I couldn’t have said it any better than Eric Boehlert did:
The idea that the Matthews live-mic “Oh God” utterance should be pounced on as an “aha” moment for the unprofessional press corps is absurd. Not when Rick Santelli, a reporter for CNBC, went on live TV and uncorked an anti-Obama rant and then paraded around on right-wing radio shows for days while concocting stories about being targeted by the White House.
Despite crossing all normal bounds of journalism, Santelli was celebrated in the press as a populist. (Y’know, the Drexel Burnham Lambert kind.) And CNBC seemed to do everything it could to market and hype the rant. (Imagine if MSNBC replayed Matthews’ “Oh God” clip incessantly, bragging about how Matthews had “touched a nerve” with Americans.)
In terms of revealing deep truths about the corporate media, I’d suggest Santelli’s off-kilter tirade, followed by his puffed-up prancing around, and the press corps that cheered him on, told us a helluva lot more abut the press than did Matthews’ split-second “Oh God” utterance.
Read the entire article on HuffPo.