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WHERE'S DONIE? CNN's Emmy-Nominated 'Extremism' Reporter Goes Missing Amid Outburst of Left-Wing Violence

Donie O'Sullivan is a senior correspondent for CNN who purports to be an expert on political "extremism" in America. The esteemed journalist earned an Emmy nomination for his three-part series, MisinfoNation: Extreme America, in which he traveled "around the country meeting far-right extremists with a long history of hate." For some reason, O'Sullivan has been remarkably uninterested in covering the ongoing outburst of left-wing violence in this country.

By Andrew Stiles·
WHERE'S DONIE? CNN's Emmy-Nominated 'Extremism' Reporter Goes Missing Amid Outburst of Left-Wing Violence

Update: O'Sullivan has finally surfaced. Sort of. He appears to have been hard at work producing a new segment for CNN. Does it have anything to do with the alarming outbursts of left-wing violence? No, of course not. He went to a conference of UFO enthusiasts and spoke to a "UFO lobbyist" who thinks Donald Trump will soon confirm the existence of alien life. "Greetings, do you all come in peace?" he told a group of freaks getting off a bus in the California desert. "We're all Earthlings here." 

O'Sullivan has made clear that he finds the concept of left-wing extremism and political violence to be rather giggle-inducing. In one episode of his Emmy-nomited series, he conducted a friendly interview with Taylor Lorenz, the demented former New York Times journalist who accused Joe Biden of commiting "genocide" by refusing to impose COVID-related mask mandates. They discussed how Lorenz and other left-wing freaks were fawning over Luigi Mangione, the cold-blooded assassin who gunned down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

O'Sullivan and Lorenz, who admitted feeling "joy" upon learning of Thompson's death, casually joked about how Mangione had become a radical chic sex symbol. "Like, here's this man who's revolutionary, who's famous, who's handsome, who's young, who's smart," Lorenz said of the accused murderer. "He's a person that seems like this morally good man, which is hard to find [deranged laughter]." O'Sullivan quipped that "women will literally date an assassin before they swipe right on me." Since their lighthearted discussion about why murderers who espouse left-wing politics are "morally good," Lorenz has accused Pete Buttigieg of supporting "far-right eugenics" (for lamenting the Democratic Party's efforts to keep schools closed during the pandemic) and argued that the United States "deserved" 9/11.

(CNN)

It's not the first time a celebrated CNN reporter has mysteriously disappeared. The network's premier fact-checker, Daniel Dale, went missing for several weeks in the fall of 2021, and again in December 2022, presumably because he had nothing to do. After all, a Democrat was president and Donald Trump was still banned from social media. Like O'Sullivan, Dale is hyper-focused on covering right-wing personalities and random Facebook users. Even after he returned from his "vacations," Dale was not very interested in fact-checking Joe Biden or other Democrats, but he continued to diligently investigate claims from "conservative tweeters" and "right-wing circles" and, in one instance, an "anarcho-nihilist" bodybuilder.

CNN has struggled to regain the magic it briefly captured during the first Trump administration, when colorful anti-Trump personalities such as Michael Avenatti (now a convicted felon) dominated the airwaves. Earlier this week, CNN parent company Warner Bros. Discovery announced it was splitting off the network from its more profitable streaming business, a move that mirrors the spinoff of failing left-wing network MSNBC from parent company Comcast.