Random Lengths News

Boycott Fox

-

I call it the Fox-Trump Conspiracy Cycle. It’s vicious, it summarizes the last four years really well, and it goes a little something like this …

Fox News recites right-wing conspiracy theories, often pulled off the internet.

Trump repeats Fox News talking points to the press. Fox News invites Trump on air to repeat talking points. Right-wing groups post Trump-Fox clips on Facebook and Twitter. Facebook and Twitter’s mysterious algorithms serve this content to people who are most susceptibl­e to racism and misinforma­tion. Right-wing conspiracy theories spread like wildfire on the internet.

Lather, rinse, repeat. Fox, Trump, Fox, social media — it’s viral conspiracy-theory gold.

Just last week, Trump called into Fox News with a dangerous lie that trivialize­d the very real threats the pandemic poses to children. This time, Facebook and

Twitter took steps to block the Trump-Fox clip (after millions of people had already seen the video),1 but nothing could stop it from spreading across the internet and our media system. Some may try to dismiss Fox News as a fringe network, but let’s be clear: Fox’s ratings are consistent­ly high and its audience is only growing.

The network’s audience is primarily made up of the 80+ demographi­c, a group at extremely high risk from COVID-19, which the network has downplayed all year. But last week, Fox announced that since the pandemic hit, it’s seen a surge in younger viewers — helping it lure new advertiser­s to back its toxic brand of racism and disinforma­tion.

MyPillow, a top advertiser on Tucker Carlson Tonight, has made it clear that the notoriousl­y racist Fox News host can say whatever he wants, but what about Google, Dell, TalkSpace and Samsung?

Fox’s toxicity could cost lives — any company whose advertisin­g dollars are propping up the network should know that they are enabling the spread of hatred and disinforma­tion.

Candace Clement

Freepress.net

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States