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Cable's War Coverage Suggests a New 'Fox Effect' on Television
NY Times ^ | April 16, 2003 | JIM RUTENBERG

Posted on 04/16/2003 5:59:35 PM PDT by Pharmboy

The two commentators were gleeful as they skewered the news media and antiwar protesters in Hollywood.

"They are absolutely committing sedition, or treason," one commentator, Michael Savage, said of the protesters one recent night.

His colleague, Joe Scarborough, responded: "These leftist stooges for anti-American causes are always given a free pass. Isn't it time to make them stand up and be counted for their views?"

The conversation did not take place on A.M. radio, in an Internet chat room or even on the Fox News Channel. Rather, Mr. Savage, a longtime radio talk-show host, and Mr. Scarborough, a former Republican congressman, were speaking during prime time on MSNBC, the cable news network owned by Microsoft and General Electric and overseen by G.E.'s NBC News division.

MSNBC, which is ranked third among cable news channels, hired the two shortly before the war in Iraq, saying it sought better political balance in its programming. But others in the industry say the moves are the most visible sign of a phenomenon they call "the Fox effect."

This was supposed to be CNN's war, a chance for the network, which is owned by AOL Time Warner, to reassert its ratings lead using its international perspective and straightforward approach.

Instead, it has been the Fox News Channel, owned by the News Corporation, that has emerged as the most-watched source of cable news by far, with anchors and commentators who skewer the mainstream media, disparage the French and flay anybody else who questions President Bush's war effort.

Fox's formula had already proved there were huge ratings in opinionated news with an America-first flair. But with 46 of the top 50 cable shows last week alone, Fox has brought prominence to a new sort of TV journalism that casts aside traditional notions of objectivity, holds contempt for dissent and eschews the skepticism of government at mainstream journalism's core.

News executives at other networks are keeping a wary eye on Fox News, trying to figure out what, if anything, its progress will mean to them.

"I certainly think that all news people are watching the success of Fox," said Andrew Heyward, president of CBS News. "There is a long-standing tradition in the mainstream press of middle-of-the-road journalism that is objective and fair. I would hate to see that fall victim to a panic about the Fox effect."

The American news media have been here before. Newspaper headlines in World War II clearly backed the Allies. In 1944, The New York Times used the following headline above a photo essay about an air raid: "We Strike at the Japs."

But until Fox News, television news had rarely taken that sort of tone, though opinion has broken through at times. The major networks were first considered bullish on the Vietnam conflict. Then Walter Cronkite editorialized against it.

Still, for all the claims of disinterest from network anchors and correspondents, conservatives believed that they were masking liberal bias.

Rupert Murdoch played off that suspicion when he started the Fox News Channel in 1996, declaring it would take both sides of the political spectrum into account while overtaking CNN. Fox kept most of its political commentary to its prime-time schedule, which it called the equivalent of a newspaper's opinion page.

After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, though, Fox News Channel covered the fighting in Afghanistan with heavy patriotism, referring to "our troops" who were fighting "terror goons." Fox jumped to first in the cable news ratings in January 2002.

The channel has now taken its brand of pro-American journalism to a new level. One recent night, a correspondent in Iraq referred to war protesters as "the great unwashed."

After the first statue of Saddam Hussein fell in Baghdad, Neal Cavuto, an anchor, delivered a message to those "who opposed the liberation of Iraq": "You were sickening then, you are sickening now." Another Fox anchor, John Gibson, said he hoped Iraq's reconstruction would not be left to "the dopey old U.N."

CNN's ratings also rose during the war, to 2.65 million average daily viewers, from 610,000, but CNN trailed Fox, which had 3.3 million. Though MSNBC remained in third place with 1.4 million, it saw its share of the cable news audience grow, and for the first time in years had a sense of momentum.

Fox News executives would not comment for this article, beyond contending that their channel's success had more to do with its reporting than its editorial approach. They noted, for instance, that Fox showed the first live reports from the push to central Baghdad and from Mr. Hussein's palace there.

Fox's success initially seemed to push CNN to reconsider its editorial direction. In 2001, the network's former chairman, Walter Isaacson, made a public show of meeting with Republican leaders in Washington to discuss CNN's perceived liberal bias. Like Fox News and MSNBC, CNN featured an American flag on its screen after Sept. 11.

Since CNN's new chief, Jim Walton, took over last winter the network has reaffirmed its role as an international news network. It is the only one of the three cable-news networks without a flag on its screen now.

