For more than half a century American TV was dominated by three networks – ABC, NBC, and CBS – all doing pretty much the same programming in competition with each other. Then along came cable. CNN, founded in 1980, offered round-the-clock news. Then followed Fox, in 1986, with a distinctly conservative take. And a decade later, from the liberal end, MSNBC.
It’s Fox that has proved most controversial, run for decades by its flamboyant chief Roger Ailes, and giving powerful support to Donald Trump, both as a candidate, and, especially, as President.
It’s a year since Fox News dropped its slogan “Fair and Balanced.” Not because they wanted to confess to being unfair and unbalanced, but as part of a re-branding effort to ditch every memory of Roger Ailes. Ailes, long-time revered founder and, more recently, disavowed sexual predator. It had been his idea so it had to go.
What do these terms mean though, when applied to a private sector cable news company? It’s a free country, and specifically a free speech country. While Britain’s BBC has a legal obligation, backed by taxpayer funding, to be fair and balanced (though not everyone thinks it is), American private sector broadcasters can do pretty much what they like.
But does Fox over-step the mark? Night after night its suave, high-profile, commentators like Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham assault the liberal elites and rally socially conservative opinion. Is it basically propaganda? That’s the claim of more than one recent book. But it’s not so simple.
The site Allsides.com, which conducts blind trials of bias in reporting, notes that “Despite all of the controversy and criticism, commentators, news anchors, and reporters at Fox News Channel have responded that news reporting and political commentary operate independently of each other, and have denied any bias in news reporting.” For example, Shepard Smith, chief news anchor, is known for his intensely critical questioning of conservatives.
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