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Go Home The Idiot Box

SEPTEMBER 14, 2011

The Idiot Box

It was a self-inflicted, eye-glazing marathon—50 hours in late August spent watching a full sampling of the Fox News lineup. Looking back, it seems like a nine-day hallucination of strident voices, blonde hair, and more pitchmen hawking gold coins than at any time since the heyday of King Midas.

Why did I volunteer for this ordeal when a rational person would have been at the beach? Not to belabor the predictable liberal lament that Fox News fails to uphold the high TV journalistic traditions of Edward R. Murrow and Eliot Spitzer. Rather, I wanted to know how the leading cable news network was deploying its unprecedented powers in its coverage of the 2012 GOP presidential race.

Few Republican voters outside Iowa and New Hampshire will glimpse a presidential contender on anything other than a TV screen. And that TV screen is apt to be tuned to Fox. According to a 2010 poll by the Pew Research Center, 40 percent of Republicans habitually watch Fox News. Bill O’Reilly alone regularly attracts 21 percent of Republicans. It is a safe guess (although Pew did not ask the question directly) that more than half the activists who will be voting in the GOP primaries are Fox faithful. There is no equivalent thumb-on-the-scales force on the Democratic side—not even if you combine MSNBC, NPR, and The New York Times. And, as it turned out, the lesson of my TV marathon was unambiguous: The Fox News primary already has a winner.

LET’S START WITH the long shots. No Republican makes Fox squirm like Ron Paul. The network’s pundits and personalities were obviously defensive about accusations that they had neglected the Iowa Straw Poll’s runner-up. (An easy explanation for their discomfort: Paul acolytes are rabid Fox News viewers.) Neil Cavuto, the host of “Your World,” paused during an interview with Paul to note that he had appeared on his show 28 times since the 2008 election. “You could practically be my co-anchor,” Cavuto gushed. “I wanted to let your people know that we love having you on.”

Meanwhile, Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum were each granted a single, respectful, prime-time interview and were otherwise mercifully left on the cutting-room floor. Herman Cain was invited on Sean Hannity’s show solely to refute comedian Janeane Garofalo’s absurd claim that he was running only to protect the GOP from charges of racism.

Jon Huntsman might welcome this sort of benign neglect. Cavuto began a Huntsman interview by highlighting his microscopic poll ratings and grilling him about his call for “shared sacrifice.” “A lot of Tea Partiers read that, sir, to say, well, maybe they should pay more in taxes,” Cavuto said accusingly. And what Fox commentators had to say about Huntsman behind his back was worse. To Michelle Malkin, a Huntsman profile in a glossy women’s magazine provided evidence of his liberal leanings. Appearing on the midday show “America Live,” she snapped, “The only [Republicans] that these liberal media people think are smart [are] the ones who are trashing conservatives and getting their pictures taken in Vogue magazine by”—she hissed—“Annie Leibovitz.”

When I began this undertaking, I was braced for a bacchanalia of Michele Bachmann coverage. Less than two weeks earlier, she had been the toast of conservatives after winning the Iowa Straw Poll. But I had failed to appreciate just how quickly the enthusiasms of Fox News would shift. Without a major gaffe or gotcha moment, Bachmann was almost entirely absent, like a Red Army general excised from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia after being purged by Joseph Stalin. She was almost never pictured on screen, even though she was on a four-day campaign swing through Florida. When her name came up, it was usually coupled with a glib dismissal of her chances.

The only extensive discussion of Bachmann I saw was on “The Five,” a late-afternoon political roundtable that I found oddly addictive. The theme was summarized by the on-screen crawl, “BACHMANN FOR OIL DRILLING IN THE FLORIDA EVERGLADES.” The panel’s token Democrat, Bob Beckel, chortled at the radicalism of this position: “I think that you are asking for a trip to the psychiatric ward early.” I expected former Bush White House Press Secretary Dana Perino to leap to Bachmann’s defense, but instead she piled on: “In Florida, which is a swing state, you’ve got to deal very carefully with off-shore oil drilling and the Everglades.”

