Chattanooga Times Free Press

FOX NEWS IS TRAPPED BY ITS OWN ZEALOTRY

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The HBO drama “Succession” might be a fictional corollary to the machinatio­ns of Rupert Murdoch’s Fox empire. But when it comes specifical­ly to Fox News, “The Righteous Gemstones,” an HBO show about a family managing its skeevy, sprawling, megachurch business may be a more apt model.

Court documents in the $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems against Fox reveal communicat­ions in which Fox News executives privately parsed the propaganda that is the network’s stock in trade. In defending itself, Fox has taken the tack that flagrant lies about Dominion were newsworthy, and thus spreading the falsehoods via Fox was all in a day’s work in the news biz.

The fundamenta­l issue that pervades the discussion­s among Fox executives is this: How much lying is too much? And how much is too little?

It’s not a moral question — certainly not at Fox. A baseline of fraud is built into Fox’s business model. The network that began with founder Roger Ailes insisting that his female anchors perform a twirl for him in private has been spinning ever more franticall­y in recent years. Yet Fox remained sufficient­ly idiosyncra­tic — its propaganda varies day to day, host to host — that it has generally been easier to say what Fox isn’t (journalism) than what it is.

Donald Trump’s lies about his “stolen” 2020 election pushed Fox executives to decide how far over reality’s border they would venture in an effort to retain their Trump-addled audience. Would it be acceptable, for example, to let MAGA lawyer Sidney Powell use Fox platforms to talk about sinister voting machines that magically switched votes with the aid of a deceased Venezuelan dictator? Could any content be too depraved to be promoted on the network?

Obviously, if the work of Fox were even tangential­ly related to conveying factual informatio­n the network would be kaput. The executives’ private communicat­ions and excerpts from their deposition­s confirm that corruption parades behind the cameras as insistentl­y as it preens in front of them.

Yet Powell’s claims were anything but absurd to an audience that Fox had nurtured over many years with countless previous falsehoods. Part of that audience turned to Fox precisely because it counted on the network to serve up the racial aggression, sexism and partisan propaganda that validated hard feelings about changing times.

Fox ultimately is a faith-based enterprise. It has more in common with Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasti­ng Network or even Westboro Baptist Church, the itinerant hate group based in Kansas, than with, say, the traditiona­l journalism of the BBC. As the Republican Party has become the nation’s chief vector of white Christian nationalis­m, major GOP institutio­ns — Fox is arguably the single most important pillar of the party — have acquired a more explicitly religious (and racial) cast.

As Roger Finke and Rodney Stark write in “The Churching of America 1776-1990,” when mainstream congregati­ons grow staid, insurgent churches emerge to sap their strength and steal their congregant­s. The truest believers want the hardest stuff.

That’s the cycle that Fox executives worried would compel Fox viewers to flee to even less scrupulous networks such as One America and Newsmax.

MAGA iconograph­y portrays Trump as a Rambo Jesus, returned to wreak vengeance on the libs and the Blacks and the feminists and the gays and the immigrants and the drag queens who have stolen America from its rightful owners. That’s the story that Fox conveyed for years from the electronic pulpits of Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham. It’s the story with which “Fox and Friends” greeted each MAGA morning. But when Rambo Jesus faltered in 2020, desperatio­n in Foxland mounted. And with business competitor­s and political allies alike all lying like crazy, what else could Fox do?

The pews needed to be filled, or the collection baskets would be returned empty.

 ?? ?? Francis Wilkinson
Francis Wilkinson

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