The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Sinclair pulls show where Fauci conspiracy theory is aired

- By David Bauder AP Media Writer

NEW YORK » The Sinclair Broadcast Group said Saturday it is pulling from the air an edition of its “America This Week” program that discusses a conspiracy theory involving Dr. Anthony Fauci and the coronaviru­s.

Sinclair spokesman Michael Padovano said Sinclair hopes to add context and other viewpoints and still air the controvers­ial segment on the next week’s edition of “America This Week.”

Meanwhile, Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, talked in detail in a new podcast about the “serious threats” and hate mail directed his way.

“America This Week” is hosted by Eric Bolling, a former Fox News Channel personalit­y, and sent to stations Sinclair owns in 81 markets. The show it initially distribute­d for this weekend’s show featured an interview with Judy Mikovits, maker of the widely discredite­d “Plandemic” video, and her lawyer, Larry Klayman.

Mikovits, an anti-vaccine activist, said she believed that Fauci manufactur­ed the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 and shipped it to China. There has been no evidence that the virus was produced in a lab, much less any of Fauci’s involvemen­t.

Bolling did not push back on the claim, or show any evidence of checking its veracity. He followed up with a segment interviewi­ng radiologis­t Dr. Nicole Saphier, a Fox News contributo­r, who said she thought Fauci “in no way, shape or form has been involved in the manufactur­e of this virus.”

During the segment, first revealed by Media Matters for America, a chyron on the bottom of the screen read “Did Dr. Fauci create coronaviru­s?”

Bolling told CNN Business that he wasn’t even aware of the “Plandemic” video before his bookers arranged for Mikovits’ appearance. He told CNN that “frankly, I was shocked when she made the accusation.” He said he brought Saphier on to challenge what he called a “hefty” charge.

The 26-minute “Plandemic” video emerged this spring and promoted a series of questionab­le, false and potentiall­y dangerous theories. Online platforms Facebook, YouTube and Twitter took actions to slow its distributi­on.

Kelly McBride, a senior vice president and ethics expert for the Poynter Institute, a journalism think tank, said Saturday that such controvers­ial theories should only be presented if accompanie­d by thorough reporting on their accuracy.

“One has the responsibi­lity to vet the informatio­n that they’re putting in front of an audience,” McBride said. “There’s no way to put informatio­n out like that responsibl­y because it’s so farfetched.” Before pulling the episode, Sinclair had tweeted that it did not endorse Mikovits’ theory. But the company said, “We’re a supporter of free speech and a marketplac­e of ideas and viewpoints, even if incredibly controvers­ial.”

A hero to some for his blunt talk about COVID-19, Fauci has been the target of criticism by President Donald Trump and his supporters. It was revealed this spring that he was given security after receiving threats, and he talked about it in some detail on “The Axe Files” podcast with former Obama aide David Axelrod this past week.

Fauci said he’s seen a side of society that is disturbing, with a far greater level of anger than he heard in the 1980s when he was working to combat HIV.

Fauci says he is receiving “not only hate mail, but actual serious threats against me.”

“I mean against my family, my daughters, my wife,” he said. “There are people who get really angry at thinking that I’m interferin­g with their life because I’m pushing a public health agenda.”

When it comes to hate mail and serious threats against him and his family, Fauci said, “I don’t really see how society does that.”

“I could understand, very well, that you have to be careful because of the negative consequenc­es of things like shutting down,” he said. “That’s understand­able, which is the reason we’re all trying to open up America again in a way that is safe, that we can do it in a measured fashion. But the hostility against public health issues is difficult to not only understand, but difficult to even process.”

 ?? SUSAN WALSH-ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo dated June 26, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dr. Anthony Fauci, center, speaks as Vice President Mike Pence, right, and Dr. Deborah Birx, White House coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, left, listen during a news conference with members of the Coronaviru­s task force at the Department of Health and Human Services in Washington.
SUSAN WALSH-ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo dated June 26, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dr. Anthony Fauci, center, speaks as Vice President Mike Pence, right, and Dr. Deborah Birx, White House coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, left, listen during a news conference with members of the Coronaviru­s task force at the Department of Health and Human Services in Washington.

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