Coulter was lambasted for saying something wildly inappropriate here, but no one seems to have actually corrected her for saying something factually inaccurate: Ted Kennedy wholloped Mitt Romney by more than 17 points (not 5 points). There seems to be this myth among conservatives that Romney came anywhere close to winning that race.
You blew it, Howard. Ann Coulter did not call Ted Kennedy a (bleep), he called John McCain a (bleep). Get your criticism straight. We will wait for your clarification on next week's installment.
Now more than ever, the press is a part of every story it covers. And CNN's "Reliable Sources" is one of television's only regular programs to examine how journalists do their jobs and how the media affect the stories they cover.
Brian Stelter is the host of "Reliable Sources" and the senior media correspondent for CNN Worldwide. Before he joined CNN in November 2013, Stelter was a media reporter for The New York Times. He is the author of the New York Times best-seller "Top of the Morning."
Coulter was lambasted for saying something wildly inappropriate here, but no one seems to have actually corrected her for saying something factually inaccurate: Ted Kennedy wholloped Mitt Romney by more than 17 points (not 5 points). There seems to be this myth among conservatives that Romney came anywhere close to winning that race.
You blew it, Howard. Ann Coulter did not call Ted Kennedy a (bleep), he called John McCain a (bleep). Get your criticism straight. We will wait for your clarification on next week's installment.