Disinformation surrounding the election’s outcome is desired by Fox’s viewers,

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • PAULYPOKER
    BARRELED IN @ SBR!
    • 12-06-08
    • 36581

    #1
    Disinformation surrounding the election’s outcome is desired by Fox’s viewers,
    not forced upon them.

    As one Republican politician said, “One thing I can’t comprehend is how hungry
    people are to consume lies and to consume disinformation that is not true.”

    What was going on?
    Fox’s split-screen approach, which consists of bouts of honesty during its
    less-influential daytime hours and nonstop falsehoods during its primetime
    programs, is actually kind of ingenious.

    *My political stance
    is null as CNN/MSNBC and all of mainstream media is just as guilty but
    what makes FOX news the most dangerous is the fact they are the only
    source for the entire right wing MSM, meaning there is no conservative media
    competitors to put the Murdoch media empire in check especially during
    the Trump administration as Fox parted ways fired mostly all
    of their main revenue sponges then scripted and designed the Trump administration
    TEAM media which was so ingenious the Murdoch empire was able to control Trump
    flawlessly as a 1,000 stringed puppet......,

    forming their viewers own thoughts out of an unlimited supply of fresh clay...*



    Why Fox News Can’t Afford to Quit Donald Trump
    Eye friendly Links throughout the rest of this OP are in black...
    AT FOX NEWS, a funny thing happened on the road to redemption.


    As Donald Trump fell behind in the presidential vote count, Fox began pivoting away
    from the reality TV star it had backed for so many years. There was an early
    announcement by Fox that
    Arizona had been won by Joe Biden. There was a
    reporter calling Trump’s fraud claims “
    just not true.” And there was an abrupt
    silencing
    of Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany by anchor Neil Cavuto. This seemed
    to be evidence that Fox and the Murdoch family, which owns the network, were
    finally turning on Trump with a weapon they had rarely aimed at him: truthfulness.

    But then, like the
    scorpion that stings the frog in the middle of a stream, Fox did
    what it had always done by nature. Its primetime hosts made a frantic assault
    against the math of ballot counting, arguing against all evidence that Trump was
    right, the voting was rife with fraud, and Biden and antifa were stealing the
    election. The false allegations came night after night from a who’s who of
    delusional
    thinking
    , led by Sean Hannity and including Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham,
    Jeanine Pirro, Jesse Watters, and Mark Levin. The network loved it, putting up a
    promotional spot that highlighted their fabulism.


    What was going on? Fox’s
    split-screen approach, which consists of bouts of honesty
    during its less-influential daytime hours and nonstop falsehoods during its
    primetime programs, is actually kind of ingenious. It allows the network to wear a
    fig leaf of honesty in front of people living in the real world, while continuing to
    throw insane chum into the billion-dollar market for delusions. Nobody is entirely
    happy (there have been protest chants of “
    Fox News sucks”), but the network’s
    ratings
    remain strong.


    Much of the discussion around misinformation has focused on the supply coming
    from Fox News, Facebook, and Twitter. But the latest convolutions speak to
    the
    demand side of the market. Thanks in large part to the decades Fox has
    devoted to inciting and expanding an audience for right-wing content, a lucrative
    market has been brought into existence. Fox’s disinformation is desired by its
    viewers, not forced upon them. In fact, while Fox is contaminating its daytime
    programming with dollops of truth, smaller TV outlets that are fiercely pro-Trump at
    all times, such as Newsmax and One America News, are seeing
    remarkable gains.
    This appetite for political fantasies was noted by Al Schmidt, a city commissioner in
    Philadelphia who forcefully denied unfounded claims that ballots had been cast in
    the name of dead voters. As the Republican
    told CNN, “One thing I can’t
    comprehend is how hungry people are to consume lies and to consume information
    that is not true.”


    Yochai Benkler, the lead author of an excellent book on disinformation “
    Network
    Propaganda
    ,” has devoted much of his life to studying the internet and
    communication. In an interview, he noted that “the market structure of this niche of
    the outrage industry really does discipline the outlets.” He pointed out that the most
    prominent conservative publication that turned on Trump in recent years — the
    Weekly Standard — was
    abruptly closed in 2018. When there’s a choice between
    being truthful and being profitable, it’s an easy call for right-wing media executives.
    “To be surprised that business puts profits ahead of ethics is to miss the
    fundamental spring mechanism of capitalism,” Benkler said.



    But this isn’t just a matter of future revenue for Fox and the Murdochs.
    The primetime fraud clamor has the effect of creating a false narrative that will
    likely deform the U.S. political system for years ahead. About half of Republicans in
    a
    new Reuters/Ipsos poll believe that Trump “rightfully won” the election, and
    according to a
    Politico poll, 70 percent of Republicans do not believe the election
    was free or fair — even though, it bears repeating, there is no evidence of
    widespread voter fraud, and nearly every day another court in the nation tosses out
    another unfounded lawsuit from the Trump campaign. Of course, the campaign’s
    tweets and statements reach an audience without amplification by Fox News, but
    the amplification is
    crucial oxygen that gives vigorous life to the delusions.


