Word: limbaughs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Most of the 86 Republicans elected in 1994 attended the event, which featured a keynote address by talk show radio host Rush Limbaugh...
...lost his debate against Gore. That's what three instant TV polls said. That's what a panel of debate coaches said. And worst of all for Kemp, that's what prominent Republicans said, on the airwaves and, more vehemently, in private. "A disaster," thundered right-wing icon Rush Limbaugh. "We need new leaders!" Many of the callers to his syndicated radio show expressed amazement and anger that Kemp passed up debate moderator Jim Lehrer's invitation to critique President Clinton's ethics, even on such public matters as the collection of FBI background files by the Clinton White House...
...Dole counterpart Nelson Warfield debated the debate on ABC's Good Morning America. NBC analyst Tim Russert and ABC's Jeff Greenfield weighed in on Don Imus' radio show. In a CBS poll, 50% of the respondents said they thought Clinton was the winner, vs. 28% for Dole. Rush Limbaugh replayed Clinton's response on the issue of presidential pardons and exclaimed, "Now what does that mean?" USA Today tracked the minute-by-minute responses of 148 voters in St. Louis, Missouri, and reported that they felt most favorable about Clinton when he praised health insurance guarantees in the Kennedy...
...specialize in business news. Another two--one from ESPN, the other from CNN and Sports Illustrated--will soon be offering around-the-clock sports news. On radio, news dribbles out daily on all-news stations and is dissected by opinionated talk-show hosts like Imus, Howard Stern and Rush Limbaugh. Local TV news programming is booming--up to six or seven hours a day on some stations--and 18 regional cable channels offer 24-hour local news...
...audience is being further fragmented by the boom in news outlets catering to special interests. For Washington policy wonks, there's C-SPAN. For Clinton bashers, there's Rush Limbaugh. For teens fixated on Beavis and Butt-head, there's MTV's Week in Rock. The Internet has become the ultimate narrowcasting vehicle: everyone from UFO buffs to New York Yankee fans has a Website (or dozen) to call his own--a dot-com in every...