With hours of air time to fill, there was no reason for the network to prematurely airbrush Bachmann out of the picture, but that’s exactly what happened. Did this have an effect? Possibly. A Fox News poll at the end of my viewing period showed her with just 4 percent support, her weakest showing since early June. That poll then cemented the new Bachmann-is-irrelevant story line.

The Bachmann blackout was, of course, the direct result of Rick Perry pandemonium. More rapidly than the rest of the press corps, Fox News simplified the GOP battle to Perry versus Mitt Romney. Eric Bolling, one of the regular panelists on “The Five,” captured the glow surrounding Perry, saying, “We have had this discussion every day since Perry got in the race—that he is the real deal.” O’Reilly, equipped with the biggest megaphone in cable TV news, explained that, because of Perry’s large lead in the polls, he is now “a big target for those who do not like the GOP.” In that spirit, the network was all over a Politico article provocatively headlined, “IS RICK PERRY DUMB?” I saw this article denounced on four separate shows. Hannity, for instance, heatedly declared, “The mainstream media have set their sights on Rick Perry and are determined to take him down.” Meanwhile, on “Fox & Friends,” Steve Doocy disparaged Politico—whose only ideology is a short attention span—as “a lefty website.”

Where does Romney fit into the prevailing Perrymania? Awkwardly. Romney has not been ignored like Bachmann, since every two-man race needs a second banana. Nor is he currently being attacked for ideological indiscretions such as the Massachusetts health care law. Perhaps because he could still be the GOP nominee next year, Romney is being treated gingerly. As O’Reilly put it, “The truth is that both Romney and Perry have many things in common, including good hair.”

Still, it wasn’t hard to infer where the preferences of most Fox personalities lie. Late-night Fox host Greg Gutfeld offered the most memorable summary on “The Five.” “Mitt Romney is like somebody you hook up with periodically until you get serious and you want to meet somebody serious,” he said. “He [is] friends with benefits. And Perry is marriage material.” Yikes.

Walter Shapiro is a special correspondent for The New RepublicFollow him on Twitter. This article appeared in the October 6, 2011, issue of the magazine.

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16 comments

Let me get this straight.. a liberal blogger who once lost a Democratic primary finds Fox News and Perry offensive.... .. in other news, Dog chases Cat.

- mr_rationale

September 16, 2011 at 4:52pm

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Sooo... we're finally starting to come around: i.e., television makes the voter's decisions for them, yup, right on the spot, Mr. Shapiro, ya nailed it! Now, all we have to deal with is the sordid politics of such people as Rick Perry when TV gets the voters to put them in! I stumbled onto this political reality in 2006 and, as of yet, I have few takers, but the verbs are flying faster everyday, fishing around for who calls the shots in this world. My theory that the L.A. television and movie business makes the top real decisions in this world walks and talks!

- JackWS

September 16, 2011 at 5:33pm

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So who's gonna be president? One of the these folks, or the black guy who's been sleeping with his wife in the freaking White House these last three years and, if he wins, will go on doing so?

- ironyroad

September 22, 2011 at 12:20am

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I understand the significance of Fox News to the Republican base, but I don't watch it so I appreciate this update. I had no idea Fox had dropped Bachmann from it's most adored list. It's an odd thing that all conservative candidates flock to Fox like flies to butter even though Fox so obviously marks the winners and losers early in the contest. I suppose this can be explained for several of the losers by their insanity (you know who they are), for Gingrich because he has bills to pay, and for Huntsman because there will be a 2016.

- rayward

September 22, 2011 at 7:54am

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Here is a reality test: Fox News was around in 2008. Who did they support (measured by Shapiro's standards) then in the GOP primaryies? Who won? And who won the general election? In other words, Fox is influential, but not all powerful.