    What this means, once Biden is inaugurated in January, is that a bitter portion of
    the electorate will likely regard his presidency as illegitimate — a presidency of
    stolen votes. It takes little imagination to envision four years of far-right
    kneecapping of Biden based on this fraudulent narrative of fraud. It would be a new
    form of birtherism but more virulent and durable because Fox has seeded it so
    deeply and widely — and seems intent to continue doing so. Even if Trump
    shambles off to a post-presidential bog of legal jeopardy and incoherent tweets, the
    Republican Party will have the weapon it needs to inflict the damage it wants.


    In the end, as journalism professor Bill Grueskin
    has noted, it boils down to
    the toxic choices of Rupert Murdoch and his heirs. Fox News is owned and
    controlled by the Murdoch family, which is presided over by its 89-year-old
    patriarch, Rupert, who founded the network in 1996. His oldest son, Lachlan, is now
    the chief executive of Fox’s parent company. Rupert’s five other children —
    Prudence, Elisabeth, James, Chloe, and Grace —
    hold ownership shares of the
    family’s assets but do not currently have any active management responsibilities.
    The Murdoch family is collectively worth about
    $17 billion.


    It’s somewhat understandable why Hannity would shout about election fraud even
    though he must know the charges are bogus. His ratings depend on providing the
    false narratives that his viewers demand; if his audience shrinks, he could lose his
    show and the clamor he clearly adores. The out-of-the-spotlight Murdoch family
    does not have that excuse, because their financial situation and their day-to-day
    lives would not be affected by a ratings decline. They could fire Hannity and Carlson
    and still be assured of possessing enough money to acquire luxury yachts
    and country estates for generations of their spawn.



    What explains the choices of Fox’s owners? The mechanisms of capitalism are
    recalibrated when the law or the markets demand it. The Murdochs have built a
    machine that’s operating as designed — the markets are rewarding them with
    billions of dollars a year while the First Amendment is shielding them from liability
    for
    the damage they cause. The Murdochs are capitalists, Benkler observed, not
    ethicists. “They are sitting on this incendiary device that is burning down the
    house,” he said, “but they are not the first or the last willing to make money off
    destroying lives.”
  • Justin3587
    SBR MVP
    • 08-29-12
    • 2566

    #2
    To be honest, I stopped reading about halfway through because this is literally the same shit CNN or MSNBC would do. Each side is gonna criticize the other and their media networks.

    Disinformation and censorship are all over the board.

    Conservatives news outlets aren't the sole proprietors of this fuckery. CNN and the left's media outlets do this shit on EVERY level ALL DAY every day.
    Comment
    • pavyracer
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 04-12-07
      • 82839

      #3
      Trump is milking his base for donations. Once he lines up his pockets with enough money he will concede.
      Comment
      • navyblue81
        SBR MVP
        • 11-29-13
        • 4143

        #4
        Originally posted by pavyracer
        Trump is milking his base for donations. Once he lines up his pockets with enough money he will concede.
        Actually he’s trying to convince electors to go against the vote and instead cast their vote for him, hence why he’s bringing in state legislators from Pa, Ga and Mich. Remember, it’s ultimately the electors that cast their ballots for President. His plan is if he can convince these legislators that the election was stolen from him, they’d vote against their people.

        Ultimately I do think he’ll concede and transition but it won’t be done gracefully.
        Comment
        • jtoler
          BARRELED IN @ SBR!
          • 12-17-13
          • 30967

          #5
          Originally posted by pavyracer
          Trump is milking his base for donations. Once he lines up his pockets with enough money he will concede.
          lol
          Comment
          • asiagambler
            SBR Hall of Famer
            • 07-23-17
            • 6827

            #6
            <blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I WON THE ELECTION!</p>&mdash; Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1328200072987893762?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" >November 16, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
            Comment
            • Tanko
              SBR Hall of Famer
              • 09-19-09
              • 5143

              #7
              Originally posted by navyblue81
              Actually he’s trying to convince electors to go against the vote and instead cast their vote for him, hence why he’s bringing in state legislators from Pa, Ga and Mich. Remember, it’s ultimately the electors that cast their ballots for President. His plan is if he can convince these legislators that the election was stolen from him, they’d vote against their people.

              Ultimately I do think he’ll concede and transition but it won’t be done gracefully.
              The law doesn't support Trump on these efforts.


              If the Mich legistlature does pick the electors and goes against how the public voted (not likely but possible), by law the governor of Mich is allowed to name the electors and then it is up to congress to decide which set of electors to allow in the electoral college (the legistlature's or the governor's). All of the constitutional lawyers that have commented on the situation (including on Fox) have indicated the governors electors are the one that will be chosen.


              Also, Penn legistlative leaders have already stated on record they will support the public vote when choosing electoral college.


              Besides, Trump would have to pull off this magic trick in at least 3 states to win. I can't see it happening.


              This seems like a waste of time for Trump. It appears he is just doing it to continue to put on a show and make life dificult for Biden and he has to find someone better than Rudy to be his leadman. Rudy is a joke.
              Comment
              • Roger T. Bannon
                SBR Hall of Famer
                • 06-28-18
                • 5139

                #8
                Trump is a wannabe dictator. His fans want him to be dictator. But the R establishment hates his guts so he is out.

                For Trump to be president, you'd need a military coup and then you'd see US tanks being blown up in US cities and that would be embarrassing. Trump is not worth it. If Sanders had won, they might have tried it.
                Comment
                Search
                Collapse
                SBR Contests
                Collapse
                Top-Rated US Sportsbooks
                Collapse
                Working...