(36)
60R-: Mineta(9), Specter(9), Arlen Specter(7)
2 Paul Krugman
New York Times
85 77 201D+: Kerry(60), John Kerry(26), Democratic(17)
18D-: Kerry(6), Lieberman(4), Democratic Party
27R+: Bush(4), Reagan(3), Gregory Mankiw(2)
809R-: Bush(267), administration(164), Bush administration(59)
3 Robert Scheer
Creators Syndicate
51 71 88D+: Kerry(42), John Kerry(6), Democrats(4)
34D-: Kerry(8), Democrats(5), John Kerry(3)
42R+: Dean(6), Paul O'Neill(3), Reagan(3)
566R-: Bush(151), administration(53), the president(48)
4 Molly Ivins
Creators Syndicate
83 67 170D+: Kerry(45), Clinton(21), John Kerry(13)
47D-: Democrats(10), John Kerry(5), Dean(4)
50R+: Republicans(8), Paul O'Neill(4), Republican(3)
805R-: Bush(216), administration(71), Republican(40)
5 Joe Conason
New York Observer
47 66 158D+: Kerry(55), Democrat(14), Democratic(12)
16D-: Kerry(4), Democratic(4), Democrats(3)
93R+: Republican(15), O'Neill(9), Reagan(8)
651R-: Bush(111), the President(93), White House(49)
6 Linda Chavez
Creators Syndicate
48 65 19D+: Kerry(6), John Kerry(2), Clinton Administration
302D-: Kerry(84), Democrats(41), John Kerry(32)
206R+: Bush(38), the president(27), President Bush(20)
31R-: O'Neill(11), White House(3), Bush(2)
7 Charles Krauthammer
Washington Post
48 64 27D+: Kerry(8), Clinton(4), John Kerry(2)
276D-: Kerry(87), Democrats(39), Dean(22)
213R+: Bush(58), Reagan(22), President Bush(15)
28R-: Bush(6), Bush administration(3), McCain(3)
8 Harold Meyerson
Washington Post
51 62 367D+: Kerry(112), Democrats(47), Democratic(39)
81D-: Democrats(18), Kerry(12), Democratic(11)
43R+: Republican(7), Republicans(6), Bush(5)
608R-: Bush(161), Republicans(42), George W. Bush(35)
9 Mona Charen
Creators Syndicate
46 55 26D+: Kerry(11), Miller(4), Zell Miller(2)
272D-: Kerry(110), Democrats(37), John Kerry(15)
167R+: Bush(30), President Bush(17), Reagan(13)
22R-: Bush(5), the president(4), Republicans
10 Cal Thomas
Tribune Media Services
97 46 57D+: Clinton(6), Kerry(5), John Kerry(4)
482D-: Kerry(166), Democrats(60), John Kerry(26)
394R+: Bush(76), President Bush(62), the president(57)
90R-: O'Neill(9), President Bush(7), Schwarzenegger(6)
Complete Rankings


Other Statistics

Highest Kerry Index
1 Paul Krugman 70
2 Joe Conason 70
3 Harold Meyerson 60
4 Thomas Oliphant 58
5 Molly Ivins 55
Complete Rankings
Lowest Kerry Index
1 Ann Coulter -88
2 Thomas Sowell -84
3 Cal Thomas -69
4 Tony Blankley -66
5 Charles Krauthammer -65
Complete Rankings
Highest Bush Index
1 Ann Coulter 80
2 Linda Chavez 71
3 Thomas Sowell 71
4 Charles Krauthammer 68
5 Brendan Miniter 62
Complete Rankings
Lowest Bush Index
1 Robert Scheer -86
2 Joe Conason -86
3 Molly Ivins -84
4 Paul Krugman -84
5 Harold Meyerson -81
Complete Rankings
Normalized Total Partisanship Index
1 Ann Coulter 79
2 Paul Krugman 75
3 Robert Scheer 65
4 Molly Ivins 65
5 Charles Krauthammer 63
Complete Rankings
Normalized Median Partisanship Index
1 Ann Coulter 86
2 Paul Krugman 80
3 Robert Scheer 77
4 Molly Ivins 69
5 Joe Conason 69
Complete Rankings
Highest Democratic Index
1 Paul Krugman 64
2 Joe Conason 63
3 E. J. Dionne Jr. 45
4 Harold Meyerson 44
5 Thomas Oliphant 40
Complete Rankings
Lowest Democratic Index
1 Ann Coulter -85
2 Thomas Sowell -70
3 Linda Chavez -69
4 Charles Krauthammer -64
5 Mona Charen -57
Complete Rankings
Highest Republican Index
1 Ann Coulter 63
2 Charles Krauthammer 62
3 Peggy Noonan 54
4 Linda Chavez 52
5 Mona Charen 52
Complete Rankings
Lowest Republican Index
1 Paul Krugman -79
2 Molly Ivins -76
3 Robert Scheer -75
4 Harold Meyerson -70
5 Joe Conason -62
Complete Rankings
Positive Index
1 Peggy Noonan 40
2 Brendan Miniter 39
3 David Brooks 36
4 E. J. Dionne Jr. 36
5 Jeff Jacoby 36
Complete Rankings
Negative Index
1 Robert Scheer 70
2 Molly Ivins 65
3 Paul Krugman 65
4 Maureen Dowd 60
5 Ann Coulter 60
Complete Rankings
Neutral Index
1 Robert J. Samuelson 47
2 William Raspberry 45
3 David S. Broder 44
4 William Safire 42
5 Clarence Page 41
Complete Rankings



The Pundits

Boston Globe
Jeff Jacoby | Thomas Oliphant |

BillOReilly.com
Bill O'Reilly |

Creators Syndicate
Linda Chavez | Mona Charen | Molly Ivins | Robert Scheer | Tony Blankley | Thomas Sowell |

