The Guardian (USA)

Tucker Carlson: advertiser­s desert Fox News host after he attacks protesters

- Adam Gabbatt

A series of major US corporatio­ns, including T-Mobile and Disney, have said they will no longer advertise on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News show, after Carlson was accused of racism for attacking anti-racism protesters.

In the last 48 hours five companies – T-Mobile, SmileDirec­tClub, Disney, Papa John’s and the office furniture company Vari – have said they will pull advertisin­g on Tucker Carlson Tonight, Media Matters reported, leaving Carlson with a dwindling list of sponsors.

The exodus began after Carlson, who has described white supremacy in America as a “hoax”, suggested the protests inspired by the death of George Floyd were not about race.

“This may be a lot of things, this moment we’re living through, but it is definitely not about black lives. Remember that when they come for you, and at this rate, they will,” he told his viewers.

On Tuesday T-Mobile said it had “cancelled all future placements” on Tucker Carlson Tonight.

The T-Mobile chief executive, Mike Sievert, went further on Twitter, when he responded to someone asking if Carlson’s comments were the type of message the company supported.

“It definitely is not. Bye-bye Tucker Carlson! #BlackLives­Matter,” Sievert wrote.

Judd Legum, who publishes the Popular Informatio­n newsletter, reported that Disney, Papa John’s and Vari each dropped Carlson on Wednesday.

Media Matters said SmileDirec­tClub would also cease advertisin­g on Carlson’s show.

Fox News attempted to downplay the exodus. “All national dollars/ads were moved to other programs, and there has not been any national money lost,” a spokeswoma­n said.

The news channel had been forced to defend Carlson’s remarks on Tuesday, a spokesman telling the Washington Post: “Tucker’s warning about ‘when they come for you’ was clearly referring to Democratic leaders and inner city politician­s.”

But Carlson’s comments fit with his previous statements about race.

Carlson, who on Tuesday criticized a Sesame Street puppet for suggesting racism was a problem in the US, has broadcast a string of anti-immigrant sentiment.

In one incident Carlson said that letting low-income people immigrate to America “makes our own country poor and dirtier”.

 ?? Photograph: Richard Drew/AP ?? Tucker Carlson in March 2017. He said: ‘This may be a lot of things, this moment we’re living through, but it is definitely not about black lives.’
Photograph: Richard Drew/AP Tucker Carlson in March 2017. He said: ‘This may be a lot of things, this moment we’re living through, but it is definitely not about black lives.’

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