Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE MEDIA’S TUCKER CARLSON OBSESSION

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Tune into CNN or MSNBC on a daily basis, and you will find someone venting about what Tucker Carlson said the night before. The New York Times, The Washington Post, etc., vent daily about Carlson.

Back in the early days of blogging, bloggers would attack bigger names hoping for attention, link “love” and notoriety. It is much the same with the media, but there is more to it.

Increasing­ly, American media institutio­ns are narrative-based, not fact-based. Narrative-based news requires short stories. Those short stories require plots. Those plots require protagonis­ts and antagonist­s to move the story along.

In a recent interview with the website Vox, Democratic strategist James Carville said this about Democratic messaging: “They have to make the Republican­s own that insurrecti­on every day. They have to pound it. They have to call bookers on cable news shows. They have to get people to write op-eds. There will be all kinds of investigat­ions and stories dripping out for God knows how long, and the Democrats should spend every day tying all of it to the Republican Party. They can’t sit back and wait for it to happen.”

Much of the American political press agrees with Carville, but former President Donald Trump has gone mostly silent. Instead, the media is attempting to use Carlson as its proxy for Trump and is trying to define Carlson as the new “big bad guy” the media needs for its antagonist and narrative.

Monday night, Carlson opined that people should get in the faces of those wearing masks outdoors because it is against the body of scientific evidence. The media went nuts on Carlson, suggesting conservati­ves would be calling department­s of child services on progressiv­e parents with masked children. But Carlson’s triggering monologue left unsaid the obvious point the media forgot: For the past year, the left and media have been harassing the unmasked, even the unmasked outside at beaches.

The problem, at this point, is that in the media’s overwhelmi­ng lack of self-awareness, they’ve lost the crowd. The only people influenced by the mainstream media at this point are progressiv­es who already hate Trump and Carlson. In giving Carlson maximum exposure as a surrogate for Trump, the media forgets that Trump almost won in 2020 and did win in 2016, and that his voters represent slightly less than half the country but a majority in most states not on the coasts.

Vilifying Carlson won’t actually work. It just boosts his exposure. It also allows Carlson to steer the conversati­on as the attention garners him new eyeballs curious to see what the outrage is about. Fox will find advertiser­s. They may not be Fortune 500 companies, but they’ll still show up, and Fox’s viewers will support those companies.

Reporters on major news networks stood in front of burning rubble during the summer riots and referred to them as “mostly peaceful protests.” The media echo chamber was decidedly on the side of Black Lives Matter and antifa. Somehow, Republican­s still came within a few seats of taking back Congress and picked up state legislativ­e seats around the country.

Why? No one is really listening to the anti-Fox screeds from Fox’s competitor­s. The American public has already tuned out, except, based on ratings, to Tucker Carlson.

Continuing down the path Carville wants of tying the GOP to the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on may make Democrats feel good, but it won’t actually work, because (1) the GOP will control redistrict­ing in most states; (2) voters generally like their own congressme­n; (3) most of the GOP has plausible deniabilit­y on the issue; (4) memories are short; and (5) 2022 will be about President Joe Biden and woke ideology getting out of control, which Carville knows isn’t going away and is regularly amplified by the media and corporate America, to the seething resentment of the American public.

 ??  ?? Erick Erickson
Erick Erickson

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