Posted on 06/20/2005 8:05:50 AM PDT by coffee260
I work for Fox News as a commentator. I say whatever I want. I'm the blonde on the left, figuratively and literally the one who's usually smiling because it's television, not the Supreme Court or Congress, and I find civility more effective in any event.
Besides, why shouldn't I be smiling? Prior to working for Fox, I worked for ABC and NBC, spent a lot of time at CNN and almost ended up at CBS. I worked for a bunch of local stations in Los Angeles and had a talk radio show at KABC for six years. Story Continues Below
In other words, I'm lucky enough to have been around, and Fox News is the best place I've ever worked. I get paid well and treated with respect, and I have job security, which in this business is almost unheard of. More important, the older I get, the more the personal stuff matters. When I got caught at last year's convention in a swirl of missed car connections and painful memories, leaving me on street corners without rides at night when old fears returned, Sean Hannity picked up his own phone and ordered a car for me 24 hours a day on his own dime.
I've come to expect the jabs at Fox News since, being a liberal, I get more than most. I work there in part because, six or seven years ago, they offered me a better deal than NBC at the time; and because, as a feminist and a Democrat, I think it's particularly important to have a dialogue with people who aren't already members of the same choir I am, since that is the way we will ultimately have to win elections.
I also work there because of my respect for Roger Ailes, the man who created it, and hired me, and to whom I am extremely loyal for reasons having nothing to do with ideology and everything to do with integrity.
The jabs have gotten louder with success. No surprise there. When you get to No. 1 as fast and as impressively as Fox News has, it's a bull's-eye, and Roger would be the last person in the world to expect his competitors to go gently.
But things have taken a personal turn in the last week or so, as the targets have shifted from the institution as a whole to the individuals within it, including some of the most talented people at Fox News. The criticisms have gotten personal, the tone has changed, the volume is up, and the value is down. Neil Cavuto? Brian Wilson? Under attack by a Washington press corps for not probing enough on Iraq (Cavuto) and being too tough on Howard Dean (Wilson)? Give me a break.
Don't get me wrong: I'm not worried about Fox being hurt by this. Quite the contrary. If history is a guide, every time Fox News gets attacked, ratings go up.
More people will watch Cavuto, not fewer.
More people will be looking for Wilson, not fewer.
Neil Cavuto, Fox News' brilliant anchor, sat down to do an interview with George Bush last week on his business show. He didn't discuss Iraq. Neil doesn't cover Iraq. As far as I know, he had nothing new to ask him, nothing new to add and no important new question to pose, and the president had nothing new to say on the topic. There was no news to be made.
So he didn't use the opportunity either to beat up on the president or to let him say something we'd heard a hundred times. Instead, he asked him questions he didn't know the answer to, where he might get an answer he hadn't already heard.
For this, he has been summarily beaten up by the press corps all week the same press corps that still can't figure out why it got it all wrong about those weapons of mass destruction that justified the war, but would rather have Neil Cavuto ask a pointless question of the president than ask the hard questions of itself.
Then there's Brian Wilson's great sin. In his case, the problem wasn't NOT asking a question, but trying too hard to ask tough ones of the Senate minority leader and the party chairman, who had joined together to make it look as if there was no problem when there very obviously was.
That, and using a swear word in answering a question from a Washington Post reporter Brian himself later admitted that he wished he'd known it was a Post reporter.
The Dean charge is, of course, the more serious one, particularly since the party chairman has taken to attacking Fox News in recent days. There certainly is disagreement among Democrats as to whether party leaders such as Joe Biden and John Edwards should have gone public with the obvious criticism that Dean had gone too far in calling Republicans a party of white Christians who don't work.
But I'm hard-pressed to think of anybody who will tell you privately that in the midst of debates about such issues as Social Security and the deficits, it's a good idea for the party leader to be turning himself into the issue by engaging in class and religious warfare.
This is precisely what congressional leaders and Dean agreed that Dean would not do when he became the chair of the party. He was supposed to leave the message to them. Having not done so, and having been criticized for it by two possible presidential candidates neither of whom are even conservatives Sen. Reid was trying to put the perennial good face on a bad situation, while Brian Wilson was trying to puncture it.
That's what the press is supposed to do, last time I checked. If being obnoxious was a disqualification for being a member of the Washington press corps, it would a lonely crowd.
Former Gov. Dean, asked to respond to Vice President Cheney's comments about him to Fox's Sean Hannity, said, "My view is that Fox News is a propaganda outlet for the Republican Party, and I don't comment on Fox News."
Three times as many people watch Fox every day as watch CNN. There were certainly times during the last campaign where I disagreed with decisions made by young producers working at Fox. But without exception, every time I raised an issue, I won I saw it as my job to teach off the air, as much as to talk on the air. If anyone disagreed, the joke was that I would tell them to set their stopwatches and transfer me to Roger, so they could time how long it would take me to get their decisions reversed.
It never came to that, but everyone understood the commitment to not make decisions that would even give the appearance that Dean so cavalierly bandies about.
Is Fox News different than the other places I've worked? Sure. It would be silly of me to suggest otherwise. But all of the rest were pretty much alike, which is the larger point that Dean ignores.
bump.
Thanks for the ping!
It's easy, Susan has the deeper voice!!
Pray for W and Our Troops
Her party needs this woman very, very badly. I'm passed being angry at the left. I'm now simply agog. I can't believe what I see coming from that side of the aisle.
I can't.
They simply have nothing to suggest. Fine, disagree with everything that the right stands for - but what's your plan?
This woman might be protecting the very last shred of any integrity - personal, intellectual, or otherwise, that exists on the left.
This was refreshing to read.
I'm beginning to feel that the left is so far gone that they threaten national security. The worse it gets for the left, the bigger the threat.
I don't believe ever word that comes out of a lefties mout, as apparently you do. i understood exactly what she was up to. I just didn't swallow.
Uh, yeah, great answer there, Marty.
This is the problem, so many conservs are against fighting, or even standing up for what they believe, that all a card carrying socialist Dum has to do is spew a few kind words and everyone falls all over themselves forgiving them. Not me.
bttt
Don't believe it.
He's trying to cover.
"Last I heard she was picking on the ill Michael Kinglsey"
What's wrong with Michael Kingsley? He's sick? What's wrong with him, physically, that is.
I wonder if Fox hires Margaret Carlson (heaven help us). She'll be on the loose now as Capital Gang is folding as of this weekend on CNN (last show). So Mark Shields, Carlson, and Kate O'Bierne(sp?) will all need new jobs. As may Al Hunt. Will be interesting to see where they pop up. Rita Cosby from Fox ended up over on MSNBC, on Keith Olbermann's show. No loss there.
She was the victim of a violent rape many years ago. I'm sure that helped mold her views on abortion. She's a sharp cookie, but I don't agree with her political views. Very entertaining to watch, though.
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