USA TODAY US Edition

What is future of Fox News?

Conservati­ve viewers may seek out other networks

- Nathan Bomey

A surge of post-election momentum for pro-Trump networks suggests that Fox News’ status as the primary cable news destinatio­n of far-right conservati­ve viewers may not be as solid as previously thought.

But it’s unclear whether recent audience growth for Newsmax and One America News is sustainabl­e – and experts question whether those networks can lure the type of blue-chip advertiser­s that have enriched Fox News.

In the period leading up to the election and in the weeks thereafter, Newsmax and OAN have attracted a growing audience of far-right conservati­ves by amplifying President Donald Trump’s false declaratio­n of victory and his unfounded accusation­s of election fraud.

Newsmax, the larger of the two, appears to have made a dent in Fox News’ ratings since then, although Fox News remains the far-and-away leader.

In the last full week before the election, primetime ratings for Fox News were more than 90 times greater than primetime ratings for Newsmax, according to ratings tracker Nielsen.

But in the first full week after the election, Fox News’ lead had declined to less than nine times the ratings of Newsmax. And by the week of Nov. 30, the lead was down to less than seven times.

“Fox News is being forced to actually compete for its audience for the first time in years,” said Matt Gertz, senior fellow at Media Matters for America, a liberal watchdog group that closely tracks cable news. “They have had more or less a monopoly over right-wing cable news and have been the focal point of the overall conservati­ve media ecosystem for decades – and now they are needing to deal with competitor­s coming from the right and trying to take away some of their market share.”

To be sure, Fox News has remained the most-watched cable news network in primetime, also besting CNN and MSNBC despite recent growth for those networks. But the momentum is undeniable for Newsmax, which averaged 401,000 viewers in primetime the week of Nov. 30, compared with 57,000 the week before the election and 233,000 the week of the election, according to Nielsen.

The surge for Newsmax in recent weeks even attracted the attention of “Saturday Night Live,” which spoofed

the network in a skit about a sports channel that won’t acknowledg­e that the woeful New York Jets have ever lost a football game.

Fox News declined to comment for this story. But Steve Tomsic, chief financial officer of Fox News owner Fox Corp., recently told analysts and investors that the network “has got amazing brand loyalty” with a broad base of support that extends beyond the primetime lineup to its daytime shows and an extensive online and TV newsgather­ing operation.

“We don’t take lightly the potential for competitio­n, whether it’s the existing sort of classic MSNBC or CNN, or the sort of emerging ones like Newsmax and OAN,” Tomsic said at an investment conference, adding that “we kind of welcome it because it sharpens us up and gives us a real focus.”

Newsmax emerges

Founded in 1998, Newsmax has surged in recent weeks by giving airtime to baseless claims of election fraud and winning the support of Trump himself, who has been enraged following his loss to former Vice President Joe Biden and has refused to concede victory, promoting falsehoods about the reliabilit­y of the election results.

Trump has promoted Newsmax shows to his more than 88 million followers on Twitter as alternativ­es to programs on Fox News, which angered the president and his supporters when it called the state of Arizona and then the entire election for Joe Biden.

Those moves “really made people upset with Fox, and they realized that Fox had not been as fair in his coverage to the president, and so they decided to introduce a social media eruption,” Newsmax CEO Christophe­r Ruddy said in an interview. “That led to our success and ratings.”

Ruddy said conservati­ve viewers are seeking a “new and fresh” outlet that isn’t overly critical of the president.

“I think there was a perception that Fox could no longer trusted,” he said.

To be sure, Fox News has also been widely accused of serving as a breeding ground for Trump’s propagatio­n of numerous falsehoods during his time in office. He has even consulted with Fox News hosts for political advice – namely, primetime star and White House loyalist Sean Hannity – and, in the past, has promoted Fox shows through Twitter.

“They have been very supportive of him,” Gertz said. But Trump, a faithful viewer, “has been convinced that they are not a loyal enough propaganda outlet.”

Josh Pasek, a political science and media professor at the University of Michigan, said Fox News’ willingnes­s to declare Biden the winner showed “there really is a limit to how polarized Fox News is willing to be.”

“When someone wins, you call them presidente­lect, and that’s a journalist­ic norm that they’re holding with,” he said. “If that journalist­ic piece isn’t present at all in people’s environmen­ts, then they have the potential to be living in a completely alternate reality.”

Newsmax, on the other hand, did not call Biden “president-elect” until a majority of the Electoral College officially voted on Dec. 14 for the former vice president.

On Newsmax, Trump has largely not had to worry about facing skeptical or critical coverage. With supporters like its most popular primetime host, Greg Kelly, consistent­ly promoting Trump’s agenda, the network has become a welcome place for true believers in the president, including supportive commentato­rs. The network and its website have given credence to accusation­s of election fraud that have no basis in fact, leading critics to assail the company as irresponsi­ble and unethical.

Ruddy defended the outlet as “more fair and balanced” than Fox.

“The president and his lawyers have made certain allegation­s about the election, and I think it’s our job to report that,” he said.

Will advertiser­s follow?

From a financial standpoint, in addition to viewership counts, Fox News remains far more powerful than Newsmax or the smaller OAN, which isn’t large enough to be tracked via Nielsen ratings.

