Hygro
soundcloud.com/hygro/
Intended in my first sentence was "...do you?" But yeah you said dittohead which is definitely a Rush brand. You don't particularly strike me as the type but I was not expecting to read the term. 
When I saw the media having an agenda, yeah there's Fox which is Mordoch's green light on Roger Aile's paranoia/ratings genius. There's MSNBC who realized giving a center-left editorial slant would be a reliable ratings success though the material is far less organized and agenda-driven.
But what I really mean is the numerous professional media figures at the employ of various "think" tanks who would spin and misrepresent/cherry pick real dubious data, build an entire campaign around it, and stick to talking points again and again and again and again until eventually journalists and editors heard it enough times and enough American media consumers perked up the way people do at the disco when they recognize a song they've already heard before and next thing you know their slogans and ideas become the default position. Refer to Elfdemon's post for an example of this in action (not trying to pick on you Elfdemon, I just get a bit rankled by philosophies that use half baked economic consequence as a basis for morality, rather than as a tool for achieving moral ends).
As Krugman puts it, there's liberal professional economists and conservative professional economists. And then there's professional conservative economists. The rich were getting richer but as a share of the nation's wealth they were losing ground in our economic sort-of-golden age (post WW2 pre oil crisis). That's when literally rich folks bankrolled all these media-meets-"academia" foundations got started. They played the long game and they won. There was a parallel religion channel too but I've studied that less.
So when you have TV stations and newspapers that regular book guests from these organizations and treat them with credibility, and you have other stations that don't, then there is a difference in one station facilitating agenda driven rhetoric vs. the others which is just more of a mix of everything good and bad. One is editorial malfeasance and the other is editorial incompetence.

When I saw the media having an agenda, yeah there's Fox which is Mordoch's green light on Roger Aile's paranoia/ratings genius. There's MSNBC who realized giving a center-left editorial slant would be a reliable ratings success though the material is far less organized and agenda-driven.
But what I really mean is the numerous professional media figures at the employ of various "think" tanks who would spin and misrepresent/cherry pick real dubious data, build an entire campaign around it, and stick to talking points again and again and again and again until eventually journalists and editors heard it enough times and enough American media consumers perked up the way people do at the disco when they recognize a song they've already heard before and next thing you know their slogans and ideas become the default position. Refer to Elfdemon's post for an example of this in action (not trying to pick on you Elfdemon, I just get a bit rankled by philosophies that use half baked economic consequence as a basis for morality, rather than as a tool for achieving moral ends).
As Krugman puts it, there's liberal professional economists and conservative professional economists. And then there's professional conservative economists. The rich were getting richer but as a share of the nation's wealth they were losing ground in our economic sort-of-golden age (post WW2 pre oil crisis). That's when literally rich folks bankrolled all these media-meets-"academia" foundations got started. They played the long game and they won. There was a parallel religion channel too but I've studied that less.
So when you have TV stations and newspapers that regular book guests from these organizations and treat them with credibility, and you have other stations that don't, then there is a difference in one station facilitating agenda driven rhetoric vs. the others which is just more of a mix of everything good and bad. One is editorial malfeasance and the other is editorial incompetence.