Posted on 07/25/2016 5:23:51 AM PDT by Kaslin
The idea behind the Fox News channels was by no means a stroke of genius; it was actually a stroke of the blazingly obvious. Why not create a cable news network that was explicitly not another Democrat propaganda machine and directly target the 50 percent of Americans the rest of the media either ignores or treats like dirt? The genius of Roger Ailes came in its execution everything from the uniquely hot color palette to the uniquely hot journalists to the (at first) unique mix of opinion and straight reporting, all backed by a lean, mean organization that produced great reporting and huge profits. (Disclosure: I occasionally appear as an unpaid guest on Fox and Fox Business and I have friends associated with both).
With the resignation of Ailes the merits, if any, of the claims against him will be litigated elsewhere liberals are gleeful that this might finally be their chance to silence the one great television voice of conservatism. It is almost impossible to overstate the impact of Fox on conservatism over the last two decades. Combined with talk radio and the internet, Fox has helped educate and mobilize a generation of conservative leaders and has given voice to tens of millions of people the rest of the media completely disregarded when it wasnt actively attacking them. Its been a finishing school for conservatives many rising conservative stars got their start either on air or behind the scenes. The organization itself is remarkable in its efficiency when you deal with Fox, they not only get things done right (its a high pressure environment and if you cant cut it, theres no safe space) but remain remarkably polite. No wonder liberals freak out at the mere mention of Fox; its always delightful to see President Faily McWorsethancarter whining about the one big network that refuses to acknowledge his awesome awesomeness.
But the fact is that Roger Ailes was not going to run the networks forever changes in leadership were coming regardless and that they came during an election year when everyone is looking may make it less likely that we see a lurch to the left its viewers fear. Of course, it would never be called a lurch to the left but, rather, a moderation or an attempt to expand the viewership. Yet its hard to see how, or why, one would want to expand the viewership beyond Foxs tiny little niche of only half the population. Fox has so much influence, and makes so much money, because its the only big player the space between the coasts.
However, the left cant tolerate any dissent, and it will do all it can to try to ensure that Fox becomes yet another dull, goose-stepping transcriptionist for the coastal liberal elite. If Fox wants to stay successful, it will need to resist the urge to be assimilated into the collectivist media collective. There are eager, currently smaller players like the Blaze, NewsMax, and One America Network ready to pounce should the giant stumble after heeding the liberals telling to tie its shoelaces together.
Fox does have problems, but this is an opportunity to address them. Its demographic is skewing older you see a lot of ads for mail-order catheters. Some of the hosts are looking to move on there are rumors that after 20 years Bill OReilly is ready to retire. And Fox is not immune to the schism within conservatism over the rise of the populist wing of the Republican Party. One big chunk of the audience thinks Fox is too Trumpy, another big chunk thinks its nowhere near Trumpy enough.
So, with great presumption, here are some suggestions for navigating the coming changes.
1. Dont change too much too fast. With all eyes on Fox for the election, this is no time for big changes in the wake of Ailess departure. Im a military guy; leadership is the key to success. Ailes built a solid management team. Keep it in place and dont allow anyone to distract from the mission with purges of Ailess guys; focus on performance, not internal politics. Keep the schedule in place too. With all the chaos that has come to characterize 2016, Fox viewers want some stability.
2. Cultivate your current farm team of stars. Recently it seems there are a lot of panels consisting of Fox hosts talking to Fox reporters or other Fox hosts. Lets see more of great up and coming regulars like (Disclosure: These are all my pals) Katie Pavlich, Guy Benson, Dana Loesch, David Wohl, Ben Shapiro and Larry OConnor (who ought to be a host right now). And besides being interesting, they skew young. Well, not OConnor, but the rest of them.
3. Scout for new talent. Fox has always sought out fresh voices, and there are conservative voices out there making waves in radio and on the web who could infuse some new life into some of the older formats. Among other things, Fox producers should be scanning through conservative social media like Twitter to find the people who the people in the Fox target demographic are following. Some may have never been Fox guests; others may not have been on in a while. Here are some you might want to check out (Disclosure: This shameless logrolling for my friends is getting ridiculous): Tony Katz, Stephen Kruiser, Jon Gabriel, Liz Sheld, Owen Brennan, Derek Hunter, Kerry Pickett, David Bruge, Glenn Reynolds, Elisha Krauss, and Kira Davis, among many others.
4. Go steal some talent from the other guys. Youve done well grabbing stars from competitors in the past. Do some more. It strengthens you while it weakens your opponents intermittent, half-hearted attempts at conservative outreach. For example, clearly CNNs Jake Tapper belongs on Fox. Hes the conservatives favorite mainstream media reporter its a sad commentary that a guy who is not a conservative can be generally (though not universally) liked by conservatives simply for trying to play it straight. There are others bring them home.
