Monday, November 22, 2021

And good for them

Fox News host Tucker Carlson's special on the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol [that relied on fabrications and conspiracy theories to exonerate the Trump supporters who participated in the attack] was the last straw for two network commentators. Stephen Hayes and Jonah Goldberg have resigned [in protest of what they call a pattern of incendiary and fabricated claims by the network's opinion hosts in support of former President Donald Trump].

[...]

Carlson's series on the Capitol insurrection aired on Fox's paid streaming service "Fox Nation" in early November.

"They've begun to fight a new enemy in a new war on terror," Carlson warned his viewers in the first episode. "Not, you should understand, a metaphorical war, but an actual war, soldiers and paramilitary agencies hunting down American citizens."

[...]

Goldberg says that he had been assured by Fox's news leaders that, as Trump left Washington D.C. following his defeat, the network would tamp down on incendiary commentary and claims.

[...]

"It's basically saying that the Biden regime is coming after half the country and this is the War on Terror 2.0," Goldberg tells NPR. "It traffics in all manner of innuendo and conspiracy theories that I think legitimately could lead to violence. That for me, and for Steve, was the last straw."

[...]

According to five people with direct knowledge, the resignations reflect larger tumult within Fox News over Carlson's series "Patriot Purge" and his increasingly strident stances, and over the network's willingness to let its opinion stars make false, paranoid claims against President Biden, his administration and his supporters.

[...]

Fox News also jettisoned the leaders of its political desk, laid off a bunch of researchers and installed a new opinion hour at 7 p.m., shifting news anchor Martha MacCallum from that time to a less visible mid-afternoon slot. The news anchor at 11 p.m., Shannon Bream, was pushed back to midnight in favor of Greg Gutfeld's opinion-driven comedy show. All these moves tilted the channel to even more Trump-friendly content, even as its news programs gently tried to correct the record on the 2020 elections and the siege.

[...]

Asked for comment for this story, Carlson says the departure of the two "will substantially improve the channel."

  NPR

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