OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
Why Fox News and CNN Don’t Need Tucker Carlson or
Don Lemon
April 26,
2023, 5:00 a.m. ET
By Brian
Stelter
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/26/opinion/tucker-carlson-fox-don-lemon-cnn.html
Monday’s purge
of Tucker Carlson, from Fox News, and Don Lemon, from CNN, confirmed a belief
that has been gnawing at me for years: We think about cable news all wrong.
The Friday
episode of “Tucker Carlson Tonight” that turned out to be his last drew only
about 2.6 million viewers — a measly 1 percent of the American adult
population. But on Monday, the news of his firing was one of the top stories in
the country. That’s because the power of cable news is in its reach and
repetition, not its ratings.
I learned
this during my nearly nine years at CNN, where I anchored a weekly program
about the media and reported on Mr. Carlson’s radicalization. The people who
tuned in to his show at 8 o’clock sharp were only a subset of his total
audience. When you count all the people who saw him on a TV at a bar or in an
airport and all the people who watched a clip on the internet or heard radio
talk-show hosts quote him, he had a monthly audience of surely tens of
millions.
Now
multiply that reach by the dozens of other hosts on Fox News, and you can start
to see the true influence of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire. Nielsen has a
little-known metric for this, called cumulative viewership, and according to
that measure, Fox News attracted more than 63 million viewers during the first
three months of this year. Fox execs have pooh-poohed the cume data point,
perhaps because the figure is bigger for CNN, closer to 68 million for the
first quarter. But these metrics don’t fully account for the full digital reach
of stars like Carlson and Lemon, either.
That’s why
I dismiss predictions — fashionable, even at some of these networks — that
cable news is doomed to irrelevancy. Do the math: CNN has seen recent declines
but still expects to make $900 million in profit this year. Fox News doubles
that. The endless sea of streaming content is stiff competition, but as long as
there are 20 or 30 climactic days a year that make people want to reach for the
remote and watch a live news event, cable news will be there for them.
The
networks may be more influential than ever before, but they are definitely more
polarized. CNN and Fox News make money the same way, largely through subscriber
fees and ad sales, and they are frequently lumped together on cable channel
lineups. I sometimes lumped them together myself, staring at the ratings
spreadsheets and comparing the two channels as if they competed for the same
slice of audience. But they don’t. And though Mr. Carlson and Mr. Lemon were
both fired amid accusations that they had fostered hostile work environments,
the two hosts existed in wholly different media universes.
Fox News,
despite having a newsroom with reporters and editors, is primarily a
conservative entertainment operation and a Republican Party organ. The news
doesn’t come first or even second at Fox, and the reporters there know it.
(Correspondents there called me and griped about Mr. Carlson’s conspiracy-laden
broadcasts and their own limited airtime and inability to correct his
alternative “facts.”) CNN, though it makes some attempts to be entertaining, is
primarily a news-gathering engine, with correspondents and bureaus around the
world that it maintains at great expense.
That
difference has huge implications. Mr. Lemon’s reach made him a celebrity. Mr.
Carlson’s reach made him an unelected leader of the Republican Party, someone
the House majority leader, Kevin McCarthy, had to propitiate. An entire
ecosystem of far-right sites and social networks eagerly waited to promote Mr.
Carlson’s episodes each night. That power can’t be measured, but it’s the key
to understanding cable news’s sway.
Mr. Carlson
repeated a story of good versus evil, full of conspiratorial and xenophobic
rhetoric, every single weeknight. His repetition was his superpower,
indoctrinating his fans and inoculating them against the truth. Bruce Bartlett,
who served in the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, has
called Mr. Murdoch’s machine the “Fox brainwashing operation” rather than Fox
News. Mr. Lemon called it the “Fox propaganda network” because he didn’t think it
was accurate to call it news anymore. Dominion Voting Systems’ legal X-ray of
Fox News provided ample evidence to support him. In a darkly humorous way, the
$787.5 million settlement is also a testament to cable news’s power — the power
to destroy a company it sets its sights on.
This week
has proved two things: the might of cable news and the fact that it is
ultimately the networks, not the stars, that control it.
Mr.
Carlson, according to my reporting and others’, thought his ratings made him
invincible. Millions of people were buying what he was selling. But gravity has
reasserted itself. Monday’s terminations show that there are limits, even at
the extremes of cable news, and for all that the new media environment may have
changed in the world, one of those limits is the same that you probably face at
your job: If you get to be a big enough pain for your bosses, eventually you’re
going to get canned.
But the
cable show goes on. The audience insists on it. As word spread about Mr.
Carlson on Monday, the ratings started to spike for a much smaller right-wing
channel, Newsmax, which desperately wants to become the next Fox News. Within a
few hours, Newsmax at one point had more than triple the usual audience for its
never-ending pro-G.O.P. talk show. The next battle in the cable news wars has
just begun.
More on
Tucker Carlson and Fox News
Brian
Stelter, formerly a reporter at The Times and anchor at CNN, is the author of
the forthcoming book “Network of Lies.”


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