Media | Sunday morning talk shows Stop Sunday 'Coffee Hour,' Start Fact-Checking Sunday shows should put guests 'at a maximum disadvantage' By Matt Cantor Posted Dec 30, 2009 9:25 AM CST Copied In this photo provided by CBS, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner appears on CBS's "Face the Nation" in Washington, Sunday, April 5, 2009. (AP Photo/CBS Face the Nation, Karin Cooper) How do we give Sunday morning shows some bite when they’d prefer to stick to the role of “amiable, risk-free coffee hour”? One media expert suggests a midweek online fact check of what was said over the weekend—but why wait ‘til Wednesday? asks Jason Linkins in the Huffington Post. Instead, Linkins suggests, have “a small army of fact-checkers” on the spot. Instead of maintaining some “sporting” notion that guests and hosts “should be on equal footing,” the goal of such shows should be to put guests “at a maximum disadvantage,” Linkins writes. “At the very least, the producers of these shows should be capable of calling out anything that doesn't pass the ‘Look What You Can Find On Google Within Thirty Seconds Test.” Read These Next Two photos show 'person of interest' in Kirk shooting. Disturbing video of Charlie Kirk shooting was spreading online. Videos may have captured the shooter of Charlie Kirk on a roof. Moment of silence for Kirk ends in House shouting match. Report an error