On Wednesday, while all three network morning shows did cover the latest revelation that over half of Hillary Clinton’s non-government meetings during her time as Secretary of State were with Clinton Foundation donors, the broadcasts also recited Clinton campaign spin dismissing the Associated Press report as “utterly flawed.”

On NBC’s Today, correspondent Andrea Mitchell informed viewers: “The Associated Press reviewing Clinton's calendars as Secretary of State, reporting more than half her non-government visitors or callers were Clinton Foundation donors.” However, moments later, she dutifully touted the effort to undermine the story: “But the Clinton campaign is pushing back hard. Spokesman Brian Fallon saying the story ‘relies on utterly flawed data’ and ‘cherry-picked a limited subset of Clinton’s schedule.’”

Mitchell even helpfully cited an “example”: “...the list included philanthropist Melinda Gates, a donor who’s charities partner with the State Department around the world.” On Tuesday’s NBC Nightly News, she similarly rushed to Clinton’s defense.

On ABC’s Good Morning America, correspondent Tom Llamas only briefly touched on the topic during a segment focused on Donald Trump, noting: “The AP reporting more than half the people outside of government who met with Clinton while she was secretary of state gave money to the Clinton foundation. As much as $156 million.” After the taped report, Llamas made sure to provide the Clinton smear: “The Clinton campaign saying the AP report relied on utterly flawed data. It did not account for more than half of her tenure as secretary. And left out more than 1700 meetings you met with world leaders.”

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During a report for CBS This Morning, correspondent Nancy Cordes highlighted “the new analysis by the Associated Press, which examined Hillary Clinton's daily schedule as Secretary of State and found 85 of the 154 private individuals who got meetings or phone calls with her had donated to the foundation, either personally or through their organization.”

Like her media colleagues, Cordes hastened to push the Democratic nominee’s talking points:

The Clinton campaign fired back, saying the AP report “relied on utterly flawed data which gave a distorted portrayal of the secretary's schedule. They added that meetings with humanitarian Melinda Gates or Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus were squarely in the purview of America's top diplomat.”

Here are excerpts of the August 24 coverage on the three morning shows: