And Trump and Spicer brought it right to the fore - and by excluding the fact of the retraction, and the fact that the reporter did that job - they misrepresented it, ie lied about it, to create a false impression of the press.

Slapdash said what I had in mind above: KAC just buttressed Spicer, she doubled down on it, about the MLK bust especially. (On the crowd size the best she could do was 'alternative set of facts' which you and I well know is Orwellian).
Uhm yeah, true, if we consider taking a flamethrower to the truth to paint the press as a villain in an
invented conspiracy.
My point exactly, and yours, we join arms here. Though I'm really wondering whether the right is still 'the right' a this point.
It's contradictory to say 'I hate this thing' but 'I love this thing that it just launched and is a prominent part of.'
You're compartmentalizing here.
- Look: I do think the MLK bust issue is worthwhile discussing especially as I have seen this come up in the 'fake news' claims recently:
If a reporter reports an inaccurate fact, and then retracts or corrects it, that really is ok. It's not a conspiracy against Donald Trump personally. Is it bad journalism? Sure, yes. Let's face it, twitter is apt to put pressure on journalists of all stripes to get a story or fact out in real time. The medium is affecting the content. This is a technological and cultural issue.
I think the reality here is that the Russian report, the IC investigation and the COI problem are bearing down really heavily on Team Trump and they feel the need to destroy the reps of the people reporting on these issues.
So Trump followers are told to disregard the reporters - and their reports - and thus Trump is moving forward, because this minority, a cadre really, of hard core followers will defend and protect him moving forward no matter what happens.