Los Angeles Times

I called Arizona for Biden on Fox News. Here’s what I learned

- By Chris Stirewalt

The New York Evening Express was no great shakes as a newspaper. But in 1886, when the New York Times ran the obituary of one of the Express’ former owners, Erastus Brooks, it had to give credit where it was due. “Its make-up was typographi­cally an abominatio­n, but it always had the news,” the Times declared grudgingly of its rival.

Once, in order to beat his competitor­s with the results of an important state election in the early 1840s, Brooks hired out a stateroom on a Hudson River steamboat and installed a printing press.

By the time the competitio­n’s reporters returned to New York City from Albany to file their stories, Brooks already had the finished product in hand.

The American news business is chockabloc­k with the stories of heroic (and sometimes underhande­d) efforts to beat the competitio­n and get the news to an informatio­n-starved public.

In my career as a political analyst and, until my firing last week, an election forecaster on the decision desk at Fox News, I have always been with Brooks. I wanted to steam downriver as fast as I could to be first with the news to beat the competitio­n and serve my audience.

That’s why I was proud of our being first to project that Joe Biden would win Arizona, and very happy to defend that call in the face of a public backlash egged on by former President Trump. Being right and beating the competitio­n is no act of heroism; it’s just meeting the job descriptio­n of the work I love. But what happens now that there are almost no physical limits on the getting and giving of the news?

Being first with the account or images of major events is a thing of scant value now. What one outlet has, every outlet will have, usually within seconds. Indeed, being first can prove to be a commercial disadvanta­ge.

Having worked in cable news for more than a decade after a wonderfull­y misspent youth in newspapers, I can tell you the result: a nation of news consumers both overfed and malnourish­ed. Americans gorge themselves daily on empty informatio­nal calories, indulging their sugar fixes of self-affirming half-truths and even outright lies.

Can anyone really be surprised that the problem has gotten worse in the last few years?

Bias in the coverage of politics and government is nothing new. Old Erastus Brooks himself was an ardent Whig and frequent candidate for office. What is still relatively new is a marketplac­e that offers penalties for reporting the news but lots of rewards for indulging a consumer’s worst cravings. Cable news producers work in a world of 15-minute increments in which their superiors can track even tiny changes in viewership.

Ratings, combined with scads of market research, tell them what keeps viewers entranced and what makes them pick up their remotes. It’s no different from the pressure online outlets face to serve up items that will generate clicks and steer consumers ever deeper into the maw of “you might be interested in” content.

Whatever the platform, the competitiv­e advantage belongs to those who can best habituate consumers, which in the stunted, dataobsess­ed thinking of our time, means avoiding at almost any cost impinging on the reality so painstakin­gly built around them. As outlets have increasing­ly prioritize­d habituatio­n over informatio­n, consumers have unsurprisi­ngly become ever more sensitive to any interrupti­on of their daily diet.

The rebellion on the populist right against the results of the 2020 election was partly a cynical, knowing effort by political operators and their hype men in the media to steal an election or at least get rich trying. But it was also the tragic consequenc­e of the informatio­nal malnourish­ment so badly afflicting the nation.

When I defended the call for Biden in the Arizona election, I became a target of murderous rage from consumers who were furious at not having their views confirmed.

Having been cosseted by self-validating coverage for so long, many Americans now consider any news that might suggest that they are in error or that their side has been defeated as an attack on them personally. The lie that Trump won the 2020 election wasn’t nearly as much aimed at the opposing party as it was at the news outlets that stated the obvious, incontrove­rtible fact.

While there is still a lucrative market for a balanced offering of news and opinion at highend outlets, much of the mainstream is increasing­ly bent toward flattery and fluff. Most stories are morally complicate­d and don’t have white hats and black hats. Defeats have many causes and victories are never complete. Reporting these stories requires skill and dispassion. But hearing them requires something of consumers, too: Enough humility to be open to learning something new.

I remain confident that the current depredatio­ns of the digital revolution will pass, just as those of the telegraph, radio and broadcast television did. Americans grew into those media and providers learned to meet the demands of a more sophistica­ted marketplac­e. That’s the work that I’ve always aimed to do and hope to be part of for many years to come.

What tugs at my mind after seeing a mob of enthusiast­ic ignoramuse­s sack the Capitol, though, is whether that sophistica­tion will come quickly enough when outlets have the means to cater to every unhealthy craving of their consumers.

Chris Stirewalt is the former politics editor for the Fox News Channel and the author of “Every Man a King: A Short, Colorful History of American Populists.”

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