- PeteBeck

September 22, 2011 at 9:11am

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With sharia law in Texas it makes us wonder: Is Rick Perry really a moslem? And doesn't /peri/ mean "fairy" in Farsi? Holy hatrack! What's going on in the Fox stable anyway?

- JohnC

September 22, 2011 at 10:50am

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...So who's gonna be president? One of the these folks, or the black guy who's been sleeping with his wife in the freaking White House these last three years and, if he wins, will go on doing so?... Explicaton de texte s'il vous plait?

- basman

September 22, 2011 at 12:11pm

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Or if you prefer: Explication de texte s'il vous plait?

- basman

September 22, 2011 at 12:15pm

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Que est-ce que les mots qu'ils vous trouvez difficile?

- ironyroad

September 22, 2011 at 1:22pm

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Mon cher Monsieur Ironyroad, ce n'est pas les mots. Je ne comprends pas votre point.

- basman

September 22, 2011 at 2:14pm

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et: Sans doute, c'est moi pas vous.

- basman

September 22, 2011 at 2:32pm

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IMO the deeper psychological hostility to Obama among some sections of the electorate, even back in 2008, was always the unspoken indignation that this upstart black guy and his women were going to take over the house meant for white folks and start eating at the dining table and, in particular, having sex in the master bedroom, as opposed to knowing their place and staying in it.

- ironyroad

September 22, 2011 at 2:46pm

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Okay

- basman

September 22, 2011 at 3:02pm

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Reply to ironyroad: The idea that today's conservatives are racists is baloney. Herman Cain is a big hit among white voters in all of places South Carolina, the cradle of the Confederacy. Today it is liberals who are racists. They are racist in that they hate blacks who insist on getting ahead by effort and achievement rather than than by remaining as dependents on the liberal plantation. Over the last forty years conservatives have cleaned up their act and liberals have dirtied theirs. In a very real sense liberalism has become a reactionary, racist ideology while conservatism has become creative and progressive. We see that in the Republican president debates, where there is an exciting atmosphere of competition to see who can come up with the best ideas for reform. By contrast the Democratic base is in the teachers' and other government employee unions. Their problem is that they exist to protect their interests at the expense of the public. Minorities are their main victims. They should be outlawed on anti-trust grounds, if nothing else. President Obama and his Education Secretary Arne Duncan have had the intelligence, or the decency, to realize the necessity of education reform. But what can they accomplish when the enemies of reform constitute the activist base of their party?

- bulbman1066

September 23, 2011 at 1:02am

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Reply to Bulbman1066: Liberals more racist than conservatives? Exciting atmosphere of competition from conservatives on the best ideas for reform? Democratic base in the teachers' and other government employees unions? Gimme a break. You're either a fool, or more likely a tool of the corporatists who really run this country. Racism isn't the issue - rich vs everybody else is the issue. Who owns the media that tells everyone what to think, how the horse races for political offices are playing out (as if it made any more than a tinker's damn who wins when the plutocrats control the table), and what it all means? Here's a clue - it isn't the teachers or any other unions running the shops and calling the shots anymore, and it never was to any meaningful degree, anyway. Here are the exciting ideas for educational reform from conservatives: Public money for parochial schools, and destroy the idea of a quality public education available to all, regardless of race, color, creed, religion, or national origin. That's the real plantation massa thinking.

- bonsaibush

September 23, 2011 at 2:50pm

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Bulbman, it was somewhat of a melodramatic exaggeration for effect, rather than a description of observable reality. And I didn't say that conservatives are racists. I said clearly "sections of the electorate" because I do believe the phenomenon exists but I believe also that there are many traditionally Democratic voters who subconsciously make that kind of connection. Obama didn't just coincidentally fail to win West Virginia; there are reasons why Tennessee voted more strongly for John McCain in 2008 than they did for George Bush in 2004. Indeed, even if my sense of it is in any way accurate, "racism" may be the wrong term in any case: fear of the Other might be closer to the target.

- ironyroad

September 24, 2011 at 5:51pm

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