Did Keith Olbermann even violate NBC policy?
By Greg Sargent
Check out the fine print of what NBC policy said, as of 2007, about political activities on the part of NBC employees:
"Anyone working for NBC News who takes part in civic or other outside activities may find that these activities jeopardize his or her standing as an impartial
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MSNBC management have to know that this move will damage their ratings. In fact, they have to know that Olbermann could very likely quit and never come back - he's walked out on them before, and for less. And the outrage from Olbermann's fans is completely drowning out any "MSNBC is as bad as Fox" critics who might have been grumbling about the donations. Either this was an overwhelmingly stupid move on MSNBC's part, or something else is going on.
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[MSNBC President Phil] Griffin's statement underscores that it was Olbermann's failure to obtain approval, and not the actual political donations, that prompted the suspension."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/05/keith-olbermann-suspended_n_779586.html
So, the official explanation sounds more small and insider-y than big and principled.
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The "obtain approval" part sits funky with me because it sounds like MSNBC is trying to control the way their employees spend their money, which is a little shady and condescending.
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Did any of Keith's endorsements fit into this category? And when I say fit into this category, did any of them have explicit anti corporate leanings? jw.
Jon Stewart may have been correct about MSNBC being like Fox in some sense. Just not the way he originally intended.
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I don't think that MSNBC creates and perpetuates narratives with the same uniformity and diligence that FOX News does.
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