Fox News reporting on possible presidential run by Sarah Palin while showing image of Tina Fey. |
Ailes would like the president and everyone else to keep believing he has that clout. But these days Fox News is the loudest voice in the room only in the sense that a bawling baby is the loudest voice in the room. In being so easily bullied by Fox’s childish provocations, the left gives the network the attention on which it thrives and hands it power that it otherwise has lost. As the post-Obama era approaches, the energy spent combating Ailes might be better devoted to real political battles against more powerful adversaries—not to mention questioning the ideological slant of legitimate news operations like, say, 60 Minutes, which has recently given airtime to a fraudulent account of the murders at Benghazi and to a credulous puff piece on the NSA’s domestic surveillance.
The most interesting news about Fox News is that for some years now it has been damaging the right far more than the left. As a pair of political analysts wrote at Reuters last year, “When the mainstream media reigned supreme, between 1952 and 1988, Republicans won seven out of the ten presidential elections,” but since 1992, when “conservative media began to flourish” (first with Rush Limbaugh’s ascendancy, then with Fox), Democrats have won the popular vote five out of six times. You’d think they’d be well advised to leave Fox News to its own devices so that it can continue to shoot its own party in the foot.
The notion that Fox News has been defeated would seem absurd if you judge solely by the numbers. The year just ended was the network’s twelfth in a row as the most-watched cable-news network. Its number of total viewers surpasses CNN and MSNBC combined. As the longtime Rupert Murdoch–Fox News watcher Michael Wolff wrote of the cumulative 2013 ratings, “Nobody has come close to competing” with Ailes. “He gets larger, everybody else gets lesser.” But as Wolff also observed, “The cable audience, for all the attention heaped on it for its theoretical political sway, is not that large.” To put it mildly. As the overwhelming leader in its field, Fox draws just over a million viewers in prime time—a pittance and a niche next to even the ever-declining network newscasts, of which the lowest rated (CBS Evening News) still can attract a nightly audience as large as 8 million.
Fox News’s political sway in the real world, as opposed to its power to drive MSNBC viewers and their fellow travelers nuts and to generate ridicule from late-night comics, is also on the wane. Speaking to the Television Critics Association in Los Angeles in January, Jeff Zucker, the former NBC chief executive now trying to revive CNN (averaging a mere 568,000 prime-time viewers in 2013), complained like countless before him that Fox is an arm of the GOP “masquerading as a cable-news channel.” It doesn’t take rocket science to figure that out: No fewer than five Republican presidential hopefuls, not to mention Karl Rove and Glenn Beck, were on-camera as paid Fox personalities at the start of the 2012 election season; Murdoch is a GOP donor; and Ailes is a former Republican political operative whose partisan record extends back to his big break as Richard Nixon’s media guru in 1968. But there’s nothing in Fox’s viewership numbers, either in magnitude or in demographic hue, to suggest that there’s a significant number of voting-age Americans who at this point do not already know that Fox News is a GOP auxiliary and view it, hate-watch it, or avoid it accordingly. The masquerade that Zucker seems to find a revelation was unmasked years ago.
This article goes into great detail as to how Ailes and company tried to hide the Fox News agenda in the beginning, and how success made them over confidently reveal their hand and allow the world to see the truth behind their faux reporting and blatant propaganda.
As I mentioned before I am reading Gabriel Sherman's book, "The Loudest Voice in the Room." And what is made very apparent in that book is that Fox News is essentially the Id of Roger Ailes laid bare.
In other words when Roger Ailes ceases to exist, so will Fox News in its current form.
However if Frank Rich is right, and I believe that he is, then it really does not matter how much longer Roger Ailes continues at the helm, because Fox News is already in its death throes.
Now the only question is, if Fox News cannot survive without Roger Ailes, can Roger Ailes survive without Fox News?
"Fox News reporting on possible presidential run by Sarah Palin while showing image of Tina Fey."
ReplyDeleteOOPS LOL
Haha that bitch ain't running for nothing except to the bank.
