Posted on 01/16/2005 5:29:37 AM PST by Dane
Victory With a Swagger
Fox News 'Smash-Mouth Journalism Has Resulted in Intense Attacks, Rising Ratings and a Loyal Base
By Michael Grebb
Its good to be the king . When touring Fox News Channels Manhattan headquarters, that famous Mel Brooks punch line seems to resonate.
In the basement of the News Corp. building in midtown Manhattan (known affectionately as the dungeon by those who work there), hundreds of Fox News staffers toil in blocks of cubicles. Yet they seem strangely ... happy .
People greet each other, back-slapping as they rush past. They eat lunch at their desks, eager to monitor the latest news event as they inhale deli sandwiches. The place just exudes a certain confidence. A certain swagger. A certain knowledge that what started in 1996 as a much-ridiculed alternative to the then-dominant Cable News Network has since become a major force in disseminating news to the American public.
Shepard Smith contemplates this reality as he leans back in his chair in the dungeon conference room. The anchor of Fox Newss signature evening newscast, The Fox Report, cant help noting how the channels early naysayers and current detractors are now faced with a hard truth: It is most definitely the cable news ratings leader.
Roger told us at the very beginning that this was going to happen, and he was right, says Smith, referring to Fox News Channel chairman Roger Ailes. He said, 'Not only is this going to work, but when you get to the top of the mountain, everyone down below you is going to be taking shots at you, and its going to be painful.
Indeed, Fox News has been the target of barbs since its inception. Its popular slate of opinion shows featuring hosts many peg as conservative-leaning has given ammunition to its critics. This year, the liberal group MoveOn.org even helped finance a film, Outfoxed , about what it perceives as the channels conservative bias.
Smith says that while some viewers may watch the network for conservative opinion not found elsewhere, Fox Newss detractors just dont understand the separation between opinion and news on the network.
The moment these people ever start telling me, 'You need to start skewing the news to an audience, is the last day I work here, Smith says. It would never happen.
As its enemies turn up the heat, Fox seems to grow only stronger, as its loyal base digs in and new viewers watch to find out what all the fuss is about. To the chagrin of its critics, many who find Fox News stick with it.
In December, the Nielsen Homevideo Index ranked the network No. 8 among all cable channels in total viewership, putting it far ahead of CNN and MSNBC, according to Nielsen data supplied by Fox News. In fact, CNN hasnt led Fox News in the overall cable-news ratings since December 2001.
The people who work at Fox News both on-air and behind-the-scenes talk about high morale and stability as keys to its ratings success in recent years. As competitors dealt with mergers and corporate meddling, some credit Ailes with largely protecting the channel from similar tinkering from News Corp. The theory is that happy employees make for a stronger newscast.
Because of the way the place is run, we all focus on our jobs, and I think that pushes out to the viewers, says Greta Van Susteren, host of Fox Newss On The Record . Roger has made us feel safe and that our jobs are safe, so we concentrate on our jobs.
Van Susteren says its quite a contrast from her last days at CNN. I dont spend any portion of my day wondering who I work for, listening to gossip, what shows going to get cancelled, whos getting fired, whos coming in.
Van Susteren, who works out of a modest office in Fox Newss Washington, D.C., bureau, says the camaraderie runs deep. She jokes about the time she sent an e-mail message to Shepard Smith when Nick Nolte was arrested for driving under the influence in September 2002, commenting that his mug shot resembled one of her bad hair days.
Smith read it on the air. (She shouldnt send me e-mails, Smith quips.)
Such joshing among friends is common at Fox News and often finds its way onto the screen, along with the kind of conflict and debate that keeps people watching.
Its a smash-mouth form of journalism thats very entertaining, says Matthew Felling, media director at the Center for Media and Public Affairs. Its aggressive, and its a lot of fun to watch. Whether it advances the debate at all is up for argument.
Whats not up for debate is that Fox News has found a formula that works when it comes to beating its cable competition in the ratings.
Its a lot of fun, Smith says. We dont make apologies for graphics and whooshes and excitement and all of that stuff because if that will bring you to the news that weve spent all day or all week or all month preparing, then more power to it. Ill put anything up there to get them to watch.
People will soon be listening as well: In December, Clear Channel Communications Inc., the No. 1 U.S. owner of radio stations, announced it would dump ABC News Radios newscasts in favor of Fox News Radio. Meanwhile, Fox News Channel continues to survey the landscape from the top of the mountain.
Ah, yes. Its good to be the king .
Hubba-Hubba.
LOL. Been there lately? More like San Francisco than a southern city.
I didn't even know there was a Fox News Radio. Kewl!
Yes, I was there this summer. I chose my word carefully, "quintessentially emblematic" is not the same thing as "culturally aligned". However, I still think the Braves are the official baseball team of the Old Confederacy.
Oh, no, no, no. Hot-Lanta is the showplace of the New South.
Probably the only woman in the media better looking than Ann Coulter. Too bad she's probably a liberal.
There was a rumor a few months ago she might be hopping over to FoxNews. That would be nice...
The standard for all daily newscasts is, in my opinion, Brit Humes show.
When my cable provider dropped the Fox News Channel from its basic service (while increasing rates!), I realized that Fox News was the only reason I even watch cable anymore. So, I switched to Dish Network, which offers Fox News at a lower rate than I was paying anyway.
Did you ever notice that Shep wears false eyelashes on his
UNDER lash? Yep, he does.
Its a smash-mouth form of journalism thats very entertaining, says Matthew Felling..
And I suppose he thinks Dan Rather and CBS News are sober, fair minded, serious and professional journalists.
If she wasn't, she'd be wearing more than a bra.
You are right. At first, I thought it was an evening gown, but looking at the configuration of the strap, it does look like a bra.
It was '87 when I started really getting po'ed at the canadian socialist and his anti-American drivel, and it was '88 when I stopped watching them. ABC, that is! Nothing! Not MNF, nor any specials nonsense they had, nor any of the 'hit series', (whateve they were), and I find this so dang sweet! I still won't watch 'em for a minute, until they get rid of the canadien.
Tom Wolfe, the author, is often called conservative just because he doesn't rave like a liberal. Frankly, when I just listen to him speak, I think he just may be that rare artist who is willing to listen to conservative arguments.
Greta is certainly not a conservative. She got her big bucks suing tobacco--via her husband. No grubbing trial lawyer is a conservative. And how about Geraldo?
And it seems to me that liberals are treated MUCH more kindly on "conservative" opinion shows than conservatives were EVER treated on liberal shows. Think how Michelle Malkin was treated by that goon, that thug, that pugugly bogtrotting Chris Matthews.
But if there's a genuine conservative slant to Fox, which sometimes I doubt, then I think we've got a few slants coming to us after all these many years of All the News That's Fit to Forge. But I am thankful for Fox that there is a News Hour with Brit Hume. I have a crush on both him, and Neil Cavuto. Genuine Nice Guys.
> (btw, I believe in TV jargon its called a 'Frog')
It's called a "BUG"
The ABC network nicknamed their bug the "meatball" (my husband works for ABC)
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