OPINION
DAVID
FRENCH
Why Fox News Lied to the Viewers It ‘Respects’
Feb. 26,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/26/opinion/fox-news-lies-dominion.html
David
French
By David
French
Opinion
Columnist
There are
some stories that are important enough to pause the news cycle and linger on
them, to explore not just what happened, but why. And so it is with Fox News’s
role in the events leading up to Jan. 6, 2021. Thanks to a recent filing by
Dominion Voting Systems in its defamation lawsuit against Fox, there is now
compelling evidence that America’s most-watched cable news network presented
information it knew to be false as part of an effort to placate an angry
audience. It knowingly sacrificed its integrity to maintain its market share.
Why? There
are the obvious reasons: Money. Power. Fame. These are universal human
temptations. But the answer goes deeper. Fox News became a juggernaut not
simply by being “Republican,” or “conservative,” but by offering its audience
something it craved even more deeply: representation. And journalism centered
on representation ultimately isn’t journalism at all.
To
understand the Fox News phenomenon, one has to understand the place it occupies
in Red America. It’s no mere source of news. It’s the place where Red America
goes to feel seen and heard. If there’s an important good news story in Red
America, the first call is to Fox. If conservative Christians face a threat to
their civil liberties, the first call is to Fox. If you’re a conservative
celebrity and you need to sell a book, the first call is to Fox.
And Fox takes
those calls. In the time before Donald Trump, I spent my share of moments in
Fox green rooms and pitching stories to Fox producers. I knew they were more
interested in stories about, say, religious liberty than most mainstream media
outlets were. I knew they loved human-interest stories about virtuous veterans
and cops. Sometimes this was good — we need more coverage of religion in
America, for example — but over time Fox morphed into something well beyond a
news network.
Fox isn’t
just the news hub of right-wing America, it’s a cultural cornerstone, and its
business model is so successful that it’s more accurate to think of the rest of
the right-wing media universe not as a collection of competitors to Fox, but
rather as imitators. From television channels to news sites, right-wing
personalities aren’t so much competing with Fox as auditioning for it.
Take, for
example, the online space. Fox News is so dominant that, according to data from
December, you could take the total traffic of the next 19 conservative websites
combined, and still not reach half of Fox’s audience.
But that
kind of loyalty is built around a social compact, the profound and powerful
sense in Red America that Fox is for us. It’s our megaphone to the culture. Yet
when Fox created this compact, it placed the audience in charge of its content.
During the
Trump years, Fox faithfully upheld its end of the bargain. If you were
Republican and felt embattled for supporting Donald Trump, a quick visit to Fox
(especially in prime time) would calm your mind and soothe your soul. There
you’d be reminded that the Democrats are the real radicals. That the Democrats
are the true threat to America. And if you voted for Trump even though you were
uncomfortable with some of his conduct, it was only because “they” forced your
hand.
As the
Trump years wore on, the prime-time messaging became more blatant. Supporting
Trump became a marker not just of patriotism, but also of courage. And what of
conservatives, like myself, who opposed Trump? We were “cowards” or “grifters”
who sold our souls for 30 pieces of silver and airtime on MSNBC.
Our
disagreement was cast as an act of outright betrayal. People like me had
allegedly turned our backs on our own community. We had failed in our
obligation to be their voice.
So you can
start to understand the shock when, on Election Day in 2020, Fox News
accurately, if arguably prematurely, called Arizona for Joe Biden. It broke the
social compact. By presuming the fairness of the election and by declaring Joe
Biden the winner of a previously red state, Fox sent a message to its own
audience — an audience that had been primed to mistrust election results by
Trump and by reports on Fox News — that it did not hear them. It did not see
them.
In the
emails and texts highlighted in the Dominion filing, you see Fox News figures,
including Sean Hannity and Suzanne Scott and Lachlan Murdoch, referring to the
need to “respect” the audience. To be clear, by “respect” they didn’t mean
“tell the truth” — an act of genuine respect. Instead they meant “represent.”
Representation
can have its place. Fox’s deep connection with its conservative audience means
that it can be ahead of the rest of the media on stories that affect red states
and red culture.
But there
is a difference between coming from a community and speaking for a community.
In journalism, the former can be valuable, but the latter can be corrupt. It
can result in audience capture (writing to please your audience, not challenge
it) and in fear and timidity in reporting facts that contradict popular
narratives. And in extreme instances — such as what we witnessed from Fox News
after the 2020 presidential election — it can result in almost cartoonish
villainy.
There are
courageous reporters at Fox. We learned some of their names in the Dominion
filing. They were the people who had the courage to tell the truth. But then
there are the leaders, and the prime-time stars. Tough? Courageous? Hardly.
When push comes to shove, they embody the possibly apocryphal remark of the
French revolutionary Alexandre Auguste Ledru-Rollin: “There go the people. I
must follow them, for I am their leader.” And follow them they did, straight
into a morass of lies and conspiracy theories that should undermine Fox’s
credibility for years to come.
.
David
French is a New York Times Opinion columnist. He is a lawyer, writer and
veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom. He is a former constitutional litigator,
and his most recent book is “Divided We Fall: America’s Secession Threat and
How to Restore Our Nation.” @DavidAFrench
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