Storm: "So
this is satire and not documentary? We shouldn’t see this as-"
Moore: "It’s
a satirical documentary."
Storm: "Some
have said propaganda, do you buy that? Op-ed?"
Moore: "No,
I consider the CBS Evening News propaganda. What I do is-"
Storm: "We’ll
move beyond on that."
Moore: "Why?
Let’s not move beyond that."
Storm: "You
know what?"
Moore: "Seriously."
Storm: "No,
let’s talk about your movie."
Moore: "But
why don’t we talk about the Evening News on this network and the
other networks that didn’t do the job they should have done at the
beginning of this war?"
Storm: "You
know what?"
Moore: "Demanded
the evidence, ask the hard questions-"
Storm: "Okay."
Moore: "-we
may not of even gone into this war had these networks done their
job. I mean, it was a great disservice to the American people because
we depend on people who work here and the other networks to go after
those in power and say 'Hey, wait a minute. You want to send our
kids off to war, we want to know where those weapons of mass destruction
are. Let’s see the proof. Let’s see the proof that Saddam Hussein
had something to do with 9/11.’"
Storm: "But-"
Moore: "There
was no proof and everybody just got embedded and everybody rolled
over and everybody knows that now."
Storm: "Michael,
the one thing that journalists try to do is to present both sides
of the story. And it could be argued that you did not do that in
this movie."
Moore: "I
certainly didn’t. I presented my side-"
Storm: "You
presented your side of the story."
Moore: "Because
my side, that’s the side of millions of Americans, rarely gets told.
And so, all I’m, look, this is just a humble plea on my behalf and
not to you personally, Hannah. But I’m just saying to journalists
in general that instead of working so hard to tell both sides of
the story, why don’t you just tell that one side, which is the administration,
why don’t you ask them the hard questions-"
Storm: "Which
I think is something that we all try to do."
Moore: "Well,
I think it was a lot of cheerleading going on at the beginning of
this war-"
Storm: "Alright."
Moore: "A
lot of cheerleading and it didn’t do the public any good to have
journalists standing in front of the camera going 'whoop-dee-do,
let’s all go to war’. And, and it’s not their kids going to war.
It’s not the children of the news executives going to war-"
Storm: "Michael,
why don’t you do you next movie about networks news, okay? Because
this movie-"
Moore: "I
know, I think I should do that movie."
Storm: "-because
this movie is an attack on the president and his policies."
Moore: "Well,
and it also points out how the networks failed us at the beginning
of this war and didn’t do their job."