The Daily Courier

Jan. 6 hearings dominate — except at Fox News

- BY DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — America's top television networks on Thursday turned prime time over to a gripping account of former President Donald Trump's actions during the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol -- with one prominent exception.

The top-rated news network, Fox News Channel, stuck with its own lineup of commentato­rs. Sean Hannity denounced the "show trial" elsewhere on TV just as he was featured in it, with the House's Jan. 6 committee examining his tweets to Trump administra­tion figures.

Hannity aired a soundless snippet of committee members entering the hearing room as part of a lengthy monologue condemning the proceeding­s.

That was all Fox News Channel viewers saw of the hearing.

"It's really just a cheap, selectivel­y edited political ad," Hannity told his viewers.

Meanwhile, ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS, CNN and MSNBC aired the second prime-time hearing, focusing on Trump's real-time response to the riot.

"This very much sounded like a closing argument, certainly of this chapter of their investigat­ion, and it was profound," ABC News anchor David Muir said.

About 20 million people watched the first prime-time hearing on June 9, the Nielsen Company said. Generally, reaching that big an audience in mid-July would be a long shot, as it is the least-watched television month of the year.

Yet the seven daytime hearings have proven something of an oddity. Buoyed by strong word-ofmouth, the hearings grew in audience as they went along. CNN, for example, reached 1.5 million people for the second daytime hearing on June 16, and 2.6 million for the last one on July 12, Nielsen said.

Fox's broadcast station in New York, which did not air last month's prime-time hearing, showed the Thursday night session.

There's little interest at Fox News Channel, which televised the daytime hearings, although only up until the demarcatio­n line of the network's popular show "The Five." Ratings show that roughly half the network's audience flees when the hearings start, and return when they're over.

That would be a much more serious problem in prime time, where Fox's audience is more than double what it is during the day.

Fox News Channel's decision not to air the prime-time hearings is almost certainly a function of the demands of their audience and prime-time hosts, said Nicole Hemmer, an expert on conservati­ve media and author of the upcoming book "Partisans: The Conservati­ve Revolution­aries Who Remade American Politics in the 1990s."

"It creates an awkward situation when a host like Tucker Carlson tells his audience that the hearings are a debacle not worth their time, and then the network preempts his show to air them," Hemmer said.

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