BEN STEIN
rush limbaugh...the answer is Ben Stien, not Rush Limbaugh!
Richard Nixon
No. He never admitted what he did wrong and the Watergate incident was only brought to the public's attention through the media whereupon Nixon retired.
Richard Nixon referred to journalist Daniel Schorr as the "ayatollah of the press corps." This remark reflected Nixon's frustration with Schorr's critical reporting and the aggressive questioning style he employed during the Watergate scandal. Schorr was known for his investigative journalism and was a prominent figure in the media at the time, often challenging the administration's actions.
No. John Fitzgerald Kennedy was a Democrat, but Richard Milhouse Nixon was a Republican. Mr. Kennedy's was also noted for his ability to project a comfortable image when dealing with the media of the day, while Mr. Nixon came across as stiff and uncomfortable. Kennedy's running mate was Lyndon Baines Johnson, from Texas, while Nixon's running mate was Henry Cabot Lodge.
By repeated harangues in the news media. He covered up a crime.
Various tape transcripts show that Nixon did make several anti-semite remarks. Nixon believed that one of his 'enemies' was the Jewish dominated New York media. It would be hard to call Nixon a racist however given his very liberal attitude to desegregation of schools. They were more likely 'rants' with racist overtones.
J.J. Jackson - media personality - died on 2004-03-17.
Because of the Watergate Scandal. Nixon had denied any involvement in the break-ins into the Democrat Party Headquarters at the Watergate Complex, but the media soon discovered he had been in charge of it. According to the US Constitution, a US President can be impeached (sacked by Congress) for lying. Nixon chose to resign rather than by impeached.
Probably the first politician to develop a successful media image was John F Kennedy. If you can, look at highlights of his televised debates with Richard Nixon to see how he used television to appeal to the voters.
SANDEEP MARWAH
The legacies of 1968 were the triumph of mob violence, the triumph of the Mainstream Media in distorting the reality of mob violence as well as of the Vietnam War and of Soviet aggression in Czechoslovakia, and the refusal of most Americans to stand for such, hence the election of Richard Nixon.