Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

How does Carlson’s show survive?

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Follow Michael Hiltzik @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

It used to be that the economics of television were pretty straightfo­rward: Broadcaste­rs sold advertisin­g to sponsors, who were willing to pay more to hawk their wares on the highest-rated programs.

The biggest shows and stars attracted the classiest advertiser­s — luxury car makers, popular consumer products, brokerages and banks.

Things have obviously changed radically, or how else could one explain the phenomenon of Tucker Carlson?

Carlson is the undisputed star of Fox News Channel. In the April Nielsen ratings he trounced all other cable news programmin­g, with an average audience of over 3 million viewers. His “Tucker Carlson Tonight” also finished first in the sought-after 25-to-54 age segment, averaging 523,000 viewers.

Yet the advertisin­g lineup of Carlson’s show displays virtually no class at all. Judging from my viewing of the program on a couple of recent evenings, it comprises one advertiser that has attracted a regulatory complaint, another dinged for alleged ineffectiv­eness, a few others selling products for geriatrics that one would more expect to see on daytime TV or in predawn hours, and a few other minor consumer products.

A couple of years ago, while Carlson’s rank on Fox News was on the rise but before he reached his current peak, his advertiser­s included Disney, T-Mobile, Lexus and the brokerage TD Ameritrade. None is an advertiser any longer.

It’s proper to ask what Fox Corp., his employer, gets out of the relationsh­ip. But Fox plainly thinks it gets something of value, for Carlson’s contract is reportedly worth $10 million a year.

Carlson has become the most prominent face of right-wing politics on cable. He has attacked immigrants and immigratio­n in the most offensive terms and openly voiced racist talking points.

He ridicules anti-pandemic measures such as social distancing and maskwearin­g. On his program a few days ago, he counseled viewers to harass anyone they saw wearing a mask outdoors and to call the police or “child protective services” on parents if their children are seen wearing masks at play.

The decline in interest from major advertiser­s in Carlson’s show has built over time. Variety reported in 2019 that ad spending on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” had crashed in 2018 by 47.8%, to $48.3 million from about $92.7 million in 2017.

Though it’s hard to know exactly what prompted that decline — and Fox claimed the figures were inaccurate — it happened around the time that Carlson declared, “We have a moral obligation to admit the world’s poor, they tell us, even if it makes our own country poorer, and dirtier, and more divided.”

First-rank sponsors continued to flee as Carlson’s pitch to right-wing viewers became ever more febrile. Now that he has become the leading spokesman on cable news for white supremacy, with side dishes of noxious anti-masking and anti-vaccinatio­n commentary, it’s perhaps fortunate for him that there are no more front-line sponsors to lose.

Fox has been cagey about Carlson’s advertisin­g, though not about his popularity. “Despite an onslaught of politicall­y motivated criticism, ‘Tucker Carlson Tonight’ remains the highest rated cable show in America,” the network told me by email. Ad revenue on the show has been “rising in each of the past three quarters,” the network said.

Convention­al wisdom holds that even divisive television figures can survive controvers­y as long as they bring in the bucks. When that flow is stemmed, career trouble often has followed.

So let’s take a romp through the Tucker Carlson advertisin­g landscape. These figures are based on his evening shows Tuesday and Wednesday and afternoon show Thursday last week.

Carlson’s biggest advertiser Tuesday, in terms of minutes of airtime, was Tucker Carlson. About five minutes of the more than 21 total minutes of advertisin­g were devoted to promoting a program he’s done for Fox Nation, his company’s streaming service, evidently devoted to portraying Chicago as a community beset by unrelentin­g mayhem.

Another big advertiser was Fox itself, which placed 2 minutes and 15 seconds on Tuesday and 5 minutes, 15 seconds on Wednesday of ads promoting its own programs and Tubi, a streaming service Fox owns.

The largest paying advertiser appears to be MyPillow.com, the direct sales bedding firm whose owner, Mike Lindell, has been among the most feverish supporters of exPresiden­t Trump and his debunked claims of a rigged election.

According to the analytics service Tvrev, Lindell’s ads were second only to Fox News house ads in the number of airings on the show in the last week of March, accounting for nearly 20% of ad minutes. On Tuesday and Wednesday, the twominute MyPillow commercial­s were the only ones clocking in at more than a minute each on both shows. (A commercial for an oxygen backpack for seniors and the infirm also lasted two minutes on Tuesday.)

One prominent sponsor is Balance of Nature, a marketer of nutritiona­l supplement­s. Balance of Nature and its proprietor, a former chiropract­or named Douglas Howard — who is featured in the ads — were the target of a Food and Drug Administra­tion enforcemen­t action in 2019.

