Tucker Carlson was Fox News’s biggest star. Then
he became its biggest liability
Margaret
Sullivan
Tucker Carlson will find new ways to spew his toxic
lies. But at least you won’t pay for it on basic cable
Tue 25 Apr
2023 07.18 BST
On any
other day, the revelation that anchor Don Lemon was out at CNN would have been
a big deal in the world of media news.
But Tucker
Carlson’s abrupt toppling from his primetime perch at Fox News not only
overshadowed that development by a mile, but it threw the whole rightwing media
ecosystem into a tailspin.
Carlson has
been far more than a cable-news host over the half-dozen years since he took
that prominent evening slot and became Fox’s most-watched personality.
He has been
America’s chief fomenter of populist resentments, its go-to guy for the
politics of grievance and – despite his smarmy demeanor, and aging prep-school
appearance – he’s been a twisted kind of working-class hero.
“Carlson
has been uniquely dangerous and damaging – the leading figure in the right’s
larger undertaking of making stuff up and inciting a hate-filled narrative
against the educated, cosmopolitan elite,” said Linda Hirshman, an author and
cultural historian who studies and writes about social movements.
You can despise what these men are saying and still
have trouble tearing your eyes from their TV presence
He has
consistently elevated white-nationalist voices and, according to Jonathan
Greenblatt of the Anti-Defamation League, “used his primetime show to spew
antisemitic, racist, xenophobic and anti-LGBTQ hate to millions”.
Tucker is
hard to replace with just another cable-news face, Hirshman noted, because “he
doesn’t just repeat things that others are saying but rather he cooks up these
ridiculous issues in an ever-evolving list of grievances”.
What’s
more, he’s remarkably good at capturing attention and giving his viewers the
language to express their anger, racism and hate.
In that
sense, Carlson is something like Donald Trump, who famously called himself a
“ratings machine”. You can despise what these men are saying and still have
trouble tearing your eyes from their TV presence; they possess a kind of
perverse gift, like one bestowed by an evil godmother upon an ill-fated infant
in a fairy tale.
Carlson is
smarter than most of his TV peers, but he has used that intelligence in the
service of tearing down the democracy whose very first amendment protections
have allowed him to spread his lies and hostility.
The media
world was obsessed Monday with precisely why Carlson was out. Was it entirely
related to the just-settled Dominion Voting Systems defamation suit which cost
Fox News $787.5m? Perhaps it really was about some other lawsuit yet to reach
fruition – like that of his former Fox employee Abby Grossberg who is suing
Carlson and the network for discrimination, citing a hostile and sexist work
environment, or another defamation suit coming up in New York by Smartmatic
USA. Or maybe Fox’s shareholders are preparing to file their own suits that
would finger Carlson.
And,
reporters speculated, how will the deposed host resurface? Will he drift to an
even farther right network? Will he run for president as a spoiler against
Trump whom Carlson has said privately he despises, despite continuing to give
him valuable airtime? Will he accept the apparent invitation of state-funded
Russia Today which was tweeting out its advances on Monday? Maybe he will start
his own media enterprise, like Alex Jones with InfoWars, and take his huge and
fervent audience with him?
Because Carlson
has loomed so large, these questions are intriguing, though the answers are
elusive.
One of the worst influences in American media and
politics has been knocked off his extremely prominent perch
But what we
do know for sure may be more important: one of the worst influences in American
media and politics has been knocked off his extremely prominent perch. For now,
his voice is – if not silenced – quieted.
“At least
his Great Replacement lies won’t be aired in America’s waiting rooms or
included in basic cable packages anymore,” observed Ben Collins, the talented
NBC News reporter who covers “the dystopia beat”, delving deep into media’s
darkest fissures. Collins noted that Carlson’s “A-block” – the first segment of
his nightly show – was “often more extreme than the front page of InfoWars”.
Carlson
won’t stop what he’s doing. And he won’t disappear. His outrages will probably
get even worse, since they will be freed of even the weak constraints at Fox
News.
Whatever he
does next, he will be no less toxic. But he may be less visible – less
omnipresent in American day-to-day life.
And that
alone is something to be grateful for.
Margaret
Sullivan is a Guardian US columnist writing on media, politics and culture

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