THE DAILY NEWSLETTER - FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 

Media Winners & Losers

MEDIA WINNER:
Lester Holt

For more than seven months, the identity of the Capitol Police officer who shot Ashli Babbitt during the January 6 storming of the Capitol remained undisclosed to the public. On Thursday, that officer revealed himself in an interview with NBC Nightly News anchor Lester Holt.

Along with his fellow officers, Lieutenant Michael Byrd was protecting 60 to 80 House members hunkered down nearby when he fired a single fatal shot that hit Babbitt as she tried to force her way through a barricaded door inside the Capitol. 

Several investigations have cleared Byrd of any wrongdoing, but former President Donald Trump and some of his supporters have attempted to paint Babbitt as a martyr, criticizing Byrd for taking that shot.

NBC's exclusive interview with Byrd was a feather in the network's cap, to be sure, but the balance and thoughtfulness Holt brought to the interview deserves special mention. He asked difficult questions in order to tell a more complete story of what happened that day. 

MEDIA LOSER:
Malcolm Nance

Pro Tip: In the aftermath of a terrorist attack that has claimed lives, "#DealWithIt" is not a good hashtag to tweet. This is a lesson that MSNBC's Malcolm Nance should have learned before Thursday, but he didn't. 

“20 YEARS- FYI there have been terrorist suicide bombers killing civilians nearly DAILY in Afghanistan. This ain’t new. It’s why we are leaving. #DealWithIt,” he tweeted in response to the explosions outside the Kabul airport, later revealed to be caused by two suicide bombers.

Thirteen U.S. service members and nearly 100 Afghan civilians were killed, along with many more who were injured. It was the deadliest attack against the U.S. military in Afghanistan since Aug. 6, 2011 and our first casualties there since Feb. 8, 2020. ISIS-K, the Islamic State branch in South and Central Asia, has claimed credit for the attack.

Nance later deleted the tweet and apologized, but not until several hours had passed -- and many people had expressed their outrage in response. 

The A-Block

'We will hunt you down and make you pay'

The already troubled withdrawal from Afghanistan became even more chaotic after Thursday's suicide bombing at the Kabul airport, which killed 13 U.S. service members, 90 Afghan civilians, and injured many more.

"We will hunt you down and make you pay," President Joe Biden vowed. He didn't rule out sending additional troops back to Afghanistan, but the White House is sticking with the Aug. 31 deadline for now. 

The Biden administration is getting criticized from all sides on the Afghanistan issue. 

"That's one way to end a war -- surrender," said former Ambassador Ryan Crocker.

Fox News' Peter Doocy had a notably tense exchange with Biden, asking him if he felt he bore any responsibility regarding the attacks.

Former President Donald Trump, unsurprisingly, had some comments. Including some about "ISIS-X," whatever that is.

Perhaps the most damning criticism, though, came from a Facebook video posted by Marine Lt. Col. Stuart Scheller, in which he risked his own military career to blast his own commanders for failing to speak out about the catastrophic U.S. withdrawal.

Evacuations are continuing.


In Other News...

White House Covid Czar Says Biden Will 'Look for Every Lever he Can' To Push Vaccine Mandates

Seth Meyers Blasts Fox News Hosts for Pushing 'Horse Pills' as a Covid Treatment: 'How Does This Sh*t Keep Getting Dumber and Dumber?'

Fox's Bret Baier Calls Afghanistan a 'Total Miss' for Biden: 'Surprised No One Has Resigned or Been Fired'

‘It’s Complicated: Shaq Reveals Hilarious Dating Struggle Having to Delete Tinder Because Women Didn’t Believe Him

Must See Clip

“I know that I’m going to get killed.”

A segment on Fox News’ America’s Newsroom on Friday turned emotional as an Afghan ally who was only identified as “Carl” spoke about witnessing Thursday's explosions outside the Kabul airport in which at least 13 U.S. service members and 90 Afghans were killed.

Carl, along with Jen Wilson, the chief operating officer of Army Week Association, shared the challenges they've faced attempting to evacuate Carl and his family.

Wilson vowed that her organization was continuing their efforts to get Carl to safety, but he seemed resigned to his fate.

“I know I’m going to be left behind. I know that I’m going to get killed,” he said. “Look, the good thing is that I’m not going to die for a bad thing. I’m going to die for a good thing. What I did I will never regret it because I have tried to help people.”

It was a truly harrowing segment. 

Links We Like

Clamoring for ivermectin, some turn to a pro-Trump telemedicine website
- Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny, NBC News 
A woman mailed her diary to a stranger, who added an entry and did the same. People have kept it going for a year.
- Sydney Page, Washington Post
A Bungled Mess
- Tom Nichols, The Atlantic
Environmentalists Would Buy the Land They Want To Protect, if The Government Allowed It
- Meredith Bragg, Reason
Reading this online? Why not get it in your inbox? Sign up for the Mediaite Live from the Greenroom Newsletter today!
Twitter Twitter
Facebook Facebook
Instagram Instagram
Visit Mediaite Visit Mediaite
Copyright © 2021 Mediaite LLC All rights reserved.

Write to us:  tips@mediaite.com

Problems with these e-mails? Update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.