The FDA informed Howard by letter that although the company claimed that its products were “safe and effective” for the treatment of diabetes and could be used to treat asthma, multiple sclerosis and other diseases, the products “are not generally recognized as safe and effective” for those purposes.

That made them illegally misbranded drugs, the FDA said.

We couldn’t determine how the FDA action turned out. But the commercial­s aired on Carlson’s show lack the overt claims that the agency complained about.

Another recurrent advertiser Tuesday and Wednesday was Focus Factor, the maker of a supplement that claims to improve the memory. Consumer Reports took a look at this product in 2011 and pointed out that many of its ingredient­s could be found in a multivitam­in for $1 a month, while Focus Factor could cost as much as $80 a month.

The evidence is “pretty meager” that any of the ingredient­s can improve cognition, Consumer Reports said: “Our experts recommend you forget this memory supplement.”

Other advertiser­s make you wonder who constitute­s the core audience of “Tucker Carlson Tonight.” There’s the WaxRx ear wax removal system and FungiNail. (That ad boasts, “Say goodbye to toe fungus!”)

The Fox News advertisin­g chief, Jeff Collins, told Advertisin­g Age last May that the cable channel generally had seen “an influx of younger-skewing advertiser­s.”

That doesn’t seem to be heavily reflected in Carlson’s sponsorshi­p, which included pitches for Medicare Advantage plans, which aren’t open to applicants younger than 65. The pitchman is ex-NFL quarterbac­k Joe Namath, 77, whose football career ended 44 years ago, before most members of that younger-skewing audience supposedly sought by advertiser­s were even born.

At this stage, it appears that Carlson’s audience draw may be more important to Fox than his advertisin­g. It’s not at all clear that Fox has lost advertiser­s, as opposed to Carlson himself. “All national ads and revenue from Carlson’s show have moved to other [Fox] programs,” the network asserted last June.

Then there are the economics of Fox as a cable offering. The network earns far more in fees from cable operators carrying its content than from advertisin­g — $1.9 billion from cable fees in the last six months of 2020, according to its financial disclosure­s, compared with $740 million from advertisin­g.

Advertisin­g, however, grew by 25% in that period compared with a year earlier, while cable fees were flat. In the last three months of the year, in fact, cable fees declined, a sign of the trend toward cord-cutting by viewers who prefer to subscribe to video content piecemeal rather than through cable bundles.

Carlson appears to have developed an affinity with Lachlan Murdoch, the Fox CEO and son of Fox kingpin Rupert Murdoch. Signs of that emerged in mid-April, when the Anti-Defamation League called on Fox to fire Carlson.

On April 8, the ADL said in a letter to Fox News, Carlson “disgusting­ly gave an impassione­d defense of the white supremacis­t ‘great replacemen­t theory,’ the hateful notion that the white race is in danger of being ‘replaced’ by a rising tide of non-whites.”

Lachlan Murdoch responded that “Mr. Carlson decried and rejected replacemen­t theory. As Mr. Carlson himself stated during the guest interview: ‘White replacemen­t theory? No, no, this is a voting rights question.’ ”

The ADL didn’t bite. “Mr. Carlson’s attempt to at first dismiss this theory, while in the very next breath endorsing it under cover of ‘a voting rights question,’ does not give him free license to invoke a white supremacis­t trope,” its CEO, Jonathan A. Greenblatt, wrote in a second letter.

Though he brings the company criticism and controvers­y, Carlson’s audience might more than make up for it. Carlson may be viewed as an instrument to build up Fox’s presence in streaming media; witness the heavy promotion of his Fox Nation programmin­g.

He also could be a key to an effort by Fox News to retain its grip on a rightwing, low-informatio­n audience in the face of challenges by outfits such as OAN, even further to the right.

Lachlan Murdoch, to be fair, says he doesn’t worry about those rivals on the right. America is a centerrigh­t country, he told Wall Street analysts in February. “We don’t need to go further right,” he said. “All our significan­t competitor­s are to the far left.” Yet does Carlson’s veer into the farright fever swamp really fit that strategy?

Carlson’s rise has inspired something of a parlor game in the media, based on the question of how low he can go before he’s more of a drag than a boon to Fox News. No one can tell today where the limit is, only that we’ll know it when we see it. At least we hope so.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? TUCKER CARLSON is the undisputed star of Fox News Channel, yet his toprated program has seen an exodus of top-tier advertiser­s over the years.
Richard Drew Associated Press TUCKER CARLSON is the undisputed star of Fox News Channel, yet his toprated program has seen an exodus of top-tier advertiser­s over the years.
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