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Folkenflik, Beck's Blaze Say NPR Executive Was Taken Out of Context

Portions of the James O'Keefe-produced video that showed an NPR executive making disparaging remarks about conservatives were taken out of context. That's the conclusion of at least two sources--NPRand the Glenn Beck-owned The Blaze.Andrew Sullivan reported on the misquoting, and said this: Despite the fact that O'Keefe is a known liar, and that his past video stings have been edited in misleading ways, much of the mainstream media ran with his latest. Will those outlets now inform their viewers and readers about the deceptions uncovered by  The Blaze?Mitch Albom raised similar questions in the Detroit Free Press, calling O'Keefe's videos Punk'd-style journalism. He then says that anyone hoping to prove bias in NPR reporting should do a real study, not hide a camera.Ira Glass of This American Life made a similar challenge over the weekend. He asked Bob Garfield and Brooke Gladstone of On the Media to find bias in NPR's reporting. He says they won't. Glass's challenge came during a larger conversation on why no one has come forward with documented evidence of subjective news. A fundraising executive may share private opinions over lunch, but Glass insists that doesn't affect the newsrooms at all.