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On yesterday's Radio Factor, Bill O'Reilly was shocked to find out from a caller that there might be right wing zealots who send out those "Barack Obama is a scary Muslim" emails or that there were web-sites like AOL.com had hate-filled anti-Ted Kennedy comments after his brain tumor diagnosis was revealed. Bill and his cracked staff must have missed my column where I listed his fave site for blogging expertise, Townhall.com, allowing hate-filled comments about Kennedy. It happens. He's a busy man. But he told the caller that if he was given information on these right wing sites he would go after them, tute suite. So, what say guys and gals. Why not help Bill out and give him the comments and the sites so he can hold these haters' feet to the fire, or in the least, have a Factor Producer ambush them. Let me get you started. False e-mails about Obama... Where do they come from? Hmm. This might take some time. Maybe if I went to Snopes.com where you can pretty much get... Oops. There it is. Let's see, that took about 5 seconds. Now it's your turn. If they haven't already been scrubbed clean, find the Kennedy comments and Obama email sources and send it your research to either Bill at oreilly@foxnews.com or his producer at ann.banker@foxnews.com I'm sure they'll be forever grateful. Award-winning television writer and author of "Great Failures of the Extremely Successful," Steve Young' s "All The News That's Fit To Spoof" appears in L.A. Daily News opeds every Sunday on the same page with Bill O'Reilly's...really. www.greatfailure.com A talk show host, author, columnist,award-winning television writer and filmmaker, his inspiring book, "Great Failures of the Extremely Successful" (Tallfellow Press) has been published internationally and has become required reading in the Wharton School of Business Masters Program. His "All The News That's Fit To Spoof " column appears every Sunday on the L.A. Daily News Oped Page.
Steve has appeared all over national TV and radio with his unique brand of satirical punditry and social observations appearing in national periodicals from the Los Angeles Times and The New York Times, to his own weekly Internet column "The Lords Of Loud," at AlbionMonitor.net and The Huffington Post.
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