To a degree. You have to get your media from several sources, however.
Fox News is about as right as you can get. They misinform their viewers, and their viewers get answers to big questions of national significance wrong more than any other network. (As shown by research.) They are probably the least Fair and Balanced of the networks by a long shot (ironic, eh?), and are certainly used as a tool by the Republican Party.
MSNBC news is, apparently, the left's answer to Fox. Not fair or balanced either. They rank with FOX as least fair and balanced.
I rarely watch news on TV. Sometimes I'll watch a show (or debate or election coverage) on PBS, such as the one with Gwen Ifill. She is fair and balanced. (Those on the very right who vilify PBS will disagree.) By the way, the viewers who get the most questions right about the big issues (in the same research that shows that FOX viewers get the least questions right) are the PBS/NPR viewers. So, even if they might lean a little left, they provide accurate information.
Regarding print coverage, you'll need to use a couple of sources. It's generally pretty easy to tell if a newspaper tilts one direction or the other. For example: The Seattle Times is a little right of center and the Seattle PI is a little left. In Las Vegas, the Review Journal is extra right and the Sun (now defunct) was probably left. I would suggest seeking out sources such as The Economist (a little right) and the Christian Science Monitor (a little left) for general reporting. These are also good since they provide a view of the US from outside of the US. Helps to escape the bubble. Since I'm surrounded by the ideas of the left, I like to seek out columnists who are right of center (but not crazy) to balance my ideas. One good example is David Brooks of the NY Times.
For radio, I listen to NPR and similar (OPB, MPB, BBC, PRI, etc.). Yes, I'm sure the vast majority of their employees are liberal/lefties, but they feel obligated to provide both sides of an issue. Which is way more than can be said of most talk radio. One of my favorite times is Friday afternoons when they bring on David Brooks (right) and EJ Dionne (left) to discuss the relevant issues of the day. It can be very enlightening.
Finally, it sounds like there are many on the right who did not get their news from any sources outside of the right's sphere of influence (e.g. Fox, National Review, Glen Beck, etc. and so on.) Many seemed really surprised that Romney lost. It should not have been a surprise, since the polls had been trending toward Obama for several weeks. (Read Nate Silver's Blog 538.) But, these viewers never exposed themselves to media sources outside of their bubble. It kind of begs the question of what other issues have they so deluded themselves about. Climate change is the first issue that comes to mind.
ETA:
Reading some of the responses (after the fact) shows that there is a whole lot of crazy out there. Some folks conspiracy theories regarding all news sources except FOX (that harbinger of the ultimate truth! har har) would be really entertaining if they weren't so sad.