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Fox News Producer Reveals All

(November 2003)

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AN
All New Johnnyboy
I know this is not 100% relevant to TV Pres, but I thought fellow forumers may find this an interesting read. We all know Fox News is biased (except for Ste, of course), and a letter recently surfaced about the pressures Fox News workers feel to tow a management line. So, we all know it's done, but this is apparently how it's done.

Letter from Fox News producer Charlie Reina to the Poynter Institute

So Chris Wallace says Fox News Channel really is fair and balanced. Well, I guess that settles it. We can all go home now. I mean, so what if Wallace's salary as Fox's newest big-name anchor ends with a whole lot of zeroes? So what if he hasn't spent a day in the FNC newsroom yet?

My advice to the pundits: If you really want to know about bias at Fox, talk to the grunts who work there - the desk assistants, tape editors, writers, researchers and assorted producers who have to deal with it every day. Ask enough of them what goes on, promise them anonymity, and you'll get the real story.

The fact is, daily life at FNC is all about management politics. I say this having served six years there - as producer of the media criticism show, News Watch, as a writer/producer of specials and (for the last year of my stay) as a newsroom copy editor. Not once in the 20+ years I had worked in broadcast journalism prior to Fox - including lengthy stays at The Associated Press, CBS Radio and ABC/Good Morning America - did I feel any pressure to toe a management line. But at Fox, if my boss wasn't warning me to "be careful" how I handled the writing of a special about Ronald Reagan ("You know how Roger [Fox News Chairman Ailes] feels about him."), he was telling me how the environmental special I was to produce should lean ("You can give both sides, but make sure the pro-environmentalists don't get the last word.")

Editorially, the FNC newsroom is under the constant control and vigilance of management. The pressure ranges from subtle to direct. First of all, it's a news network run by one of the most high-profile political operatives of recent times. Everyone there understands that FNC is, to a large extent, "Roger's Revenge" - against what he considers a liberal, pro-Democrat media establishment that has shunned him for decades. For the staffers, many of whom are too young to have come up through the ranks of objective journalism, and all of whom are non-union, with no protections regarding what they can be made to do, there is undue motivation to please the big boss.

Sometimes, this eagerness to serve Fox's ideological interests goes even beyond what management expects. For example, in June of last year, when a California judge ruled the Pledge of Allegiance's "Under God" wording unconstitutional, FNC's newsroom chief ordered the judge's mailing address and phone number put on the screen. The anchor, reading from the Teleprompter, found himself explaining that Fox was taking this unusual step so viewers could go directly to the judge and get "as much information as possible" about his decision. To their credit, the big bosses recognized that their underling's transparent attempt to serve their political interests might well threaten the judge's physical safety and ordered the offending information removed from the screen as soon as they saw it. A few months later, this same eager-to-please newsroom chief ordered the removal of a graphic quoting UN weapons inspector Hans Blix as saying his team had not yet found WMDs in Iraq. Fortunately, the electronic equipment was quicker on the uptake (and less susceptible to office politics) than the toady and displayed the graphic before his order could be obeyed.

But the roots of FNC's day-to-day on-air bias are actual and direct. They come in the form of an executive memo distributed electronically each morning, addressing what stories will be covered and, often, suggesting how they should be covered. To the newsroom personnel responsible for the channel's daytime programming, The Memo is the bible. If, on any given day, you notice that the Fox anchors seem to be trying to drive a particular point home, you can bet The Memo is behind it.

The Memo was born with the Bush administration, early in 2001, and, intentionally or not, has ensured that the administration's point of view consistently comes across on FNC. This year, of course, the war in Iraq became a constant subject of The Memo. But along with the obvious - information on who is where and what they'll be covering - there have been subtle hints as to the tone of the anchors' copy. For instance, from the March 20th memo: "There is something utterly incomprehensible about Kofi Annan's remarks in which he allows that his thoughts are 'with the Iraqi people.' One could ask where those thoughts were during the 23 years Saddam Hussein was brutalizing those same Iraqis. Food for thought." Can there be any doubt that the memo was offering not only "food for thought," but a direction for the FNC writers and anchors to go? Especially after describing the U.N. Secretary General's remarks as "utterly incomprehensible"?

The sad truth is, such subtlety is often all it takes to send Fox's newsroom personnel into action - or inaction, as the case may be. One day this past spring, just after the U.S. invaded Iraq, The Memo warned us that anti-war protesters would be "whining" about U.S. bombs killing Iraqi civilians, and suggested they could tell that to the families of American soldiers dying there. Editing copy that morning, I was not surprised when an eager young producer killed a correspondent's report on the day's fighting - simply because it included a brief shot of children in an Iraqi hospital.

These are not isolated incidents at Fox News Channel, where virtually no one of authority in the newsroom makes a move unmeasured against management's politics, actual or perceived. At the Fair and Balanced network, everyone knows management's point of view, and, in case they're not sure how to get it on air, The Memo is there to remind them.
LU
Luke
Bloomin hell! That is quite shocking, but not really surprising, I suppose.
MA
mark Founding member
A fascinating read - interesting to finally get a glimpse into what goes on behind the scenes af Fox News. Pretty much as I expected, really!
BO
boring_user_name
Hopefully, this memo will recieve the needed publicity, and Fox News will be forced to tone down its ultra right wing propoganda.

The channel is a disgrace to everything western democracy stands for. I only hope that cnn and other US networks don't try to imitate it's style to gain viewers.
IN
intheknow
boring_user_name posted:
Hopefully, this memo will recieve the needed publicity, and Fox News will be forced to tone down its ultra right wing propoganda.

The channel is a disgrace to everything western democracy stands for. I only hope that cnn and other US networks don't try to imitate it's style to gain viewers.


They already have to a degree, but they had no impact on ratings, and have backed off as they just didn't work.

CNN didn't have partisan bias as such, but attempted to introduce Fox News style personality based shows. One of them, Connie Chung Tonight, didn't last very long. Their was a shakeup in the management at CNN, and when the Iraq War began, Chung was relegated to a role presenting the "At This Hour" news headline inserts, as her own hour long show was dropped for continuous war coverage. A few days later, one of the new execs at CNN informed her that her show wouldn't return once normal schedules resumed.

MSNBC hired Michael Savage, a hard-line right-wing talk radio presenter, that didn't last long either, as he started ranting anti-gay remarks, referrering to a caller to his show which he called a "sodomite" and said he should "get AIDS and die.", amongst other things. He was rightly sacked shortly afterwards.

Still, CNN and MSNBC now are a lot better than those on the network that should be called "The Most Biased Name in News", "We Distort You Comply", it's just a shame the ratings are in the Faux News Channel's favour.
MT
MrTomServo
Unfortunately, regardless of the facts that rational people like you, me, and Johnnyboy can see, the vast majority of the American public sees Fox News as just another news channel. For easily-suggestible types that Fox News caters to, the blatant slanting and propagandisation that we see goes largely unnoticed by the public. This channel is contributing to the non-questioning, roll-over-and-beg political philosophy that the Bush administration so greatly desires.

Journalism should be turning its back on Fox News. If the wire services had any credibility, they wouldn't sell video, photos, or stories to them.

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