Tucker Carlson home studio reportedly dismantled
by Fox News workers
Daily Mail report says construction workers ‘took the
set, all the equipment, everything’ from Maine studio network built for him
Martin
Pengelly in New York
@MartinPengelly
Wed 24 May
2023 18.20 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2023/may/24/tucker-carlson-fox-news-home-studio-maine-dominion
As Tucker
Carlson prepares to take his show to Twitter, workers from Fox News, the
network which fired the primetime opinion host last month, have reportedly
dismantled the home studio it built him in Maine.
“Fox came
in last week and got all their shit out of there,” DailyMail.com quoted Patrick
Feeney, who it said was managing work to rebuild the studio, as saying.
“They took
the set and everything, all the equipment, the chairs, the desk, the fake
walls, everything.”
Fox News
has not commented on Carlson’s firing beyond its initial statement on the day
it happened, 24 April.
Then, the
network said: “Fox News Media and Tucker Carlson have agreed to part ways. We
thank him for his service to the network as a host and prior to that as a
contributor.”
On
Wednesday, a Fox spokesperson declined to comment on the Daily Mail report.
Carlson was
fired in the aftermath of a $787.5m settlement of a $1.6bn defamation lawsuit
brought against Fox News by Dominion Voter Systems, over the broadcast of
Donald Trump’s lies about voter fraud in the 2020 election.
Amid proliferating
speculation about why Carlson was fired, Variety recently reported that a Fox
board member told Carlson his firing was a condition of the Dominion
settlement.
“The
unnamed board member told Carlson that the condition does not appear in any of
the settlement’s documents, and instead was a verbal agreement,” Variety said.
“If Fox
didn’t comply, the settlement was off, Carlson was told. Dominion had plenty of
leverage given that the $787.5m deal to settle Dominion’s defamation suit
against the network wouldn’t officially close until late May.”
However, a
Dominion spokesperson told the Guardian the full settlement sum was received on
18 April, two days before the case was closed and six days before Carlson was
fired.
The
spokesperson pointed to comments earlier this month in London in which John
Poulos, the Dominion founder and chief executive, told the Sir Harry Evans
Global Summit in Investigative Journalism: “By the time we left the courtroom,
they had wired the money.”
Carlson
announced his planned move to Twitter on 9 May, promising “a new version of the
show we’ve been doing for the last six and a half years” but offering few
specifics.
The status
of his contract with Fox News remains in question.
On
Wednesday, the Mail said Carlson, 54, was working with a three-man construction
crew to rebuild his studio in Woodstock, Maine, after the visit from Fox. The
site published pictures of Carlson dressed in a plaid shirt and work vest and
carrying a sizable axe.
“There’s no
hardware in place at all,” the crew member, Feeney, was quoted as saying.
“There’s not even an infrastructure for a TV studio for a long time.”
He added:
“We just came to clean it up and get it looking like something again. There’s
no imminent venture. We’re just getting ready in case something does happen.
There’s nothing we’re doing other than cleaning the place up, shoring up the
walls, making it look good again.”
Feeney also
told the Mail Carlson had “just got back late last night after meeting with
lawyers and all that stuff. As you can imagine, he’s very, very busy right
now.”

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