Los Angeles Times

STAYING ON SCRIPT

For cable networks, it’s business as usual, despite the unpreceden­ted nature of the day’s events.

- By Meredith Blake

If there was one thing MSNBC’s Chris Matthews was determined not to normalize on Donald Trump’s Inaugurati­on Day, it was the incoming president’s unbuttoned overcoat. Which Matthews mentioned at least three times.

“Why doesn’t Trump button his coat?” Matthews fretted. “Sign of formality there.”

Given the strange, strained and unpreceden­ted relationsh­ip between Trump and the television news media, the most striking about Friday’s coverage was its unexpected predictabi­lity.

While revelation­s and suppositio­ns about Russia’s involvemen­t in the election continue to emerge, CNN, Fox, and MSNBC seemed trapped in a contextual bubble — determined to report more on the time-honored ritual than the man walking through it.

Each network hewed to its traditiona­l quasi-partisan lines, but all seemed to have agreed to an uneasy cease-fire with the new president, whose Twitter account remained silent for hours.

After months of launching, then dodging, fiery “fake news” salvos, of attempting to adjust to a presidenti­al tone of invective that began with the primaries and ran up until hours before the swearing-in, the talking heads of cable news seemed suddenly at a loss, returning to old scripts that may have fit the pomp but not the circumstan­ce.

And there were plenty of moments to sustain cable’s endless commentary: Melania Trump showing up at the White House with a gift for the Obamas from Tiffany’s; Hillary Clinton visibly steeling herself before walking down the Capitol steps to join the ceremony she thought would be hers; the rows of empty stands outside the White House; Sen. Charles E. Schumer’s carefully critical (and loudly booed) remarks; the rain that began, as if on cue, just seconds into Trump’s address.

There was the speech itself, a fiercely nationalis­t, strikingly angry rebuke of the Washington establishm­ent and the “American carnage” it has, in Trump’s estimation, wrought.

What the pundits heard in the speech differed depending on who was offering commentary, but generally everyone agreed it was — how to put this? — different.

CNN chief Washington correspond­ent Jake Tapper deemed it one of “the most radical inaugural speeches we’ve ever heard,” allowing “radical” to serve whatever purpose the listener required.

The network, perhaps keen to disprove Trump’s constant claim of bias, clung to its signature middle of the road real estate, in at least one case literally: Anchor Brooke Baldwin provided running commentary from the back of a truck that was crawling down the middle of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue during the slow-moving inaugural parade.

The network relied, as ever, on its standard chessboard of talking heads, but this time there was no shouting, no drama, and everyone gushed about the miraculous­ly peaceful transition of power, perhaps a little more enthusiast­ically than in years past.

Though MSNBC has made efforts to edge into the middle over the last year, it remained the leftie outlier on Friday. Anchor Tamron Hall parked in front of the newly opened Trump Internatio­nal Hotel, a source of potential ethical headaches for President Trump.

It also had Chris Matthews being very Chris Matthews. When he wasn’t analyzing the state of President Trump’s coat, he was namechecki­ng John F. Kennedy, and before the clock had struck 11 a.m. on the East Coast, making an ill-advised joke about the difficulty Trump would face in theoretica­lly firing his senior advisor/son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

“Mussolini had a great solution to that,” Matthews said. “He had him executed.”

Rachel Maddow also invoked World War II, though in less off-color fashion. She noted that Trump’s repeated use of the loaded slogan “America first” harkened back to the isolationi­st, anti-Semitic group that opposed American involvemen­t in World War II. The phrase is “something that means a specific thing in this country. To repurpose it now, not that far down the historical path, it’s hard.”

MSNBC commentato­rs were also ready to point out — repeatedly — that the crowds on the National Mall were smaller than those of Obama’s inaugurati­on in 2009.

Fox, meanwhile, often seemed far more interested in the protesters than the president. Those who clashed with police in downtown D.C., breaking store windows and throwing rocks were, according to Fox politics editor Chris Stirewalt, making Trump’s case against carnage for him.

As for Trump’s speech, reaction varied, but the word “muscular” popped up with an uncomforta­ble frequency on Fox. Analyst Brit Hume deemed it “not poetic, but quite strong.” He also added that it wasn’t “soaring rhetoric” — i.e., it wasn’t Obama, and therefore not entirely a bad thing.

If anchor Chris Wallace wasn’t buying the comparison­s to Charles Lindbergh, he was also quick to remind some of his more ideologica­l colleagues that Obama left the White House with record approval ratings.

 ?? Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP and First Lady Melania Trump dance at the Liberty Ball, with the presidenti­al seal in a place of prominence.
Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT TRUMP and First Lady Melania Trump dance at the Liberty Ball, with the presidenti­al seal in a place of prominence.

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