MSNBC, on the other hand, has added several features to capture more conservatives, who, along with moderates, make up a larger share of the cable news audience than do liberals, according to analysts.

MSNBC has patriotic flourishes throughout the day. Along with the regular screen presence of an American flag, Mr. Bush's portrait is featured on MSNBC's main set and an "America's Bravest" studio wall shows snapshots of men and women serving in Iraq.

Neal Shapiro, the NBC News president, said MSNBC hired Mr. Scarborough and Mr. Savage to add political equilibrium to its lineup of hosts. Before the war, Mr. Shapiro said, all of them — Chris Matthews, Phil Donahue, Bill Press and Pat Buchanan — opposed the war. Mr. Donahue's program was canceled in February.

"If you have a range of opinion that leaves out a whole part of the country," Mr. Shapiro said, "you're unintentionally sending a message that `you are not welcome here.' "

Erik Sorenson, MSNBC's president, said it was trying to differentiate its report from what he called a mainstream style of automatic questioning of the government.

"After Sept. 11 the country wants more optimism and benefit of the doubt," Mr. Sorenson said. "It's about being positive as opposed to being negative. If it ends up negative, so be it. But a big criticism of the mainstream press is that the beginning point is negative: `On Day 2, we're in a quagmire.' "

MSNBC's programming moves were welcomed by L. Brent Bozell III, founder of the Media Research Center, a conservative media analysis group. "What Fox is doing, and frankly what MSNBC is also declaring by its product, is that one can be unabashedly patriotic and be a good news journalist at the same time," Mr. Bozell said.

Still, MSNBC's moves have news executives and some liberal critics worried that Fox's success will push TV news too far from a neutral tone.

"I'm a huge believer in the forces of the market and the audience's ability to make choices among various channels," Mr. Heyward of CBS said. "What I would not like to see happen is legitimate debate stifled, or journalists' skepticism, heated journalistic inquiry, somehow dampened by a flock of Fox imitators."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: foxnews; liberalhypocrisy; mediabias; newnormal
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To: freedom4me
That's the same reason I'm for it. We are of one mind on this issue.
101 posted on 04/16/2003 10:10:22 PM PDT by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Babu
It's laziness. It's always easy to take the cheap shots, the easy-one-liners, etc. More than just Savage lapsing into that on the right.

I speak from experience...I made a decision a long time ago to tone down my rhetoric and get the blue out of my writing (don't ask me where I write, cuz I can't answer :p), and it's tough. It's always tempting to rant. But what good does a rant do, except for the choir? It's not going to change anybody's mind, perception, or even make them think. The goal is to get writers out there who are so good you read them even if you disagree with them (same with TV pundits). Anyway, all that being said, it's hard to get yourself out of the "ranthole", as it were, once you put yourself in there, but he should at least be trying to claw up the walls to APPROACH intellectual debate. ;-)
102 posted on 04/16/2003 10:15:32 PM PDT by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Kip Lange
I think you're right, M. Savage has lapsed into the "art of the rant and the cheap shot". He calls just about every public figure names, even conservatives! I wonder if anyone pleases him for more than 5 minutes. Basically he is what he claims he isn't, a "shock jock". And it appears to me that his recent rapid success with his book, TV show and all has swollen his brain to the point where sometimes I wonder if he has to calm himself down just to get his noggin through a doorway. I criticize his behavior because I do feel he has a great mind, but then . . . "a mind is a terrible thing to waste"
103 posted on 04/16/2003 10:27:35 PM PDT by Babu
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To: Pharmboy
They are having a fit because of the fact that we now have a choice. That drives the socialists absolutely crazy. They are angry that any view other than their own is allowed. (For example, listen to Tim Robbins.). That's, in part, why they create all sorts of things that serve to limit speech (political correctness, hate speech, etc.).

The conservatives who for years were forced to watch CNN now have moved to Fox. The majority of CNN's viewers were probably always more conservative than it was, and now they are finally realizing that fact.

104 posted on 04/16/2003 10:28:20 PM PDT by Fraulein (Will the real Slim Shady please stand up?)
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To: Fraulein
For example, listen to Tim Robbins

Side note: How long do you think he worked on the "brilliant" "19th Century Fox" remark? I bet coming up with that one taxed his poor brain to the limit (and I bet he thought he was REALLY funny, too...poor man. :p).

