THE DAILY NEWSLETTER  - FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 2021

Media Winners & Losers

MEDIA WINNER:
Chris Stirewalt

Former Fox News digital political director Chris Stirewalt is having a good week, which by itself is an accomplishment so soon after being publicly fired from the cable news network. 

In his first media appearance since his termination, Stirewalt chatted with MSNBC's Chris Hayes during the Thursday edition of All In With Chris Hayes.

Besides the schadenfreudelicious element of appearing on a rival network, Stirewalt was also given broad latitude to defend the work he and his fellow Decision Desk colleagues performed on Election Night, directly criticize the baseless claims of election fraud made by President Donald Trump, and even engaged in an extended discussion with Hayes about the pitfalls of clickbait media.

Stirewalt described how they called Arizona for President Joe Biden, and the angry backlash that surprised them a few days later, because they had "broken" Trump's narrative that the election was stolen.

Hayes pressed him about the "mistruths" that Fox News had promulgated, and Stirewalt was clear that he had not done so himself

“Well I am glad that you have been liberated from a place where people do lie," Hayes said to conclude the interview, "and I wish you well genuinely in writing in places where you can do good work."

MEDIA LOSER:
New York Post

This week, The New York Post was taught a painful and embarrassing lesson about the importance of fact-checking, when they excitedly published a story about a 22-year-old man who tweeted that he had taken out a second mortgage on his parents' home to buy more GameStop and AMC stock.

The story, unsurprising to anyone who's ever actually gotten a mortgage loan, was absolute garbage. A Twitter user named @JackoWest_3 completely made it up. His silly prank tweet got a giant spotlight when Post reporter Mary K. Jacob messaged him to ask about his motivation for taking such a "big risk" but failed to request even the most basic verification of his unbelievable story.

"JackoWest" not only claimed that he had taken out a mortgage on a home he does not own, but that he had obtained the loan "via a zoom call (without the camera on) with his hometown bank." 

Property laws vary from state to state, but nowhere in the U.S. can you legally take out a loan on property you do not own, and you definitely cannot take out such a loan over a phone call without a written document to confirm the agreement.

Jacob's story was swiftly exposed as a fraud, the Post deleted it from their website, and Jacob protected her Twitter account. 

The A-Block

Crazy

Axios founder and CEO Jim VanderHei had some harsh words for the GOP in a Morning Joe appearance on Friday, exclaiming that the party was "on fire right now," with Republican elected officials facing the choice to "either act crazy, tolerate crazy, be crazy, or get crushed."

Vile garbage

CNN's Don Lemon reacted with disgust to some of the recently uncovered clips of QAnon-supporting Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), calling her racist claims she made in an undated video "vile garbage."

Her fellow member Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) is advocating for her removal from the House.

Late night host Stephen Colbert slammed Greene as a "child harassing psychopath."

Nope

Greene has found her name in the headlines a lot lately, but White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki dismissed a question about her, saying they didn't want to elevate conspiracy theorists

Psaki also passed on a question about the GameStop stock trading story.

Tweet, delete, retweet

The View co-host Meghan McCain tweeted an apparently too-hot-for-Twitter take on GameStop. She quickly deleted it and then tweeted a more watered-down version of her comments. But we've got the screenshots.

Madness

Louise Linton, the wife of former Trump Treasury Secretary Steve Mnunchin, has a new movie coming out called Me You Madness where she plays a billionaire sociopath who apparently develops a habit of murdering her lovers. The trailer is truly bonkers and you can watch it here.

Are you kitten me?

Rachel Maddow had an unusual metaphor about kittens in the monologue on her show to illustrate her deep skepticism for the prospect of Republican Senators giving bipartisan support to the Biden agenda.

Russia collusion?

A former KGB spy is claiming that Russia groomed Trump as an asset for four decades, beginning when he married his first wife, Czech native Ivana Trump, in 1977. Yuri Shvets described the mission as a "charm offensive" to target Trump, who they viewed as "extremely vulnerable intellectually, and psychologically, and he was prone to flattery."

Must See Clips/Tweets

"You had me at hello."

MSNBC's Brian Williams and two guests on his show last night, Baratunde Thurston and Bill Kristol, had a laugh at House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy's expense. 

Williams introduced the segment by saying that they had "exclusive video" of McCarthy's meeting with former President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago. The video clip that played, however, was not of either Republican politician, but from a well-known 1996 movie.

Watch the humorous moment here.

The Interview: 60 Minutes correspondent Wesley Lowery discusses his decision to leave the Washington Post and why he wasn't surprised by the Capitol attack

Links We Like

Democrats Have No Excuse Not to Reform the Criminal Justice System
-  via Reason
The best face mask is one that fits
- via Vox

Congress Bows to the Pen and the Phone
- via National Review
Pipe bombs found near Capitol on Jan. 6 are believed to have been placed the night before
- via Washington Post
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