5. Get out of New York more. The Big Apple is part of the networks identity, but more remote broadcasts (or even basing a show or two in Flyover Country) will remind viewer that you are talking to them and not just to Manhattanites.
6. Experiment more. Greg Gutfelds special insanity has created a distinctive brand of conservative humor. Turn over an hour at o-dark thirty (Side Note: No one in the military says zero dark thirty) to some amusing conservatives (see above), give them a (very) few bucks plus a studio, leave them alone, and see what happens. If its good, conservative social media will spread the word and itll get DVRd and take off.
7. Revel in being rebels. Fox is the media outlet that doesnt run its stories by the establishment for approval. Rub that in your competitors faces and be known as the one big media outlet that isnt a lapdog, especially if we have to endure four years of President Felonia Milhous von Pantsuits corruptoriffic antics.
8. Resist the pressure to moderate. Because, of course, what the left wants is not moderation but capitulation. No one needs a Fox that does not explicitly welcome conservatives all the others are trying to look and feel like you, except for their gratuitous slobbering over whichever lib the Democrat cartel tells them to slobber over in its daily media guidance memo. Keep watching social media and let the viewers tell you whats interesting to them. Dont let your people forget that their one and only job is to earn Foxs audiences approval by ignoring liberal spin and accurately reporting the news. Fox fades if its goal becomes earning the approval of liberals in the mainstream media and at rich peoples cocktail parties. If you remember your mission, Fox will be fine.
Assembling a “panel” of people giving opinions in not news.
Fox has very little factual information to give.
Fox isn’t a news channel.
Fox is a social commentary channel.
My wishful thinking is that Ailes would start a new conservative network and steal talent from Fox.
i thought that's what fox has become ... totally in the tank
My issue with Juan is simply this—I refuse to listen to lies/propaganda—whether they are on TV or in the real world.
I don’t want to debate them, I don’t want to refute them, I want nothing to do with them.
“Fair and balanced” with one person lying does not interest me.
Only an idiot would tamper with Fox News by turning it into a clone of the other networks. Viewership would plummet. The huge success of Fox News isn’t from who is running it, but that it represents the only alternative to the propaganda networks.
I am not in “Rio Lynda” but I am close enough to know
that:
a) The name of the town is Rio Linda.
b) The Rio Linda that Rush knew in the mid 1980s is
most definitely not the same town today. And, even the
Rio Linda he describes was never very different than
semi-rural communities across America, complete with
some unfunctioning cars on concrete blocks in the front
yards.
Nothing wrong with having some fun with long standing
reputations but understanding the underlying reality
is a good thing too.
This year is very much like 1968. Very few people (myself included) "liked" Nixon, but the alternative was unthinkable!
The RINOs already did a good enough job of destroying it.
Quote:
“My wishful thinking is that Ailes would start a new conservative network and steal talent from Fox.”
Ain’t much “talent” at the “News” channel worth a damn. Guilfoyle and Tucker Carlson are a few of the “regulars” i would like to see move over to the Business channel permanently.
Kimberley Guilfoyle and Tucker Carlson are WAY too smart for the stupid shows they are currently featured on. Many “contributors” like Ralph Peters, Monica Crowley, Ebony Williams, etc. belong over at the Business channel as well.
And Trish Regan at FBN is 500 times more appealing than that harpy Megyn Kelly.
The people you cite are openly speaking for Trump now that the choice is clear. IMO its time for O’Reily to do the same. BTW, I agree with you about their abilities, I hope they survive the hard times that are coming.
But I wonder, what happened to Andrea Tantaros? She was backing Trump, (or at least coming to his defense) and wrote a book about current problems with feminism and now where is she?
And what is this concept of a gag order? She is still on the payroll but cannot do an interview?
I have watched a lot of Fox (and Fox Business which is better) but I fear that the changes — Murdoc giving away and Ailes out. Where are they headed?
Tantaros won’t be coming back. I’m guessing she is getting paid by Fox until her contract expires. If she violates the terms of her contract she risks loss of pay in addition to a lawsuit.
Even the New York Times is starting to 'get it'...
"Why Readers See The Times as Liberal"
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/24/public-editor/liz-spayd-the-new-york-times-public-editor.html
We’ll see what happens. FOX News is one of my click & go places. They lost a lot of cred, mostly just entertainment factor now, with snippets of red meat. Web sourcing most of my info these days. Too bad, they could have been in a solid position.
Agree.
FoxBiz is all we have left, as far as major cable news outlets go.
Ailes himself set this self-immolation in motion with all his liberal hires. Within a year FNC will be like the rest.
Yes, I can see that this may be the plan. But the question is still Why?
Andrea, in her book, is not adverse to speaking up. I wonder how much money she would lose to get her message out.
Fox isn’t really conservative but it isn’t a DNC organ like the others.
If they go left, the ratings will tank.
Bartiromo, Varney and Dobbs are the BEST!!!
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