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As counter-media fuels tea party movement, main stream media catches on

The mainstream media 鈥榗an no longer control the narrative鈥 of American culture, contends counter-media mogul Andrew Breitbart in a fiery speech to Tea Party Conventioneers. But that doesn鈥檛 mean tea partiers are saying 鈥榥o comment鈥 to establishment reporters.

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Ed Reinke/AP
Mark Skoda of the Memphis Tea Party addresses attendees of the National Tea Party Convention in Nashville. Mr. Skoda is a talk radio host.

Recounting the exploits of two young reporters who went undercover to uncover the ACORN scandal, online publisher Andrew Breitbart on Saturday exhorted a widely held view among those in the tea party movement: Liberals and media organizations 鈥渃an no longer control the narrative.鈥

The rise of conservative media outfits like Breitbart鈥檚 Big Journalism [] and Big Government and Tucker Carlson鈥檚 The Daily Caller [] have offered a kind of counter-media that, in Breitbart鈥檚 view, tells the stories that the mainstream media won鈥檛 tell Americans 鈥 including that of the nascent tea party movement, which has grown largely by Twitter, Facebook and via blogs like Glenn ReynoldsInstapundit [].

Technology the great equalizer

鈥淭echnology has been a great equalizer,鈥 says Judson Phillips, founder of the , a sort of tea party Facebook that sponsored this weekend convention. 鈥淚t reminds me of how the British used old-style tactics and the patriots would be behind the trees, shooting.鈥

In a fiery speech to the first-ever National Tea Party Convention on Saturday, Breitbart 鈥 who runs his counter-media empire from his basement office in Hollywood 鈥 painted a vivid picture of a press in lockstep with liberal values, where reporters use words like racist and homophobe as weapons to suppress dissent. (At that point, a woman wearing a t-shirt that said 鈥淚 resist鈥 stood up and waved.)

Breitbart said reporters put all news involving conservatives into two basic buckets: "racism and Watergate." He urged the 600 tea party activists gathered at the Opryland resort in Nashville to take inspiration from conservative reporters like James O'Keefe, the videographer behind the undercover ACORN expose.

"I'm trying to tell you, wink, you can do it, too. You have cameras! You have ingenuity!" he said. 鈥淲hat we are starting to do is create our own media 鈥 that is reporting what the mainstream media refuses to tell you .We are exposing the corruption of the mainstream media.鈥

Breitbart鈥檚 may have a point. Proof to many here is how the mainstream media for weeks missed the story of Scott Brown鈥檚 surging candidacy in Massachusetts (one likely reason for all the interest in the Tea Party Convention), or how the New York Times put Mr. O鈥橩eefe on page 1 only after he was arrested for alleged phone-tampering at Sen. Mary Landrieu鈥檚 office in New Orleans.

Jabs at the mainstream media

But while the roomful of tea partiers stood up at several of Breitbart's jabs and at the back of the room, the fact that there were TV cameras there at all partly undermined Breitbart鈥檚 point that mainstream reporters are totally out of touch.

Convention organizers realized it, too. After originally banning all but a few mostly conservative outlets, the organizers ultimately opened the convention doors wide, even allowing media into Sarah Palin鈥檚 speech tonight.

True, some of the ensuing coverage has been critical and snide. But the willingness of people like California tea party activist Heather Gass to speak her mind to mainstream reporters may do as much, or more, to legitimize the tea party movement as the counter-media鈥檚 attention.

"People can now see who we are and they can see that we鈥檙e not dangerous,鈥 says Ms. Gass. 鈥淲e鈥檙e their neighbors.鈥

Not everyone agrees. One caller to C-Span 鈥 which aired nearly the entire convention 鈥 said the sight of primarily white and older self-described 鈥減atriots鈥 frightened her. She said the gathering looked like a lynch mob.

But the fact is that the 200-plus old-school reporters attending the convention is giving the potent but inchoate movement something it craves and, ultimately, needs: respect.

That includes a Swedish radio reporter who sent an earnest piece back to Sveriges Radio on Friday, explaining how a modern-day tax revolt movement that appeared at first to be woefully fringe is looking more and more mainstream.

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