Chicago Tribune
Clarence Page |

Inactive
Anne Applebaum | Bob Herbert | Colbert I. King | Claudia Rosett | David Ignatius | Dorothy Rabinowitz | Fred Hiatt | Frank Rich | Jackson Diehl | John Fund | Jim Hoagland | Kimberley A. Strassel | Nicholas D. Kristof | Pete du Pont | Robert Kagan | Thomas L. Friedman | Walter E. Williams |

New York Observer
Joe Conason |

New York Times
David Brooks | Maureen Dowd | | Paul Krugman | William Safire |

Tribune Media Services
Cal Thomas |

Universal Press Syndicate
Ann Coulter |

Washington Post
Charles Krauthammer | David S. Broder | E. J. Dionne Jr. | George F. Will | Harold Meyerson | Michael Kinsley | Richard Cohen | Robert J. Samuelson | Sebastian Mallaby | | William Raspberry |

WSJ OpinionJournal
Brendan Miniter | Daniel Henninger | Peggy Noonan | |




Highly Recommended and Relevant

Spinsanity has been doing a brilliant job exposing "manipulative political rhetoric" from all parts of the political spectrum. Notice that partisanship is usually the motivation for the "deception and irrationality" of their targets. The three Spinsanity guys freely disclose their Democratic party affiliations, but pledge to be "non-partisan, fair and civic-minded". Lying in Ponds couldn't agree more with their mission statement.

Eric Alterman's book Sound and Fury : The Making of the Punditocracy, has an excellent history of the development of political punditry in this country. Alterman discusses his interesting and provocative ideas about how to elevate the level of pundit discourse. It is a valuable book despite the distracting ideological baggage.

According to Dr. Andrew R. Cline: "The Rhetorica Network, including my Rhetorica: Press-Politics Journal web log, is my attempt to explain the persuasive tactics of politics and the press." His discussion of media bias is very good.

Jay Rosen is the chair of the Department of Journalism at NYU. His PressThink weblog argues that "the press has become the ghost of democracy in the media machine": "So the press is a backward glancing term. To me that's what's great about it. It points back to the history of struggle for press liberty, to the long rise of public opinion, and of course to the Constitution, a source from which The Media try to draw legitimacy. But the First Amendment actually speaks of the press. It doesn't mention media. Anyone could, but then almost no one does, uphold "freedom of the media" as a great right-- worth defending and even dying for."

FactCheck.org says that they are "a nonpartisan, nonprofit, 'consumer advocate' for voters that aims to reduce the level of deception and confusion in U.S. politics."

MBA

Media Bloggers Association
Robert Cox: The National Debate
Tom Biro: The Media Drop
Patrick Frey: Patterico's pontifications
Cori Dauber: Rantingprofs
Brian Stelter: TVNewser/Media Bistro
Jason Clarke: Moorelies
Matthew Sheffield, Greg Sheffield: Rather Biased
Henry Hanks: Croooow Blog
Jeff Jarvis: BuzzMachine
Dan Gillmor: Dan Gillmor on Grassroots Journalism
Donald Luskin: Chronicle of the Conspiracy
Cory Bergman Steve Safran, Richard Warner, David Johnson, Julie Moos, Liz Foreman: Lost Remote
Terry Heaton: Donata
Tim Porter: First Draft
Brendan Nyhan, Ben Fritz, Bryan Keefer: Spinsanity
Jay Rosen: PressThink
J.D. Lasica: New Media Musings
Jonathan Dube: CyberJournalist.net
Oliver Willis
Rebecca MacKinnon: RConversation
Aaron Barnhart: TV Barn

The Press

Bob Somerby: The Daily Howler
Romanesko
Brendan Nyhan
NPR: On the Media
memeorandum
Howard Kurtz
Cursor

Pundits

Cal Thomas
Robert Scheer
Bill O'Reilly
Paul Krugman
Ann Coulter

Krugmania

Bobby Pelgrift: The Unofficial Paul Krugman Archive
Brad DeLong: Semi-Daily Journal
Robert Musil: Man Without Qualities
Steve Antler: EconoPundit

Eclectic

Dean Esmay: Dean's World
James Lileks: Daily Bleat
Susanna Cornett: Cut on the Bias

Politics

Matthew Yglesias
The Weekly Standard
The Volokh Conspiracy
Tapped
Slate
Kevin Drum: Washington Monthly's Political Animal
National Review Online
The New Republic Online
Joshua Micah Marshall: Talking Points Memo
Mickey Kaus: kausfiles
Tom Maguire: JustOneMinute
Glenn Reynolds: InstaPundit
Daniel W. Drezner
Andrew Sullivan: Daily Dish
The Atlantic Online
Eric Alterman: Altercation

North Carolina

North State Blogs
NC Blogs
Tightly Wound
Lee Ann Morawski: Spinsters
Silflay Hraka
Craig Newmark: Newmark's Door
Don McArthur: Misanthropyst
Eric Muller: IsThatLegal?
Ed Cone: Word Up
Betsy Newmark: Betsy's Page
Begging to Differ

Friends

Paul Mena

Reciprocal

What If?
Jay Manifold: A Voyage To Arcturus
The Useful Arts
Undeterred Capitalist
Strange Women Lying in Ponds
Matthew J. Stinson
skimble
Signifying Nothing
PunditMania
Philosoraptor
Peter Fallow's Media Musings
The People's Republic of Seabrook
Peevish
...Parenthetically Speaking
No Watermelons Allowed
Amy Ridenour's National Center Blog
LawPundit
Just a Gwai Lo
Hoystory
Economia Everywhere!!
Colby and Beyond!
Burning Dog
Blogo Slovo
BaySense
The Art of Peace
Ambidextrous