By Matthew Balan | December 9, 2011 | 4:14 PM EST

NPR's Yuki Noguchi and Lynn Neary completely omitted Jon Corzine's Democratic affiliation on Thursday's All Things Considered, while mentioning practically every other prominent occupation he has held- Goldman Sachs CEO, senator, governor, even "multimillionaire." On the other hand, Noguchi gave the Republican party ID of two representatives who questioned Corzine at a recent hearing.

Neary outlined in her introduction for Noguchi's report that "former Senator Jon Corzine returned to Congress...Corzine was once CEO of the most successful bank on Wall Street. He left Goldman Sachs for the Senate, then was elected governor of New Jersey." The correspondent soon added that "until late October, Corzine was the CEO of MF Global."

By Jeff Poor | June 25, 2009 | 8:05 AM EDT

Call this a teachable moment, but even with ABC's best-laid plans to kickstart the debate about health care reform and not allow the "Prescription for America" special to become an "infomercial," as many have complained - the president spent more than twice as much time as his questioners vaguely answering or not answering the questions asked of him. But the network consistently presented the event as part of the need to fix a "broken system." When asked, every one of the 164 hand-picked audience members said they felt that health care needed to be changed.

President Barack Obama appeared on the ABC network in a town hall format broadcasted from the White House on two separate programs on June 24 - an hour-long primetime special during the 10 p.m. Eastern Time hour and later on the "Nightline" program that aired during the 11:30 p.m. Eastern Time hour.

By NB Staff | June 17, 2009 | 5:30 PM EDT

<div style="float: right"><object width="240" height="194"><param name="movie" value="http://www.eyeblast.tv/public/eyeblast.swf?v=ydaGQunzkU&amp;c1=0xCE4717&... name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.eyeblast.tv/public/eyeblast.swf?v=ydaGQunzkU&amp;c1=0xCE4717&... allowfullscreen="true" width="240" height="194"></embed></object></div>Calling it an &quot;all-day home field advantage play for Obama and his position on health care,&quot; MRC's Seton Motley noted on the June 17 Fox News Channel program &quot;America's Newsroom&quot; that an upcoming ABC network special hosted at the White House will fail to include the other side of the complex policy argument. [audio <a href="http://media.eyeblast.org/newsbusters/static/2009/06/2009-06-17-FNC-Motl... target="_blank">available here</a>]<br /><p> Although there will also be a question and answer section with participants picked by ABC News, the planned special will not include a response from Republicans or government-run health care critics.<br /><br /> ABC &quot;has a history of going as far left as possible with these specials and yielding time to Democrats when they won't yield to Republicans,&quot; Motley argued. The MRC Director of Communications pointed out that Linda Douglass, White House Director of Communications, served as an ABC News correspondent from 1998 to 2006. </p>