DeleteAnd, everyone is suspecting she's no longer getting the donations to her PAC as she once did...she doesn't have the individual support anymore.
DeleteI can only hope that the final death rattles come before they are jumping in glee at trying to destroy Hillary. Hang on..Hil..maybe the worst you will have to deal with is Rick Santorum. Please proceed, unemployed hack.
ReplyDeleteI think Fox News is the zombie afterlife of Richard "I am not a crook" Nixon continuing to ratfuck the nation.. The zombie inhabits Roger Ailes, but soon Ailes will leave this mortal coil and the zombie will find a new host. Perhaps Sean Parnell, perhaps Ted Cruz, possibly even Mitch McConnell.
ReplyDeleteSean Parnell? You have to be kidding me - "Captain Zero" has no national following!
DeleteHow can anyone read the comment and think this is entirely serious? Why not suggest your own replacements for Ailes? Charles Manson, Timothy McVeigh, Bart Simpson? GMAFB
DeleteYou'll love this Gryphen!!
ReplyDeleteSarah Palin at Liberty University - An Atheist Strikes Back: http://youtu.be/zhsCilfxY4M via @youtube
SPREAD IT FAR AND WIDE!
HOPEFULLY THE BEETCH WILL GO ABSOLUTELY LOONIE TOON!!!
She WILL see it eventually. Bristol and gang hang on these Anti-Palin Blogs CONSTANTLY.
DeleteHeheheehhheeee!
Link incorrect?
DeleteWorking link is www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhsCilfxY4M
DeleteHow much further can Fox prolong the fear and rage? Not an inch more. Since 2008.
ReplyDeleteIn 2012 a room full of Ole Miss grads were peppering me with questions about Romney's prospects. They were starving for an objective "take." He doesn't stand a chance, and they are lying to you, I said, and quoted Nate Silverman and the Princeton Election Consortium. To a man, they nodded their heads in agreement.
The poor saps were clinging to Nevada. Nevada!
After the election they were in high dungeon, pissed about the results and directing their anger at POTUS and the MSM. You SHOULD be mad, I told them, at the people who lied you. To a man, they nodded their heads in agreement.
I am,
Sincerely Yours,
A Proud Southern Republican.
Unfortunately, Rich's article only makes sense if you forget about everything except the Presidential vote. I side with this view: http://nomoremister.blogspot.com/2014/01/fox-news-cornered-rat-i-know-some-of.html
ReplyDelete"I'm sure the fact that Democrats keep winning (or, in 2000, "winning") presidential elections is great comfort to women under Republican state governments who have to drive a hundred miles to get a legal abortion (and face multiple restrictions beyond that), or poor people in the same states who can't take advantage of the Medicaid expansion in the Affordable Care Act, or blacks who've voted for decades and now can't because they don't drive and can't obtain a birth certificate, all because Fox and other right-wing media outlets keep motivating right-wingers to vote for state and local Republican candidates who spout Fox talking points, even in states Democrats win handily at the presidential level. "
One thing that never gets mentioned is one simple fact: Those who don't share Fox's idiosyncratic extremist point of view have EVERYWHERE ELSE to go for news. So of COURSE Fox has "bigger ratings", their viewership isn't spread across ten or twelve channels.
ReplyDeleteThe sad thing is watching many of those channels compulsively creeping toward the Fox model in a mindless, lemming-like attempt to replicate Fox's "success".
I wouldn't trust Sarah Palin to be president of my condo board, muchless the country.
ReplyDeleteI read the entire argument and I have to agree with much of it. My problem is that Fox (Fake) news is still on the air. Will it die in my lifetime? I'm 58 and I would like to live to see this day, but I don't hold out hope.
ReplyDeleteIn the same vain, I would like to see the end of Sarah Palin as a news maker. Do I have to hear her and now Bristol's whining for the rest of my life? It's like hell right here on earth.
That's one of the best screen grabs EVER!
ReplyDeleteFox's demise will grow exponentially with the decline in population of angry old white guys. Ailes will just be the cherry on that vanilla sundae with whipped creme.