Newsmax “still pays to get distributi­on on cable” and is “likely” facing a “multi-year lossmaking initiative” as it looks to expand its operations, Barclays analyst Kannan Venkateshw­ar wrote in a Dec. 4 research note.

The company had about $59 million in revenue in 2018, compared with $2.7 billion for Fox News, Barclays estimated. But that figure has almost certainly risen since then, given the surge in viewership and readership the company has experience­d since Trump cast a spotlight on the network.

Daily active users of Newsmax’s mobile app have soared in recent weeks, rising from about 156,000 on Oct. 20 to peak of 2.25 million on Nov. 24, and settling in around 1.9 million by Dec. 12, according to Apptopia, a mobile intelligen­ce firm.

Ruddy said Newsmax can eventually challenge Fox News for viewership and advertisin­g, pointing to Fox News’ ability to quickly overtake CNN as the highestrat­ed cable news channel as an example of how easy it is for an establishe­d network to lose ground.

He said Newsmax would benefit from its narrower focus on news and politics, compared with Fox News’ wider range of interests, including entertainm­ent news.

Since the election, Newsmax has hired 25 new employees, and “we’ll probably hire another 25 to 30 in the next two months,” Ruddy said. Among them: The network recently added former Fox News host Rob Schmitt to host a show at 10 p.m. and plans to “increase our coverage” on weekends, Ruddy said.

Will it be enough to attract lucrative advertisin­g? Major corporate sponsors have been skittish about backing highly political content on Fox News’ primetime lineup in recent years, Media Matters fellow Gertz said.

For now, Newsmax is getting “low-level advertiser­s” and is profiting from “newsletter­s where they basically sell out their audience to hucksters and scammers,” Gertz said.

Ruddy said the company has no “problem with advertiser­s” and said that network’s current sponsors are “getting a tremendous value” since “our rates haven’t kept up” with recent audience growth.

The polarizati­on of media in America

The rise of outlets like Newsmax and OAN raises concerns among political scientists that the media environmen­t is becoming further polarized, hearkening to an early-America era in which partisansh­ip consumed journalism.

Newsmax and OAN are cultivatin­g a “larger group of people who are functional­ly disconnect­ed from a reality that doesn’t fit their partisan bias,” the University of Michigan’s Pasek said. “And that’s dangerous because living in a shared informatio­n environmen­t on some level is critical to a functionin­g democracy.”

With Trump set to leave in office within weeks, farright conservati­ve outlets may become increasing­ly emboldened as they play the role of opposition to Biden, experts said.

“I don’t doubt that they’ll be able to continue their momentum in many respects,” Pasek said. “It is very easy to become more extreme and to buy into a whole bunch of conspiracy theories when your side is out of power.”

But there is almost surely still a significan­t place for Fox News to serve as a “broad-based and not-superextre­me” home for conservati­ves, Pasek said. “That gives Fox a huge potential audience,” he said. That said, if Trump no longer promotes Fox News and, in fact, continues to actively criticize the network, that could spur some of his supporters to look elsewhere.

Throughout much of his presidency, Trump has used his platform to bolster Fox News. From Sept. 1, 2018, through Aug. 31, 2020, he posted 1,206 tweets about watching cable news, 95% of which were about Fox News or Fox Business, according to Gertz’s analysis.

But in the wake of the election, from Nov. 15 through Dec. 2, 53% of his cable news tweets were about Fox News or Fox Business, while 37% were about OAN and 10% were about Newsmax.

If Newsmax and OAN continue to give Trump and his supporters a platform to circulate falsehoods even after he’s left office, they could continue the type of symbiotic relationsh­ip they already have in place.

“Newsmax right now is trying to, as clearly as possible, openly say that they are a pro-Trump network and attract an audience that way,” Gertz said.

But Fox News, “regardless of how supportive they are of the president, they cannot cross the line into saying they are a pro-Trump network” since they are trying “to sell themselves to advertiser­s as a legitimate news network,” Gertz said.

On OAN, meanwhile, anchors and writers have treated Trump’s election fraud claims as potentiall­y legitimate. OAN President Charles Herring did not agree to a phone interview for this story and did not respond to emailed questions after previously agreeing to do so.

Like Newsmax, daily active users of OAN have also increased in recent weeks, rising from about 107,000 on Oct. 20 to a peak of 621,000 on Dec. 7.

OAN is capitalizi­ng on “really unhinged conspiracy theories about global government,” Gertz said. “OAN has even less of a connection with reality.”

 ?? EILEEN BLASS/USA TODAY FILE ?? “We don’t take lightly the potential for competitio­n.” Steve Tomsic Fox Corp. CFO
EILEEN BLASS/USA TODAY FILE “We don’t take lightly the potential for competitio­n.” Steve Tomsic Fox Corp. CFO
 ?? NEWSMAX VIA AP ?? Greg Kelly is Newsmax’s most popular primetime host. The network has surged in recent weeks on coverage of the presidenti­al election.
NEWSMAX VIA AP Greg Kelly is Newsmax’s most popular primetime host. The network has surged in recent weeks on coverage of the presidenti­al election.

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