MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 2026
The insult that hasn't quite barked: This morning, starting at 6:17, Joe and Mika reported the classic insulting remark.
It was the last comment recorded on the 47-second videotape recorded by Jonathan Ross. As we noted in Saturday's report, the 47-second videotape went public last Friday. Last Wednesday morning, someone present at the scene had made the remark a second or two after Renee Good was fatally shot.
Good's car was still rolling down the street when the comment was recorded. This morning, featuring one or two misstatements by Joe, here's what the Morning Joe co-hosts reported about the remark:
BRZEZINSKI (1/12/26): Then [Good] was called an "F-ing B" after he [Ross] shot her.
SCARBOROUGH: After he killed her, after he killed her, he’s [sic] then calling her a fucking bitch.
BRZEZINSKI: OK, Joe! Wow.
SCARBOROUGH: That’s what he said!
BRZEZINSKI: I know.
SCARBOROUGH: After he murdered—after he—
I take that back—after he "killed" her. After he killed her, that’s what he called her.
BRZEZINSKI: That’s true.
So said Joe and Mika. You can see the videotape as part of this report by Mediaite.
Two quick corrections / clarifications:
We'd score Joe's initial use of the term "murdered" as a possible deliberate mistake. He knows that "murdered" is a legal term. No one has been charged with murder at this point, let alone convicted.
By standard journalistic norms, he should have said "killed" and left it at that. Presumably, that's why he took his original comment back.
Also this:
As far as we know, no one has established that it was actually Ross who uttered the classic two-pronged insult. It could have been Ross, of course. Or it could have been one of the other ICE officers who had been gathered around Good's car.
That said, the classic insult was quickly delivered, a second or two after Good was fatally shot. Unless you read the New York Times, in which case you've apparently never seen the classic insult reported.
The background goes like this:
At 3:36 this morning, the Times published this updated version of a detailed report:
What We Know About the Fatal ICE Shooting in Minneapolis
The updated report includes an account of the comments which can be heard on the 47-second videotape. But once again, for whatever reason, the Times fails to mention the "fucking bitch" comment in this updated report.
Using the Times search engine earlier today, we were able to find no sign that the Times has ever reported the existence of that classic soul-draining remark.
As we noted in Saturday's report, the Washington Post did report the comment in question as part of a detailed report. This morning, Joe and Mika also reported the remark, with two possible journalistic errors sprinkled in.
We brunched with a lifelong friend on Sunday morning. Like many D.C.-area denizens, he and his wife cancelled their subscription to the Washington Post during one of the Jeff Bezos brouhahas.
His main subscription now is the Times. On Sunday morning, two days after the 47-second tape was released, he was still unaware of the "fucking bitch" remark.
There may be a defendable reason for what the Times has chosen to do. Also, there may not be! All in all, we're frequently puzzled by the "sanitizing" behavior the New York Times seems to perform in matters of this type.
(In its news reporting, we'd say that the Post tends to be much tougher. As we noted on Saturday, the Post gave major prominence the 47-second tape all day Saturday. As of 7 o'clock that morning, the Times seemed to have virtually disappeared the 47-second videotape—seemed to have removed its initial report on the tape from view on its major websites.
Was the ugly two-pronged insult ever delivered that day at all?
Times subscribers will say (and will think) one thing. Post subscribers, and Morning Joe viewers, are likely to think something different.
Some orgs have reported the comment. Other orgs have not. What's the reason for this divergence?
We don't have the slightest idea—and by prevailing rules of the game, no one will ever ask!