As for the rest of your post, yep, bingo. I'd also add that these are Fabian Socialists -- they can't believe we'd listen to "common rabble". ;-)

105 posted on 04/16/2003 10:49:15 PM PDT by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Babu
Or (now, I love the guy, so no flames :p) if you're Dan Quayle: "The mind is a terrible thing to...lose...or...that is...to lose one's mind...is very wasteful". ;-)

(poor guy, he really got pilloried, but man, did he have a knack for foot-in-mouth disease...)
106 posted on 04/16/2003 10:51:28 PM PDT by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Babu
He's on the record as saying he's NOT a shock jock?

Bah. He just lost more points with me. :-(
107 posted on 04/16/2003 10:53:16 PM PDT by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Dog Gone; handy
Unbelievably, MSNBC is starting to get it.

Yes, I must admit this has probably been one of the most remarkable outcomes of the war!

108 posted on 04/17/2003 6:02:52 AM PDT by livius (Let slip the cats of conjecture!)
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To: narvi
...but....but.....Mike would like you to play The Bandit, so we can enjoy their extensive 34 song playlist! He likes hearing "Whole Lotta Love " seven times in eight hours. Angel would like you to play more K-Buena so he can pick up some more gutter Spanish to impress the obese divorcees at L and J's. Big John would like a triple meat Whataburger and a diet drink to wash it down with. Oh, and 4 Zebra Cakes for dessert. Me? I'm good "widdit"......it's all good........quit staring at my food!
109 posted on 04/17/2003 5:03:33 PM PDT by gueroloco
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To: CheneyChick
No they don't get it...mebbe they'll figger it out when they're on the Early Bird Special line somewhere in Broward County in 2017...
110 posted on 04/17/2003 8:09:51 PM PDT by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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To: Kip Lange
I'm not disagreeing with anything you say, just saying maybe you should save your anger for the REAL j**koffs, like, say, Michael Moore.

An idiot is an idiot no matter what his political strip. I wasn't aware that Michael Moore had a Talk Radio or TV show. When is it on the air?

The current crop of blow-dried loud-mouthed entertainers who are using their claimed conservatism to line their pockets with payola are eventually going to destroy the conservative movement. Each new clown that comes along knows that the fastest route to riches is by being the loudest, most virulent talking head on the scene. Eventually one of two things will happen. The public will either begin to equate all conservatives to those blow-dried fools and turn against conservatism entirely or a particuraly articulate con-artist with exceptional skills of persuasion will arrive on the scene to reap havoc.

We don't need entertainers with sky-high salaries to sell conservatism, they can only damage us later.

111 posted on 04/17/2003 8:29:32 PM PDT by FreeLibertarian (You live and learn. Or you don't live long.)
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To: FreeLibertarian
An idiot is an idiot no matter what his political strip. I wasn't aware that Michael Moore had a Talk Radio or TV show. When is it on the air?

I, too, agree that idiots aren't limited by their...strips...uhm...man, you just put an image of Michael Moore and Michael Savage stripping in my head, not fun. :-) (stripe, I know, honest typo, couldn't resist the joke).

Nah, Michael Moore doesn't have a TV show (well, he did get a wee bit of air time at the Academy Awards), just an Oscar.

I see you don't bother to save your vitriol for me, either. ;-) Heh. However, surprise, I'm going to have to back up and agree with you.

The current crop of blow-dried loud-mouthed entertainers who are using their claimed conservatism to line their pockets with payola are eventually going to destroy the conservative movement.

I worry about that myself. Everybody wants to be Rush, but...only Rush is Rush, and charming enough to brush off criticism. The race to become conservative pundit of the week IS worrisome. It leads to op-ed pieces or TV appearances/shows that preach ONLY to the choir. This is pointless. We don't need any more convincing that we're right. We *do* need people who can write or speak effectively enough so that a liberal will listen to them EVEN if they disagree with them. Which is not the case with Savage -- a moderate is going to switch him off right away and file him away under "right-wing nut" in his head. Personally, I don't think he's a nut, but I'm part of the choir; Savage's job is NOT to convince me that his viewpoint is right, since I agree with him (mostly), but to convince the people who DISAGREE with him that he's right. Which he's not good at doing.

On the whole though, I'm just not as ticked as you about Savage, sorry. Too much outrage at too many other things; I only have time for so much, y'know? :-) This ranks rather low on my radar.

112 posted on 04/17/2003 8:50:43 PM PDT by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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