Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Fox News is getting people killed, but you knew that

- GENE COLLIER Gene Collier: gcollier@post-gazette.com and Twitter: @genecollie­r.

Among this week’s harvest of factoids I unearthed looking for other factoids is that next month, Oct. 7 to be precise, marks the 25th anniversar­y of the birth of Fox News.

As for gifts, what should we get for the network to mark such a significan­t milepost?

Dunno. What has it gotten us, other than killed I mean.

Look, this won’t exactly be the first essay suggesting that Fox News is getting people killed with its disinforma­tion on the vaccine, on masks, on science, on the virus, all pumped 24/7 through the distorted prism of what Fox founding father Rupert Murdoch thinks the media ought to be doing.

At the journalism school I went to, I don’t remember any of the professors saying explicitly, “Look, try not to get anybody killed,” but I left there feeling confident that it had at least been implied.

And Fox News knows it’s getting people killed, which is why its audience is suddenly watching a crisp about-face from some of its more prominent personalit­ies.

“Please take COVID seriously; I can’t say it enough,” said Sean Hannity, the prime-time blatherer who has been described as Trump’s Svengali. “Enough people have died. We don’t need any more death. ... Take it seriously. It absolutely makes sense for many Americans to get vaccinated.”

Morning show co-host Steve Doocy, suddenly self-aware that his network’s interminab­le antivax messaging was effectivel­y killing off its own audience, said “Look, the pandemic right now is really just with the people who have not been vaccinated. Ninetynine percent of the people who died have not been vaccinated. ... If you have the chance, get the shot, it will save your life.”

Monday afternoon, with many of their regular stars on holiday, the cable news channels were running out the jayvee teams. I decided to flip on Fox to see whether they were still stuck on the critical race theory outrage, the open borders scandal or the Afghanista­n derelictio­n, but COVID-19 had the stage for the moment. My main rule for Fox watching was in play: Watch until somebody says something that is just flat wrong, inordinate­ly stupid or borderline incendiary (typical stay 30-45 seconds).

Over another chyron setting up Dr. Anthony Fauci as a national punching bag, the anchor was introducin­g a reporter for a story about confusion over COVID-19 booster shots by saying that when it comes to the vaccine, the White House messaging is still unclear.

I guess when the president of the United States goes on television and says, “Please, please, please get the vaccine,” that’s somehow unclear. I was gone in 16 seconds.

For COVID-19 advice that’s perfectly clear, one would suppose you’d have to tune into Tucker Carlson, Fox’s highestrat­ed host. No one sews distrust in the vaccine or eviscerate­s public health policy on masks like the man whom Variety awarded the media label “frozen food heir turned paleo-conservati­ve firebrand pundit.” If there’s an origin story as to why nearly half of Republican­s are unlikely to get the vaccine, Tucker Carlson directed it.

The irony there is that it was Carlson, who in March of 2020 left his Gulf Coast mansion to drive across Florida, owing to a deep sense of “moral obligation,” to meet with Trump at Mar-aLago for the express purpose of convincing him to take the emerging coronaviru­s more seriously. Without that two-hour meeting, there might never have been “Operation Warp Speed,” the Trump-accelerate­d vaccine ramp-up that gains reliably overthe-top praise on Fox as it just as reliably instructs its viewers not to take it. Carlson is a person who essentiall­y can’t even believe himself, working for a network that most of the time does not believe what it’s saying.

Trump, Murdoch, Hannity, all vaccinated. Carlson, asked if he was vaccinated by Time’s Gillian Laub, called that question “super - vulgar,” then asked Laub, “What’s your favorite sexual position and when did you last engage in it?”

It wouldn’t do to call that retort sophomoric. Why insult the sophomores?

Fox’s blatantly irresponsi­ble COVID-19 coverage has long since attracted the attention of people who like to count things. Media Matters, for example, issued a report in August that said between June 28 and July 11, less than two weeks, “Fox personalit­ies made 216 claims underminin­g or downplayin­g vaccines or immunizati­on drives. Out of those, 151 claims came from pundits on the network, which represente­d 70% of the total. Fox pundits described vaccine efforts as coercive or dangerous 75 times.”

Broadcast executive Preston Padden, who worked seven years at Fox, said recently Murdoch “owes himself a better legacy than a news channel that no reasonable person would believe.”

So if you think of it, take a moment Oct. 7 to reflect on the 25year-old Fox News, in its childhood nothing more dangerous than just the favorite channel of Dick Cheney. Later, the juvenile Fox News would morph into a lascivious post-pubescent entity, always getting sued for sexual harassment. Who knew it would turn into a serial killer?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States