It's a good thing there are so many Sunday news talk shows on the air to really represent the diversity of voices and viewpoints America has to offer. If by "diversity of voices and viewpoints" you mean men, with the occasional woman thrown onto a roundtable discussion when the Sunday shows really want to get wild and crazy.
NBC's Meet the Press had Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) and Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD). The show's roundtable discussion included NBC's Andrea Mitchell and the New York Times' Helene Cooper. ABC's This Week had Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and "top Obama adviser" Robert Gibbs. The roundtable discussion included Dee Dee Myers, now of Vanity Fair. CBS's Face the Nation had Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum. The roundtable discussion included CBS's Norah O'Donnell and the Washington Post's Karen Tumulty.
Those are your big three network shows, and on a week when birth control rights were one of the top stories in the news, not a one of their featured guests was a woman. Additionally, of the five women included in roundtable discussions, four were non-partisan, allegedly unbiased reporters, while the men across the table from them included former Republican National Committee Chair Ed Gillespie, on Meet the Press, and conservative columnist George Will and conservative television commentator Lou Dobbs, both on This Week. Only former Clinton press secretary Dee Dee Myers could be considered an opinionated counterpart to those three partisan voices.
Is Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) moonlighting as a booker for the network Sunday shows?