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Written well with strong insight into a real issue with our society. While it can be repetitive, it does shine the light of balance on some of the so-called "truths" that the right wing talkers of this country speak of as gospel.
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Poor organization, poor logic, po....ooor grammer he has used every trite cliché possible on conservative talk. Because the book is warmed over griping I think it does more to help the conservative movement than enlighten the masses. Is Bill Press a closet conservative planted by the Tea Party movement?????
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The two people who bought the book liked it.
Talk radio has done an end run around the voting public. With the far right controlling the five major syndicates, conservatives have a disproportionate voice in the medium—even in liberal markets such as New York, Boston, and San Francisco. Writing with his characteristic and incisive wit, Bill Press exposes the destructive power of Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, Bill O’Reilly, and the other polarizing figures of talk radio who dominate 90 percent of the political airwaves today while spewing partisan lies and propaganda. Toxic Talk fires a timely cannon blast at the right-wing media machine and how it subverts American democracy.
Press, who hosts the liberal talk radio Bill Press Show, takes on his conservative competition in this witty rundown of the major actors and themes of right-wing political broadcasting. Individual chapters are devoted to Rush Limbaugh ("the big fat liar"), Glenn Beck ("the big crybaby"), Sean Hannity ("the party hack"), and Michael Savage ("the savage"). None emerges looking good. After trashing the top tier of conservative broadcasting, he moves on to critique conservative talk television, minor league talk radio, and selected local radio shows. One chapter is devoted to providing data on the demographics of the audiences of talk radio (mostly older white males) and analyzing why conservatives predominate in this format. Press wraps up with a peek at emerging progressive talk-show programming. VERDICT Liberals unhappy with the predominance of conservative talk radio will relish this impassioned, personal attack on the personalities of right-wing broadcasting.—Judy Solberg, Seattle Univ. Lib.
More Reviews and RecommendationsBill Press is the co-host of MSNBC's Buchanan and Press. An award-winning commentator, he writes a nationally syndicated newspaper column and is a talk-show host on WMAL in Washington, D.C.