Fox News in Trouble

I had a lot of fun reading Alternet's report of trouble at Fox News today. As the main cheerleader for the Bush presidency and the war in Iraq, this channel has a lot of blood on its hands, and I'm glad to see they're having trouble keeping their dominance of the cable ratings wars. I also think the fact that the channel's bad fortunes are coinciding with a generally lackluster Republican presidential primary speaks to a deeper, more general distaste for conservatism as a whole, and that's great.

Then again, I don't think it's all over for the channel, or for the conservative movement. The movement is still incredibly well-funded and savvy at using new media, and is fully capable of launching some pretty nasty attacks. We have yet to see how Republicans will do at the congressional level, or at the local and statewide levels. In some ways under-the-radar electoral wins are more dangerous than big-enchilada wins, and a kinda sorta victory at the presidential level should not leave progressives the least bit complicit at other levels.

Moreover, the election is just the beginning of the story. Will a Democratic President and Congress be able to enact progressive laws, or will we have a reprise of the disastrous 1993-94 legislative session? I was just coming of political age back then, and I can easily remember how chillingly effective the vicious conservative media machine - which was still then in nascency - was at stopping progressive reform.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, this piece serves as a warning for progressive TV programmers. Tying our fortunes up too tightly with our favored elected officials opens us up to the dangers of losing audience share if those officials ever lose favor. We shouldn't be the sycophantic cheerleaders Fox News has been. We want progressive TV to be progressive first, and partisan second.

 

Update: Fox won this year's State of the Union coverage, but the margin between Fox and CNN is shrinking.

Comments

Conservative/Liberal

I'm not sure that I agree with the whole conservative/liberal media idea. As a news professional, I know that news judgements are made everyday. It's the news media's job to choose what stories to tell and how to tell them, and I think most of the netwroks manage to get the important stories out daily.

You hit the nail right on

You hit the nail right on the head, the truth is there is a lot of money behind FOX and a lot of interests and power behind it. It's not going to disappear anytime soon...unfortunately.

Free media

There're 3 types of media reporting:- 1. Pure news reporting without much analysis, 2. Reporting news with analysis, 3. Reporting news with partisan bias. If one is reporting news with analysis, there are times when one will be seen as siding a party at SOME point in time. That is inevitable. Therefore, 1 & 2 is acceptable. Unfortunately, Fox seems to be type 3 which is totally undesirable.

Progressive first, partisan

Progressive first, partisan second? Good luck with that one, they're all fatcats looking for some more food, and naturally...they're going to support whomever gives them the most food. Am I making sense or is it time for me to get some sleep!