San Francisco Chronicle

Decency trumps bullying

- © 2018 Robert Reich Robert Reich, a former U.S. secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at UC Berkeley. To comment, submit your letter to the editor at SFChronicl­e.com/letters.

Last month, Laura Ingraham, Fox News’ queen of snark, tweeted that David Hogg — a 17-year-old who survived the mass shooting in Parkland, Fla., and has been among the eloquent advocates for gun control — “whines about” being rejected by four universiti­es to which he applied. She linked to an article from the Daily Wire calling him a “gun rights provocateu­r.”

For Ingraham and Fox News, such cruel, ad hominem attacks are typical. Vitriol helps boost ratings. After all, Fox is a central part of Donald Trump’s America. And Trump, like Fox News, has made bullying and humiliatin­g people into an art form.

But television viewers are also consumers, and the ultimate goal of advertiser­s isn’t getting them to watch a particular television show. It’s getting them to buy the advertiser­s’ products. Which has caused a problem for Ingraham.

Shortly after Ingraham’s attack on David, he called for Ingraham’s advertiser­s to boycott the show. Within days, a slew of them did just that.

As advertiser­s peeled off, Ingraham tried to take back her comment, saying the “spirit of Holy Week” motivated her to apologize for “any upset or hurt” she might have caused David, “or any of the brave victims of Parkland.” David rejected the apology. “She only apologized after we went after her advertiser­s,” he told the New York Times. He then tweeted to Ingraham that he’d accept her apology “if you denounce the way your network has treated my friends and I in this fight. It’s time to love thy neighbor, not mudsling at children.”

Ingraham’s wasn’t the first venal, personal attack directed at the Parkland student survivors who have been advocating gun control, as amplified by Fox News.

Republican Leslie Gibson, who was running unopposed for a seat in the Maine Legislatur­e, called David a “moron” and “bald-faced liar,” and Emma Gonzalez, another Parkland survivor, a “skinhead lesbian.” (This was too much for the good citizens of Maine; Gibson soon dropped out of the race.)

But unlike politician­s, who only have to survive elections every few years, corporatio­ns have to keep their consumers content all the time.

Selling satisfacto­ry products and services is necessary but often not sufficient. Customers also want to feel good about the brands they’re buying. At the least, they don’t want to associate themselves with mean-spirited vitriol.

Liberty Mutual, the giant insurer, called Ingraham’s comments “inconsiste­nt with our values as a company, especially when it comes to treating others with dignity and respect.” Nutrish, a pet food brand, said Ingraham’s comments “are not consistent with how we feel people should be treated.” TripAdviso­r explained that Ingraham’s comments “cross the line of decency.”

Such explanatio­ns sound as if these companies chose to drop Ingraham’s show to be socially responsibl­e. In truth, they’re just being smart at doing what they’re set up to do — make money. When it comes to consumer products, cruelty doesn’t sell.

Johnson & Johnson didn’t explain its decision to pull the plug on Ingraham, but it’s easy to see why it did. The company spends billions each year trying to persuade consumers that Tylenol, baby powder, Band-Aids and its other products will provide soothing comfort, analogous to a nurturing mother. Yet someone who ridicules a 17-yearold shooting survivor for not getting into the college he applied to is more like an abusive mother.

Behind all this is a new reality. The economy is now centered on intangible­s like brand image and intellectu­al property, the value of which can erode if connected with something nefarious. Look at what happened to Facebook.

Social media can speed up this process. Which is why advertiser­s reacted as quickly as they did to David’s tweet.

It’s also why corporatio­ns have quickly ended commercial relationsh­ips with famous people accused of sexual harassment and abuse. These companies aren’t being socially responsibl­e, either. They don’t want to sully their brands.

Companies are spending huge amounts seeking to connect their goods to consumers’ values. They know more about those values than anyone. Which suggests that Americans may have had enough cruelty — coming from Laura Ingraham, from Fox News, from Donald Trump, from the Harvey Weinsteins of the land, from whoever.

Meanwhile, the rest of us should help the process along and continue to vote with our consumer dollars for decency.

 ?? Debra-Lynn Hook / Tribune News Service ?? David Hogg, 17, became an outspoken advocate for gun control after surviving the mass shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school, and was taunted by Fox News’ Laura Ingraham.
Debra-Lynn Hook / Tribune News Service David Hogg, 17, became an outspoken advocate for gun control after surviving the mass shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school, and was taunted by Fox News’ Laura Ingraham.

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