Fox News settles with Dominion – not that viewers
would know it
The network has agreed to pay $787.5m for promoting
election lies, but mentions of the case were few and far between
Sam Wolfson
Sam Wolfson
Wed 19 Apr
2023 17.45 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/apr/19/fox-news-dominion-settlement-news-network-viewers
Fox’s
agreement to pay $787.5m in damages to Dominion Voting Systems is the largest
publicly known defamation settlement in history, and included an acknowledgment
that a news network that has always claimed to be “fair and balanced” had
spread baseless conspiracy theories.
Not that
you’d know about it from actually watching Fox News.
There was a
brief mention of the decision during the network’s “news” hours. Host Neil
Cavuto gave 30 seconds to the story in passing, citing a Wall Street Journal
report about the settlement, before quickly moving on.
Earlier in
the program, media analyst Howard Kurtz was invited on for a brief segment in
which he called the lies about Dominion “obviously false” and “conspiracy
theories” – but said the trial would have revolved around proving it was Fox
News hosts spreading disinformation rather than Trump spokespeople.
And that
was very much that.
As Fox News
moved into its opinion hours – which run from 5pm to however much of late-night
host Greg Gutfeld a human being can stand – there was not a peep about the
Dominion case.
Tucker
Carlson, Fox News’s most popular host, began as he normally does – trying to
make his older white viewers very scared. He showed videos of antisocial behavior
by small groups of mostly black teenagers in Chicago and Compton over the
weekend.
“This is
why we used to shoot looters,” he said over footage of the skirmishes – “in
order to defend the foundation of all that we have … without that we’d be
living in savagery and chaos. In Chicago they already are.”
About the
black teenager Ralph Yarl, who was shot after mistakenly ringing the wrong
doorbell by an 84-year-old white man, Carlson offered: “These kinds of mistakes
do happen, and they’re always sad. Assuming this was a mistake – we don’t know
all the details.” He then admonished Joe Biden for trying to use the incident
to “incite racial conflict”.
There was,
perhaps, a coded mention of the Dominion lawsuit at the end of the program,
when Carlson pleaded with his viewers to ignore other news. “We bid you
goodnight, [and] wish you the best evening with the ones that you love. You can
ignore the noise, because the people around are way more important than the
news media: that’s what we’ve learned today.”
Sean
Hannity and Laura Ingraham, whose programs follow Carlson’s, both led on
“Biden’s war against women’s sports” stoking fears about trans athletes.
Neither mentioned the Dominion case. Finally, Gutfeld, a self-proclaimed
comedian who occasionally strays a little further in his talking points, didn’t
dare go near the story either.
On the Fox
News website there was a short stub about the case that did not mention the
size of the settlement, only that the judge had praised the legal teams of both
parties for their “lawyering”.
It’s
possible the network’s silence on the issue may be a condition of the
settlement, which is private. It also has to prepare for defending itself in
another similar libel trial, brought by the voting technology company
Smartmatic, which is seeking $2.7bn in damages in New York state court.
There was
one famous Fox News personality who was happy to talk about Dominion – the
network’s former No 1 host Bill O’Reilly, who left in 2017 after settling five
sexual harassment lawsuits.
O’Riley,
posting on his own blog, wrote: “Since I left FNC [Fox News Channel], the
template changed from ‘fair and balanced’ to ‘tell the audience what it wants
to hear’.” He said Fox was now being “punished” for its “foolish coverage of
the 2020 election” and called its legal troubles “a disaster”.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário